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Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Tannhauser: Pilgrims Chorus & Finale




Two productions: Bayreuth and the MET. Not picked specifically because they were "traditional" stagings but because they were the only relevant clips on Youtube. 


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Audio Discussion: The Düsseldorf Tannhauser.

Recorded earlier today as part of WQXR's "Conducting Business" series. Chaired by Naomi Lewin,  a panel consisting of:  ENO's John Berry, Parterre Box's James Jorden,  and  the Washington Post's Anne Midgette  discuss Deutsche Oper am Rhein's "controversial" Tannhauser and a certain form of Regietheater in general.

For clarification, the term "Eurotrash" is being used extensively in some debates (although oddly, few seem to be debating the impact any of this might have on  the living members, and their ancestors, of those many groups that suffered the sort of death and torture that was described in the production. Apart that is, however briefly, one of those groups itself). For europeans, and especially those in the UK  confused by the term, it appears commentators are not using it to refer to the TV program presented by Antoine de Caunes and Jean-Paul Gaultier. Instead, it  seems to be loosely applied in three different ways. For those supportive, of the Regietheater movement it appears to be used when the production in someway "goes wrong" (this is how WQXR's editorial seems to use it).  However, for those highly critical of  Regietheater, "Eurotrash" seems to be interchangeable with the term "Regie" and is used in a derogatory manner - as indeed is the abbreviated "Regie". Finally, there seems to be an another group that use the term to describe, oddly enough,  productions that have a certain visual and narrative aesthetic as defined in the movies of Andy Warhol and Russ Myer.

Note: unless there is some discussion from any group (especially Jewish groups) directly impacted by Nazi atrocities, we intend to carry no more on this story.  Please do not ask.





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Monday, 13 May 2013

New BBC TV Documentary: "Pappano’s Essential Ring Cycle"

"Honest! The fish I caught in the Rhein was this big"
Lets hope it is a little less "one-sided" and "idiosyncratic" than the last BBC Radio 3 Wagner documentary. But given that we hear Pappano is something of a Wagner "fan", and that he certainly has the background to have a clear understanding of Wagner and his work, we have much hope.

Celebrating the bicentenary of Richard Wagner’s birth, Sir Antonio Pappano presents a 60-minute documentary which seeks to unravel the genius of Wagner’s Ring Cycle, one of the towering achievements of opera and a work which has challenged producers, conductors and performers alike, since its inception.

Filmed in London, Bayreuth, Bavaria and Switzerland, Pappano presents a unique insight into the story of this masterpiece from the people who perform it. In particular, he shares his insights into the extraordinary theatre at Bayreuth, exploring what it shows us about the theatrical world Wagner wanted to create. With expert comment from artists who appeared in the recent Royal Opera House production of The Ring, including Bryn Terfel, Susan Bullock and Sir John Tomlinson, the programme includes rehearsal footage from each of the four operas and performance from the 2005-7 production staged by Keith Warner.

Friday 17 May
7.30-9.00pm
BBC FOUR
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WNO To Revive Die Meistersinger. Bryn Terfel To Return.


Given that Richard Jones’ production of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg for WNO received, rightly, unanimous praise it should probably come as little surprise that WNO would revive it at some time in the future. Well, it seems that future date is 2016. Bryn Terfel will return with the production
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WNO's Artistic Director Discuses: Lohengrin, Fascism and Wagner

In his typically erudite manner, Welsh National Opera's David Pountney discusses the process that went into the creation their new production of Lohengrin, Wagner, fascism and the recent events in Dusseldorf.

