Tuesday 28 October 2008

Barenboim Kupfer Bayreuth Nibelungen Ring on DVD

Der Ring des Nibelungen (complete). Bayreuth Festival, filmed 1991. Production: Harry Kupfer. Cast includes: John Tomlinson (Wotan), Anne Evans (Brünnhilde), Siegfried Jerusalem (Siegfried), Günter von Kannen (Alberich), Poul Elming (Siegmund), Waltraud Meier (Waltraute). Conductor: Daniel Barenboim.

Overview and general comments

Harry Kupfer´staging is simple, aesthetic and endless. Daniel Barenboim is spectacular and grandiose. The dramatic intensity is staggering, and all singers are at least above average reaching the excellent in John Tomlinson (Wotan) and Siegfried Jerusalem (Siegfried). They peel off the layers of the Ring until only the core remains: The music and the naked stage drama.
A simply spectacular theatrical achievement and a Ring I may live happily with for the rest of my life, if necessary.

Harry Kupfer´s Nibelungen Ring is set in a fictious future, perhaps in a post-apocalyptic world. Set decorations are dispersed with, the odd metal staffelio apart. We look at grey, naked and desolate sets dominated throughout the Tetralogy by an endless road - "The Road of History". The occasional laser-rays pierce the grey mist, thus the nickname "The Laser Ring".

In brief this Ring is about survival on the planet. It is a bleak and pessimistic work. In the vacuum and/or cross-roads of history everyone fights for survival. However, a ray of hope emerges at the end. The energy level is astonishing. As are the emotional extremes.

Harry Kupfer´s trademark, the extremely detailed direction of the singers, is put to maximum use in his first Ring. Nothing is left to chance, every single movement is thoroughly coached. The energy level is maximally high in this very physical production with an impressive amount of stage movement. All singers are superb actors and all look their parts, a prerequisite for being cast in Kupfer/Barenboim Wagner stagings, it seems.

The sets were by Hans Schavernoch. Apart from the naked stage (The road of history), the stage effects consisted mainly of all types of lights (including the famous lasers) and smoke.

Incidentally, the laser beams were immensely difficult to record to a degree that the production team almost gave up. In the end, they succeeded in creating the green laser-light seen on the DVD - in Bayreuth the laser-light was blue/yellow, I have been told.

The desolate sets provide the optimal backdrop for Daniel Barenboim to shine in the finest conducted version of the Nibelungen Ring since I don´t remember when.

As usual for the Bayreuth Festival, the DVDs are recorded without the audience being present.

The major strengths of this Ring is Daniel Barenboim´s conducting and Harry Kupfer´s staging. As theatrical drama I find it unbeatable. Clearly the best Nibelungen Ring DVD on the market as I am concerned. However, potential buyers would be adviced to pre-view some segments if possible, as Harry Kupfer´s staging may not appeal to all.

The only traditionally staged Ring on the DVD market is the Schenk/Levine Metropolitan Ring, which I cannot recommend despite some fine moments. Closest to a traditional staging comes Patrice Chéreau´s Centenary Ring from Bayreuth. Harry Kupfer´s subsequent Ring, recorded in Barcelona is stunningly beautiful, though musically disappointing. Also stunningly beautiful, but of equally disappointing musical quality is Audi´s Amsterdam Ring.

Regietheater Rings are best represented by The Copenhagen Ring, which exceeds the Stuttgart Ring in both production and musical quality. These are the currently available Nibelungen Ring cycles on DVD, of which a complete overview may be found here.

The individual operas - Rheingold

Even before the socalled primordial E-flat is heard, the curtain opens for the final tableau of Götterdämmerung: Bewildered people watching the end of the world. We are now ready to start yet another cycle. Then all is dark and the aforementioned E-flat initiates this cycle. The green laserbeam pierces the mist and creates a rectangular undulating flood of light encapsuling the Rhinemaidens when they emerge from the hole in the Road of History created by Siegfried´s death in the Götterdämmerung., The same abyss from which the warm yellow Rhine Gold light shines.
Ragged-clothed, but not too ridiculous, Alberich simply fights for love as everyone else in this cycle.
With laurels around their necks and transparent plastic suitcases left in the middle of the Road of History we are introduced to a bunch of self-serving Gods and 3 meter high patchwork-clad Giants.
Eerily green-lit metal constructions appear from underneath for the Nibelheim scene introducing the scientist Mime. As everyone else, the Serpent in the transformation scene simply appears from the abyss. Ultimately rainbow-coloured laser rays pierce the Road of History creating a tube, in which the Gods ascend.