I am very excited by the prospects for our new Lohengrin, firstly because Lothar Koenigs, our excellent Music Director, is passionate about the music of this symphony for a German revolution, and secondly because, if all remains on course as we devoutly pray, it has a superb cast with a strong element, as there should be for a company like WNO, of the home grown. That is quite an advantage given that its proximity to Wagner’s actual birthday on May 22 (Lohengrin opens on May 23) means that it is in competition with an avalanche of celebratory Wagner going on all over the world.
One performance with which Lohengrin will not be in competition now is the production of Tannhäuser in Düsseldorf which has just been cancelled after protests that the Nazi/Holocaust interpretation and its execution caused some members of the audience to be physically ill. There have been some very surprising statements by the theatre management, almost seeming to apologise for the fact that their production has had a visceral effect on the audience, which up to a point you might think was the idea of a theatrical event. Perhaps a certain line has been crossed.

The story will no doubt feed the anxiety of some members of many audiences about what might await them on stage in the plethora of productions marking Wagner’s anniversary. Wagner was himself in all senses an extremist – musically, dramatically and personally – and his art invites extreme responses from fanatical adoration to hatred. He was also undoubtedly anti-Semitic, and a revolutionary nationalist, and with historical hindsight this combination obviously takes on an unsavoury whiff of Fascism, particularly as the Fascists subsequently exploited this connection. However, throughout the 19th century, nationalism meant not national aggrandisation, in the Hitler sense of “Lebensraum”, but national liberation. This left-liberal brand of nationalism seems strange to us now, but essentially the decision by Wagner to go back to German mythology for his subject matter was made with the same intent that the German speaking Smetana chose to set Czech subjects, or the Russian “Mighty Handful” were steered by their “dramaturg” Stassov to go back to Russian history and mythology. As every Welshman will understand, the assertion of identity through language and mythology is one of the essential building blocks of national consciousness, and the aim of the 1840’s revolutions, in which Wagner enthusiastically took part, was to create national unity under the banner of democracy and free speech, and wrest power away from the repressive cluster of princes, bishops and kings who ruled the many small principalities that made up 19th century Germany. 

Continue reading at his blog at WNO. Recommended
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Not The First Difficult Tannhauser Production: Meeting Venus

Edit: Given recent events, it seemed an appropriate time to delve into the archives and bring this to your attention. Originally upped a few years ago it seems to have taken an entirely new meaning - especially as this "production" also ends without a set.

We love this film and can't recommend it enough. A biting satire on the opera world: musicians, singers, conductors, producers managers and even unions (occupational and European). And yet at the same time it manages to retain a love of Wagner, Tannhauser and the entire rather messy business of both producing an opera and being human. Add to this a glorious ending that makes full use of Wagner's text and it may be the best use of any Wagner opera in the movies. While all but ignored at its premiere in 1991 it has gone on to gain something of a cult status. If you get the chance track down a copy, add it to your Christmas list, do anything but we would recommend seeing it. It has become a film we always tend to drag out at least once a year.

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The Late Jonathan Harvey discuses the creative process behind "Wagner Dream"

"I wanted Wagner to haunt the opera like a ghost, present but not full-bodied. What better way to haunt than through harmonic nuance (particularly for Wagner)? Johnathan Harvey

We thought it might be time to resurrect this fascinating Article from 2008. This is important with the up and coming premiere of the first fully staged production of this  work in the UK by WNO - alongside a new production of Lohengrin.  Of course, what makes WNO's production even more interesting is that they will not be presenting it in English as has been previously. Instead, the libretto has been re-written in German and most fascinatingly Pali (see here)

First written by late Johnathan Harvey in 2008. It documents his creative process in general but does so through the example of his opera "Wagner Dream". It was found over at Erudit.org in PDF. You will note it refers in parts to images of the score. These can be found by downloading the original PDF - freely available by following this LINK.  All images here are added by The Wagnerian and are taken from the 2007 DNO production

HOW DO I COMPOSE?

(Reflections on Wagner Dream)

Jonathan Harvey

CIRCUIT VOLUME 18 NUMERO 1

How do I compose, precisely? Let’s start by narrowing the beam of focus. We will take the first note of my new opera, Wagner Dream. Then see what happens.

It is an E flat played by the horn (fig. 1). There is an ensemble of 22 players and a cast of 17 actors and singers. The ensemble sits onstage in Pierre Audi’s pro­duction, reversing Wagner’s magical Bayreuth hidden orchestra. We see the conductor standing very near Wagner, as if they are bonded, one the embodiment of the other’s mind - the orchestra offering no illusion about magical, unprovoked sound.
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12 People Sought Medical Treatment After "Nazi" Tannhauser. Director Claims Censorship

"Why shouldn't we cast Tannhaeuser as a perpetrator, a war criminal? In my staging, Tannhaeuser is forced by members of the Wehrmacht to shoot a family. The staging is about individual guilt during the Nazi era" Kosminski'

Update. A Rheinoper spokesperson has now confirmed that it was 12 people who sought medical treatment or visited their doctor after seeing Burkhard C. Kosminski's controversial new production of Tannhauser.  Prior to this the number of people had not been mentioned. The announcement may be in part due to criticisms received by Deutsche Oper am Rhein  over artistic freedom following cancellation of the production. This included criticism from the "Friends Of Deutsche Oper am Rhein" who had said people should be able to make up their own minds about the production

At the same time, Kosminski has called the decision "a kind of censorship". It seems he had expressed a desire to enter a discourse to calm tempers and concerns on all sides. However, his proposal to stage such a discussion was ignored.

In an interview this weekend he defended his staging stating that modern audiences would or could not understand Wagner's drama.

"What interests me is the great, archaic theme of guilt" He told Der Spiegel . "Why shouldn't we cast Tannhaeuser as a perpetrator, a war criminal? In my staging, Tannhaeuser is forced by members of the Wehrmacht to shoot a family. The staging is about individual guilt during the Nazi era"

After protests and outrage because of the stark depiction of the murders of a family by performers in Nazi uniforms and a depiction  of a gaschamber, the opera announced on Wednesday,  that Tannhäuser would continue as a  concert performance. A proposal to change some scenes was rejected by Kosminski on artistic grounds

Oded Horowitz, speaking for the Northern Jewish Community welcomed the decision saying, "There is a risk that the suffering of the victims is trivialized by an inflationary use of Nazi symbolism,. You have to be very sensitive". However, he was keen to point out that the Jewish community did not not generally interfere in artistic matters. His statement goes further than that from local Jewish community leader Michael Szentei-Heise who described the production as simply "tasteless" and proving a disservice to Wagner's work.

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Sunday, 12 May 2013

New Wagner Book: Wagner's Melodies - David Trippett

Following on from our overview of Wagner related publications due this year, we are attempting to provide a more detailed overview of each book. We will start with David Trippett's intriguing Wagner's Melodies. Note, due to a publishers misprint, we originally noted that this was to be available from May 31. It seems that should have read April. It is thus now available. 

Wagner's Melodies
Aesthetics and Materialism in German Musical Identity

David Trippett, University of Cambridge
Hardback
ISBN:9781107014305
Publication date:May 2013
460pages
21 b/w illus. 17 music examples
Dimensions: 247 x 174 mm

Since the 1840s, critics have lambasted Wagner for lacking the ability to compose melody. But for him, melody was fundamental – 'music's only form'. This incongruity testifies to the surprising difficulties during the nineteenth century of conceptualizing melody. Despite its indispensable place in opera, contemporary theorists were unable even to agree on a definition for it. In Wagner's Melodies, David Trippett re-examines Wagner's central aesthetic claims, placing the composer's ideas about melody in the context of the scientific discourse of his age: from the emergence of the natural sciences and historical linguistics to sources about music's stimulation of the body and inventions for 'automatic' composition. Interweaving a rich variety of material from the history of science, music theory, music criticism, private correspondence and court reports, Trippett uncovers a new and controversial discourse that placed melody at the apex of artistic self-consciousness and generated problems of urgent dimensions for German music aesthetics.