I still vividly recall my complete astonishment upon first seen the Wotan of this cycle: He is a complete rogue. Are you really allowed to do that? Needless to say, you are. And rightly so as it is superb theater. But any expectations of Wotan, the noble hero may firmly be put aside. The eye is missing and the spear is there. But not much else is business as usual.

Wotan is the center of Kupfer´s Ring. In fact he is not a complete rogue, but a rather self-serving man, perpetually moving back and forward between emotional extremes. Nothing is half-done. He clearly overestimates himself, thinking himself smarter than everyone else. Brünnhilde he loves, clearly more like a lover than a daugher, but everyone else he detests. He fights for his own survival as does the rest. There is no room for delicate sentiments or noble values.
Daniel Barenboim had the immense stroke of luck (or foresight?) to cast British bass John Tomlinson as Wotan, here in his prime. Rough in voice as well as characterization with a simply astonishing energy leve John Tomlinson, a bass, in my opinion is the best Wotan on DVD. The only real competetition on DVD (or in general since Hans Hotter) is James Morris. John Tomlinson´s strong points are his dramatic intensity and vocal projection as opposed to James Morris´ strong points: Legato lines and subtle characterization. John Tomlinson´s weak point is his upper register legato singing, almost unnoticeable due to his absorbing dramatic presence.

John Tomlinson was joined by the perhaps greatest Alberich of the past decades Günter von Kannen and the excellent hyperenergetic Graham Clark as Loge.

The curtain goes up and reveals the aftermath of the final scene of Götterdämmerung:

The Rhinemaidens within the laser flood:

The yellow Rhingold glow from underneath. Alberich watches:

Introducing the Gods:

And the Giants:

And Loge (Wotan wondering what took him so long):

Donner trying to strike the Giants with his hammer:

Nibelheim:

Wotan forcing Alberich to part with the Ring:

Wotan mistakingly believing he has outwitted the Giants to keep the Ring:

Erda appearing from underneath:

The Gods are ready to move into Valhalla:



The individual operas - Walküre

After initially scrambling on the surface, the partisan Siegmund climbs down a tree trunk on the Road of History to find himself in Hunding´s abstract hut. The rest of Act 1 is history (ie. following the libretto).
In act two we are in the middle of the deserted Road of History, serving as an imaginary crossroad of destinies, taken into consideration the numbers of characters happening to pass by: Wotan, Fricka, Brünnhilde, Siegmund, Sieglinde and Hunding...
In the end the laser-beams once again pierce the mist to create the quadrangularly laser-framed Walkure rock.

Nowhere better than in this Walküre chamber-play does Kupfer succeed in bringing out the drama with his obsessively precise individual stage direction. Poul Elming-Nadine Secunde may only be equalled in dramatic intensity by Jeannine Altmeyer-Peter Hoffman for Chéreau in the 1976 Ring. As singer-actors they may hardly be bettered combined with Matthias Hölle´s menacing Hunding, caught in his short prime.

As to directorial concept, The road of History is still there and it is still one man´s fight against his brother to survive.
Someone once described the Walküre Act 2 as the pendulum around which the entire Nibelungen Ring swings. With Wotan´s monologue in the center. John Tomlinson´s Wotan still takes centerplace, and though he is a rogue, he is not entirely unsympathetic. The vitality he projects makes it hard not to like him. Furthermore, his constant under-restimation of his opponents is just so essentially human..Brünnhilde is more a lover than a daughter to him. His wife, on the contrary, he despises as well as underestimates.
The intensity of Wotan´s Farewell is, in my opinion unsurpassed on DVD, not the least due to Daniel Barenboim´s accompaniement, which is simply glorious. While Rheingold-Wotan may be performed by a barytone, Walküre-Wotan and especially the monologue is where John Tomlinson´s bass pays of, effortlessly projecting the passages virtually every non-bass Wotan finds hard to do.