Features

• The first study to link the emergence of the Natural Sciences and technological thinking to Wagner's aesthetics of expression
• Interweaves a wide variety of source material from the history of science, music theory, music criticism and aesthetics, including material from private correspondence, newspapers and court reports, as well as published books
• Translates a great many sources into English for the first time and uncovers a new, controversial discourse on melody within nineteenth-century German aesthetics

TABLE OF CONTENTS
:

Introduction
1.German melody
2.Melodielehre?
3.Wagner in the melodic workshop
4.Hearing voices: Wilhelmine SchröderSDevrient and the Lohengrin Recitatives.
5 Vowels, voices, and ‘original truth
6. Wagner's material expression
Excursus: Bellini's Sinnlichkeit and Wagner's Italy
Epilogue.

"Wagner sits at the centre of a veritable spider's web in this book, where the disparate threads of a practical and theoretical discourse about melody in the nineteenth century meet. Artistic creativity and the scientific spirit are spun together in a convincing image surprisingly close to discourses about music in the twenty-first century … Among recent studies about Wagner and his world, David Trippett's is one of the few with something genuinely original to say and should be read by anybody with a serious interest in the subject.'

John Deathridge, King Edward Professor of Music, King's College London

David Trippett is a University Lecturer in the Music Faculty, and a Junior Research Fellow at Christ’s College.

He is interested in elisions between sound and writing, the ways in which different technologies have influenced the recording of history, and the concomitant tension between sound as a physical object and a carrier of aesthetic ideas. His primary research focuses on nineteenth-century intellectual history, Richard Wagner, and the intersection of German aesthetic thinking with the growth of the natural sciences. Other interests include Franz Liszt and post-Classical Weimar; relations between new media, historical media, and modernism; and performance theory, including the grey area between improvisation and composition, projections of identity in performance, and theories of musical reproduction after Walter Benjamin.


For your interest; David, who has written a number of articles on Wagner, wrote part of  the programme notes for the 2009 Bard Festival Wagner and his World entitled: “The Triumphant Revolutionary”. If you click below you can read this, plus the entire programme (made available by the Fisher Center) Or should you wish you may download the entire programme as a PDF. Highly recommended. 






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Wagner on Beethoven


Brought about by listening to Wagner's piano transcript of Beethoven's 9th (below should you have access to Spotify). I think it is sometimes easy to forget the, admitted, influence Beethoven and especially the 9th had on Wagner.  All of the following is taken from Wagner's Biography "My Life" which, despite its occasional unreliability,  remains some of Wagner's clearest prose work and can be read or downloaded in full and for free by clicking this link

"Another work also exercised a great fascination over me, namely, the overture to Fidelio in E major, the introduction to which affected me deeply. I asked my sisters about Beethoven, and learned that the news of his death had just arrived. Obsessed as I still was by the terrible grief caused by Weber's death, this fresh loss, due to the decease of this great master of melody, who had only just entered my life, filled me with strange anguish, a feeling nearly akin to my childish dread of the ghostly fifths on the violin. It was now Beethoven's music that I longed to know more thoroughly; I came to Leipzig, and found his music to Egmont on the piano at my sister Louisa's. After that I tried to get hold of his sonatas. At last, at a concert at the Gewandthaus, I heard one of the master's symphonies for the first time; it was the Symphony in A major. The effect on me was indescribable. To this must be added the impression produced on me by Beethoven's features, which I saw in the lithographs that were circulated everywhere at that time, and by the fact that he was deaf, and lived a quiet secluded life. I soon conceived an image of him in my mind as a sublime and unique supernatural being, with whom none could compare. This image was associated in my brain with that of Shakespeare; in ecstatic dreams I met both of them, saw and spoke to them, and on awakening found myself bathed in tears."

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Saturday, 11 May 2013

Full Text Of "The Coming of John" - W.E.B. Du Bois

W.E.B. Du Bois
"...he sat in dreamland, and started when, after a hush, rose high and clear the music of Lohengrin’s swan. The infinite beauty of the wail lingered and swept through every muscle of his frame, and put it all a-tune. He closed his eyes and grasped the elbows of the chair, touching unwittingly the lady’s arm. And the lady drew away. A deep longing swelled in all his heart to rise with that clear music out of the dirt and dust of that low life that held him prisoned and befouled." W.E.B. Du Bois

Then as the sheen of the starlight stole over him, he thought of the gilded ceiling of that vast concert hall, heard stealing toward him the faint sweet music of the swan. Hark! was it music, or the hurry and shouting of men? Yes, surely! Clear and high the faint sweet melody rose and fluttered like a living thing, so that the very earth trembled as with the tramp of horses and murmur of angry men.

He leaned back and smiled toward the sea, whence rose the strange melody, away from the dark shadows where lay the noise of horses galloping, galloping on. With an effort he roused himself, bent forward, and looked steadily down the pathway, softly humming the "Song of the Bride,"—

"Freudig gefuhrt, ziehet dahin."


W.E.B. Du Bois
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Alex Ross "Black Wagner: The Question of Race Revisited." Full Wagner Video Lecture:


The Keynote address from Wagner World Wide 2013 - University of South Carolina.   

Alex Ross discuses a side of Wagner and his work (and indeed opera and the arts) sadly less investigated.







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K Wagner: New Bayreuth Director Will Have Limited Impact. Wants Less Interference

Festspielhaus. 1895
Katharina Wagner has said that the Bayreuth Festival's new third director (who starts on Monday), Heinz-Dieter Sense, will have limited powers in the running of the festival. "He will help us, especially in administrative formalities," said Wagner. Both she and her sister will continue to have full control of the Festival, its budget and artistic direction she continued.

If this might perhaps make the new "director" feel a little "unwanted" at the festival one cannot help but ponder what he might think as she went on, ""Previously, our father, Wolfgang Wagner was the sole director and shareholder of the Bayreuth Festival. Under him there were, for example, far less binding rules from collective agreements." This  also had advantages for productions. "If after the allotted rehearsal time, a director said "Let us repeat this scene again", it was much easier to accommodate this request." Indeed, she regrets that the festival has become less of a "family affair". This is in contrast to comments from both Nike and Gottfried Wagner.

She also went on to note that both she and Eva Wagner-Pasquier, had not confirmed that they would be staying on at the festival after their contracts expire in 2015. Whether this is the case will depend on the outcome of ongoing negotiations. One important part to this seems to be that both Wagner's are requesting much more funding for the festival to compensate for a growing wage bill. One also assumes it may depend on whether  they are successful in their re-applications for the job.
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"Me And My Shadow" Richard Wagner In Germany

A five part article from SPIEGEL ONLINE.

Wagner's Dark Shadow: Can We Separate the Man from His Works?

Born 200 years ago, Germany's most controversial composer's music is cherished around the world, though it will always be clouded by his anti-Semitism and posthumous association with Adolf Hitler. Richard Wagner's legacy prompts the question: Can Germans enjoy any part of their history in a carefree way? 



Stephan Balkenhol is not deeply moved, overwhelmed or delighted. He doesn't brood over the myth and the evil. It doesn't bother him and he isn't disgusted. He rolls a cigarette, gets up, digs around in his record cabinet and pulls out an old "Tannhäuser" by Richard Wagner, a Hungarian recording he bought at a flee market. He puts on the record, and the somewhat crackling music of the prelude begins to play. Balkenhol sits down again and smokes as slowly as he speaks. He doesn't mention the music, and he still doesn't feel deeply moved, overwhelmed or delighted. For him, it's just music.

ANZEIGEThat makes Balkenhol, 56, an exception, an absolute one among those who concern themselves with Wagner. Balkenhol remains unruffled. He drops two steaks into a pan, and as they sizzle, "Tannhäuser" fades into the background.