Climbing down from the Road of History into Hunding´s home:

Up on the Road again, where the trunk with the sword descends into Hunding´s hut through the roof:

Wotan and Brünnhilde, when everything seems to be going the right way:

Wotan with Fricka:



Wotan during the monologue, where he describes the inherent conflicts regarding his plans to create a "free hero" to retrieve the Ring:

Brünnhilde arriving to foretell Siegmund´s death as ordered by Wotan:

Wotan pushing Siegmund into Hunding´s spear after Brünnhilde has tried to help Siegmund against his explicit orders:

The Valkyries:


Wotan confronting Brünnhilde with her disobedience:


Brünnhilde trying to convince Wotan to lessen her punishment:

Wotan finally leaves Brünnhilde asleep on the Walküre Rock:



The individual operas - Siegfried

Mime lives in a derelict tube (a former nuclear capsule?) with Wotan and Alberich lurking around. Fafner´s lair is located at a section of the Road of History underneath a broken bridge. Obviously, Wotan controls the Forest Bird. In the miraculously evocative blue mist Wotan meets with Erda as well as with Siegfried, not willingly succombing to the later. Captured within the quadrangular laser-beam framed Walküre Rock Brünnhilde emerges towards the end.

The picture is clear: Wotan desperately tries to retain power by all means. Siegfried is genuinely sympathetic, but to no avail. A spiral towards the inevitable destruction.

The only point where I seriously disagree with Harry Kupfer´s approach (as well as with virtually every other stage director) lies with the characterization of Alberich. I would like to see Alberich portrayed as Wotan´s worthy adversary, not as some semi-ridiculous figure in night-wear. After all, Alberich still stands when Wotan has fallen, at least in this production. Kupfer is better than most, but still not as he could have been. And he even has perhaps the greatest Alberich of recent times in Günter von Kannen, who could pull it of both vocally and dramatically.

That said, for once the Siegfried-Brünnhilde constellation seems beliavable, and Siegfried Jerusalem is a DVD-close-to-ideal Siegfried.

Mime´s lair - with Wotan (Wanderer) and Alberich lurking in the shadows:

Mime and Siegfried:

Wotan (Wanderer) comes to visit Mime (and try to tell him how to forge the sword Nothung):

Mime untruthfully claiming to know almost nothing about Siegfried´s background:

In the end, Siegfried forges the sword himself:

At Fafner´s lair: Wotan meets Alberich:

Siegfried kills Fafner:

Fafner turns out to be rather nice without his draconic shell:

Wotan controlling the Woodbird:

Wotan evokes Erda:

Wotan trying (in vain) to block Siegfried´s passage to the Walküre Rock:

Siegfried at the Walküre Rock:

Siegfried wakes Brünnhilde:



The individual operas - Götterdämmerung

We are clearly at the end of The Road of History - marked with a big flashing red X for all to see. The Norns weave their rope of destiny in a forest of antennas. A triangular metal construction is set up for Hagen on the otherwise naked stage with the Walküre rock dis- and reappearing from beneath and naturalistic clouds vs. a futuristic skylines on the side walls. The golden Ring glitters. Wotan lurks around in the shadows.
The Road of History finally collapses to reveal an abyss during Siegfried´s Death. On the brink of this abyss Wotan collapses after throwing his spear into it. At the end, everyone watches the end of the Gibichungen world on tv-screens. Two children, representing a ray of hope, try to move past the watchful Alberich, away from the grown-ups, looking for Utopia (according to Kupfer). The cycle is now complete and we are ready to start another Rheingold.
What stands is the circular timelessness and sense of the eternal.

The norns weaving their rope:

Siegfried gives the Ring to Brünnhilde:

When Siegfried leaves Brünnhilde´s Rock he has clearly reached the end of the road:

Siegfried and Gunther pledge faith on Hagen´s spear:

Waltraute tries, in vain, to pusuade Brünnhilde to give the Ring back:

Brünnhilde uses the Ring, in vain, to defend herself against Gunther (Siegfried in disguise):

Alberich appears to his son Hagen:

Wedding scene of Brünnhilde-Gunther and Siegfried-Gutrune:

The Rhinemaidens:

Siegfried´s Death:

Wotan looking (and throwing his shattered spear) into the abyss:

Brünnilde takes the Ring off Siegfried´s finger:


People watch the end of the world of the Gibichungen on television. Alberich lurks from a distance:

Two children try to sneak past Alberich:

The singers

The Bayreuth Festival Managment are often held responsible for their casting of Bayreuth Festival productions, a truth with modifications (though they are obviously overall responsible): This Ring was mainly cast by Daniel Barenboim.
Most of the major cast members were new to their roles, and all were in their prime.