Balkenhol is a sculptor who was commissioned to create a sculpture of Wagner. He has until May 22, the composer's 200th birthday, when the new monument will be unveiled in Wagner's native Leipzig. This is the year of Wagner, but Balkenhol is keeping his cool. He isn't worried about creating a realistic likeness of the composer, with his distinctive face, high forehead, large nose and strong chin. Wagner was somewhat ugly, and Balkenhol won't try to portray him any differently.

The Composer Who Influenced Hitler

He won't need a great deal of bronze. Wagner was 1.66 meters (5'3") tall, and Balkenhol doesn't intend to make the statue much taller. He wants to give the sculpture a human dimension, avoiding exaggeration and pathos: a short man on a pedestal. But that wouldn't have been enough, because it would have belied Wagner's importance, so Balkenhol is placing an enormous shadow behind the sculpture. People can interpret it as they wish, says Balkenhol: as a symbol of a work that is larger than the man who created it, or as the dark shadow Wagner still casts today.

Music and the Holocaust come together in that shadow: one of the most beautiful things created by man, and one of the worst things human beings have ever done. Wagner, the mad genius, was more than a composer. He also influenced Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich, even though he was already dead when the 12-year-old Hitler heard his music live for the first time, when he attended a production of "Lohengrin" in the Austrian city of Linz in 1901. Describing the experience, during which he stood in a standing-room only section of the theater, Hitler wrote: "I was captivated immediately."

Many others feel the same way. They listen to Wagner and are captivated, overwhelmed, smitten and delighted. Nike Wagner, the composer's great-granddaughter, puts the question that this raises in these terms: "Should we allow ourselves to listen to his works with pleasure, even though we know that he was an anti-Semite?" There's a bigger issue behind this question: Can Germans enjoy any part of their history in a carefree way?

The Nazi years lie like a bolt over the memory of a good Germany, of the composers, poets and philosophers who gave the world so much beauty and enlightenment in the 18th and 19th centuries: Kant, Hegel, Goethe, Schiller, Beethoven, Wagner and the Romantics. Nevertheless, the Germans elected a man like Hitler and, under his leadership, unleashed an inferno. In only a few years, a nation of culture was turned into one of modern barbarians. Is it not also possible that Germany's illustrious past in fact led it irrevocably towards the rise of the Nazis? Could the philosophical abstraction, artistic elation and yearning for collective salvation that drove the country also have contributed to its ultimate derailing into the kind of mania that defined the years of National Socialism? After all, it wasn't just the dull masses that followed the Führer. Members of the cultural elite were also on their knees.

Some were later shunned as a result, at least temporarily, like writer Ernst Jünger, poet Gottfried Benn and philosopher Martin Heidegger. But the situation is more complicated with Wagner, because he wasn't even alive during the Nazi years. Nevertheless, Hitler was able to learn from him. There was a bit of Wagner in Hitler, which is why the fascist leader also figures prominently in our memory of the composer.

It also explains why the shadow over the composer's legacy is so big. Any discussion of Wagner is also a discussion of denatured history, and of the inability of Germans to fully appreciate themselves and the beautiful, noble sides of their own history. Anyone who studies Wagner can perceive two strong forces, the light force of music and the dark force of the Nazi era. There are many people who cannot and do not wish to ignore this effect. They are at the mercy of Wagner's power. These are the types of people at issue here, people whose lives have fallen under Wagner's spell and who don't know what to make of their fascination.

Hitler as Wagner's CreationJournalist Joachim Köhler, 60, described the dark side of Wagner in an especially drastic manner in his 1997 book "Wagner's Hitler -- The Prophet and His Disciple." In the 500-page work, published in German, Köhler portrays Hitler as Wagner's creation. When Hitler heard the opera "Rienzi," Köhler writes, quoting the Nazi leader, it occurred to him for the first time that he too could become a tribune of the people or a politician.

Wagner's hateful essay "Judaism in Music" offered Hitler an idea of how far one could go with anti-Semitism. The composer invokes the downfall of the Jews. Köhler detected plenty of anti-Semitism in Wagner's operas. Characters like Mime in "Siegfried" and Kundry in "Parsifal," he argued, are evil caricatures of the supposedly inferior Jews. Köhler felt that "Parsifal" anticipated the racial theories of the Nazis, quoting propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels as saying: "Richard Wagner taught us what the Jew is."

In the 1920s, Wagner's daughter-in-law Winifred invited the young Hitler to attend the Bayreuth Festival on the Green Hill in the Bavarian city of Bayreuth. When he was in prison writing "Mein Kampf," she sent him ink, pencils and erasers. According to Köhler's interpretation in 1997, the Green Hill was a fortress of evil and Wagner the forefather of the Holocaust.

Continue Reading
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Wagner Journal: New Issue Published


Sorry, a little late mentioning this. If you have not already, you can obtain a trial copy by visiting the Journals website. See below.

The March 2013 issue (vol.7, no.1), now available, contains the following feature articles:

• 'Heroic Gestures and Family Values in Wagner's Ring' by Arnold Whittall

• 'The Kiss of the Dragon-slayer' by Barry Emslie

• 'Wieland Wagner's Intellectual Path' by Ingrid Kapsamer

plus reviews of:

Keith Warner's Ring at Covent Garden

DVD recordings of Lohengrin by Wolfgang Weber in Vienna and Hans Neuenfels at Bayreuth

Marek Janowski's new recording of Tristan und Isolde and his earlier Ring, plus Ring highlights and Liszt Wagner paraphrases from Asher Fisch

Gary Kahn's The Power of the Ring reviewed by David Trippett, David Conway's Jewry in Music reviewed by Jonas Karlsson, Joseph Horowitz's Moral Fire: Music Portraits from America's Fin de Siècle reviewed by Alexander H. Shapiro and Eva Rieger's biography of Friedelind Wagner reviewed by Tim Blanning

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Friday, 10 May 2013

Boston: Ring Cycle Highlights Plus Q&A with Greer Grimsley


 Bicentennial concert and Q&A with
bass-baritone Greer Grimsley
Featuring soprano Joanna Porackova,
contralto Marion Dry, heldentenor Alan Schneider,
French hornist Kevin Owen and pianist Jeffrey Brody
Saturday, May 11, 2013, 2:00 p.m.
Old South Church, 645 Boylston St., Boston
 


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Thursday, 9 May 2013

Remember Alberich: Robert Presley (6th May 1957 - 10th April 2013)


REMEMBER ALBERICH?

Fulham Opera’s Alberich, Robert Presley died suddenly on 10th April 2013 aged 55

A tribute by Ian Wilson-Pope

I first met Robert Presley whilst working as Stage Manager for New Sussex Opera’s production of Falstaff in April 2004. Robert was playing Ford. He had very recently moved to the UK from the USA, having been a member of the chorus at San Francisco Opera for some years. I remember his vibrancy and charisma both on and off stage. He immediately became someone I would never forget.

He could seem, until you got to know him better, somewhat prickly, but he was soft-hearted and very warm underneath. A mutual colleague described him as being “like a Ferrero Rocher”: hard and brittle on the outside, but soft and chewy underneath. He just didn’t want you to know this.

Born on 6th May 1957 in the Gulf Coast of Alabama, he studied at the University of Southern Mississippi and Kent State University of Ohio. His first taste of the operatic life was as Betto di Signa in Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi for Mississippi Opera at the age of nineteen.

He appeared with several companies in the USA in many roles including title role Rigoletto, Germont La Traviata, Conte di Luna Il Trovatore, Miller Luisa Miller, Iago Otello, Figaro and Bartolo The Barber of Seville, Magnifico La Cenerentola, Enrico Lucia di Lammermoor, Ko-ko The Mikado, Ezio Attila, Silvio Pagliacci, the title role in John Phillip Sousa’s El Capitan, and he created the role of the Grandfather in American composer Carla Lucero’s opera Wuarnos. He worked with San Francisco Opera’s education/outreach programme and initiated a similar programme with the Nevada Opera in Reno.