Generel comments:

Wotan: When Daniel Barenboim initially offered Sir John Tomlinson (JT) the part of Wotan, JT refused and suggested Barenboim to hire James Morris instead, while offering to sing Hagen. When finally arriving in Bayreuth, JT has previously reported to be in for a surprise: Expecting to sing a noble part, Barenboim and Kupfer expected to see a rogue.
In brief this Wotan is the biggest achievement of JT´s career (both mine and his own opinion) and he is, in my opinion, the best Wotan of the past 40 years. A bass with high notes, as opposed to a bass-barytone, he effortlessly projects the many lower-lying sections (including the monologue). Dramatic declamation and stage command are JT´s strong points. The voice is rough and not particuarly beautiful. Extended legato lines (and legato singing in general), especially in his upper register are his weak points. However, as he performs in this Ring, his strong points make these issues seem insignificant.

Fricka: Linda Finnie both looks the part and sings and acts well.
Donner: Bodo Brinkmann is fine in this medium-opportunity role.
Froh: Same applies for Kurt Schreibmayer.
Alberich: Günter von Kannen is simply a great Alberich with the necessary vocal strenght and dramatic heft making him the most convincing Alberich of recent times.
Loge: Excellently energetic performance by Graham Clark, who almost goes over the edge to over-characterize the part. An interview with Graham Clark related to this Ring may be read here.
Fasolt: Solid performance from Matthias Hölle.
Fafner: Solid turnout for Philip Kang as well, though ideally he´d have more blackness to his voice.
Mime (Rheingold): Solid performance from Helmut Pampuch.
Mime (Siegfried): Same hyperenergetic performance from Graham Clark as in his Loge.

Freia: Piercingly clear soprano and convincingly acted by Eva Johansson.
Sieglinde: Nadine Secunde is believable as the rather bleak and subdued Sieglinde. Vocally she is competent without being memorable.
Siegmund: Danish barytone-turned-tenor Poul Elming´s first audition in Bayreuth resulted in Barenboim offering him the Siegmund and subsequently sending him to Oslo to study the part with then-musical assistant Antonio Pappano. Poul Elming is a superb fit for this production as a very physical Siegmund. Starting out a barytone, the ringing topnotes has never been his strong point, however as an overall singing-actor he is believable as few others.
Hunding: Close-to optimal performance from Matthias Hölle, caught in his rather short prime, managing both the profundo notes and the menacing radiance.

Hagen: It would be unfair to call Philip Kang a weak point, however he is the weakest of the major cast, in my opinion. He completely lacks the menacing stage presence of a great Hagen and while he does have the high notes, his voice is not a particularly powerful voice either.
Brünnhilde: Anne Evans is a lyrical Brünnhilde, but not a light-weight by any means. Very wisely she does not push her voice at any point. A very convincing actress as well and for once, she and Siegfried are belieavable as a couple. An interview with Anne Evans about her experiences in this Ring may be read here.
Siegfried: A superb Siegfried Jerusalem, who fits the bill both vocally and dramatically. His only real competition on DVD is his own Metropolitan performance around the same time of an equal high standard.
Erda: Birgitta Svendén is simply superb with the required dark penetrating voice.
Waltraute: Waltraud Meier is unsurpassed as Waltraute on DVD.
Gutrune: Eva-Maria Bundschuh is fine here and vastly superior to her later interpretation in Audi´s Ring.
Gunther: Bodo Brinkmann. Though rather a character baritone, this is somehow fitting for this Gunther, whom nobody would accuse of being a hero.

The conductor and orchestra

Daniel Barenboim conducted his first Ring when this production opened in 1988 and his performance with the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra is the undisputed musical highlight of this Ring.

Daniel Barenboim´s nuanced, yet dramatic and intense interpretation is simply stunning.
Barenboim has always stated Wilhelm Furtwängler as one of his major inspirations, but I find the Furtwängler influence far less obvious here than in other of Barenboim´s recordings. While one of Daniel Barenboim´s most audible Wagnerian trademarks is the tempo-shift (rubato) in a relatively dominant string section, for this Nibelungen Ring the orchestra seems more balanced in favour of both brass and woodwinds. In that respect he is closer to others of the past (such as Knappertsbusch) than Furtwängler. And though the flow is steady and the over-used term "epic" comes to mind, Daniel Barenboim is considerably faster than both Furtwängler and Knappertsbusch. However the long lines are certainly there as are the very unconventional as well as flexible shift of tempi, but they seem to be generated from the orchestra as a whole rather than from the string section alone.

While the covered orchestra pit has the advantage of creating a delicate "covered" sound, the disadvantage is that explosions in the orchestra are not transmitted to the degree they are with an open pit. Nevertheless the dramatic intensity is maintained throughout the Tetralogy.

To be quite unspecific: Daniel Barenboim simply understands the inner structure of Richard Wagner´s work and conducts Wagner at quite another level than (almost) anything else he conducts and unequalled by any living conductor, as far as I am concerned.

To be quite specific: This is the finest conducted Nibelungen Ring on DVD. By a large margin.

In brief - The highlights and lowlights

The highlights:

Daniel Barenboim. Kupfer´s staging. The intense drama.

The lowlights:

No real lowlights..

The bottom line (scale of 1-5, 3=average)

The ratings are given in comparison to the other Ring DVDs available. As ever, the acting skills of the singers weigh in heavily.

John Tomlinson (Wotan): 5
Linda Finnie (Fricka): 4
Günter von Kannen (Alberich): 5

Graham Clark (Loge): 5
Matthias Hölle (Fasolt): 4
Philip Kang (Fafner): 3-4
Graham Clark (Mime): 5
Birgitta Svendén (Erda): 5
Waltraud Meier (Waltraute): 5

Poul Elming (Siegmund): 4-5
Nadine Secunde (Sieglinde): 4
Matthias Hölle (Hunding): 4
Philip Kang (Hagen): 3-4

Siegfried Jerusalem (Siegfried): 5
Anne Evans (Brünnhilde): 4
Eva-Maria Bundschuh (Gutrune): 4
Bodo Brinkmann (Gunther): 4

Harry Kupfer´s staging: 5
Daniel Barenboim: 5


Overall impression: 5

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank you for this article. I think that lasers could be affect me. I think I can't like it. But the distribution could interest me.

Unknown said...

Barenboim's is indeed the best Ring on DVD, as far as I'm concerned. However I much prefer Thielemann's Ring conducting... The last bars in Walkure, the way Barenboim emphasizes the glittering fire, just doesn't wotk for me. I find Barenboim uneven, great conducting alternating with not so great. I guess people look for different things while listening, especially to the Ring.
Tomlinson is a great Wotan (the greatest since London, Stewart?) but not in the same league with Hotter... I find Clarke, Elming, Secunde mediocre, while Kang shouldn't have attempted Hagen.
Thanks for review.

Anonymous said...

There is no doubt that the finale of Götterdämmerung is one of the great moments in all of opera. Among other things it is notable for the cascading sequence of themes that accompany the drama of dissolution and re-creation. Each theme - the Rhein maidens, Valhalla, Brünnhilde and Siegfried - collapses into a gap only to be overtaken by a new emerging theme from a different section of the orchestra in the ongoing sequence, the pinnacle of which occurs in the closing bars when Brünnhilde's glorification theme emerges for the last time, coming out of a moment of pure silence. The silence represents nothingness and, at the same time, the dynamic potential of everything. I've always felt that these gaps, and particularly the final one that contains an actual pause in the score, is crucial to both the musical and dramatic presentation of the closing minutes of this opera.

I've never seen the score so I don't know what musical notation Wagner used for this pause, but it is clear that conductors interpret it differently. Karl Böhm understood it well and to my ears, his recording on Philips stands as the best interpretation I have heard. Levine is also sensitive to this moment, but extends it slightly long. Barrenboim, surprisingly because I agree he is the finest Wagner interpreter today, and as you say understands the inner structure of Wagner's work, seems to have botched it completely. Perhaps the fault may lie with an overly enthusiastic, but slightly mistimed timpani. Anyway, it is my only complaint to an otherwise splendid performance. I would be interested to hear what others think of this particular point in the opera and see if it is as meaningful a moment for them as it is for me.

Anonymous said...

This is the production that made me like Wagner, or more precisely I got hooked by that start of Rhinegold. It's still the most amazing thing I've seen in an opera, and even if I think that the lasers didn't always work for the rest of the cycle, I still get chills when I watch the beginning and see the Rhine coming alive.

Anonymous said...

extremely useful, thanks v much..there are infinite ways to stage a ring and this is a very prime and genuine example, and as far as your ratings go: perfect!

Anonymous said...

Simply the best Ring.
Barenboim and Kupfer are perfect.
Jerusalem, Tomlinson and Clark are best in their roles. But Anne, she just is...
Incredibly fantastiiqueeeeeeeee

Anonymous said...

¿Poul Elming (Siegmund): 4-5?
My rating: ¡¡¡ 1 !!!

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