He performed in concerts in England, Italy, Lebanon, the USA, and the Larnaca International Music Festival in Cyprus. He covered the role of Rigoletto for Castleward Opera of Belfast in 2004, and that year made his acclaimed UK opera debut as Ford Falstaff with New Sussex Opera.

He then toured England and Wales with Garden Opera in 2005 as Magnifico La Cenerentola, and sang with that company on its third annual tour to Kenya in March 2006. He then made his debut at the Queen Elizabeth Hall as soloist in Beethoven’s 9th Symphony that same year, and sang the role of Ashmodeus in New Sussex Opera’s production of Jonathan Dove’s Tobias and the Angel. Robert returned to Castleward Opera in June 2007 for several operatic concerts, one of which was recorded for broadcast by BBC Radio Ulster. In 2008 he sang the Voice of Neptune Idomeneo for New Sussex Opera, Germont La Traviata for Longborough Festival Opera, Sharpless Madama Butterfly for Opera Brava, and Ford Falstaff for Opera Project.

Other engagements included the role of Beckmesser in a concert performance of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, (Act III), for The Wagner Society; the Beethoven 9th Symphony for Liverpool’s Cornerstone Music Festival; and Germont La Traviata for Riverside Opera, a role he repeated for Opéra de Baugé in July/August 2009. Later he sang the title role in Macbeth for English Opera Singers, and Don Alfonso Così fan tutte for English Chamber Opera. In the summer of 2010 he returned to Baugé for the title role in Rigoletto, where he met Ben Woodward, Fulham Opera’s Artistic and Musical Director. Robert then went on to sing Amonasro Aida for Riverside Opera in March 2011, and Tonio Pagliacci and Germont La Traviata for Garden Opera.

Later that year he sang his first Alberich in Das Rheingold with the newly-formed Fulham Opera, which is where I caught up with him again. He then returned to New Sussex Opera for Ramon in Gounod’s rarity Mireille at London’s Cadogan Hall. Last year he sang the title role in Gianni Schicchi and Scarpia Tosca for Fulham Opera, as well as co-directing Fulham Opera’s Die Walküre, and Bartolo in Barber of Seville with The Opera Project. Robert was to have sung Alberich throughout Fulham Opera’s on-going Der Ring des Nibelungen during 2013/14, and he was due to cover the Siegfried Alberich at Longborough this summer, as well as appearing with me as a Vassal in Götterdämmerung. His last performances for Fulham Opera were as Alberich in Siegfried which were critically acclaimed in the April 2013 issue of Wagner News. Ben Woodward (Artistic Director at Fulham Opera) always said that the initial idea to do Das Rheingold was Robert’s. I rather feel it was both of them! Whose idea it was doesn’t matter; I for one am very grateful that they both cast me to be their Wotan.

A few days before his death we had a board meeting to discuss the way forward for Fulham Opera. He was full of life, and he wanted to organise a concert to celebrate the other operatic bicentennial this year, for Verdi .He had produced a similar concert in the USA called “Verdiana”, and with witty narration a là Anna Russell between items, wanted Fulham Opera to “go completely to pieces” in September in celebration. Indeed we shall, as a special tribute to him.

I shall be forever grateful for his support and encouragement of me as Wotan at Fulham Opera. We always had fun during rehearsals, and his love and knowledge of Wagner, Verdi and of course Anna Russell brightened our days immensely. I know that everyone who met and worked with Robert will miss him tremendously, but I think that he will be smiling, looking down on us as we “all go completely to pieces” at his sudden and untimely passing. I, for one, will always remember Alberich!

A shorter version of this tribute will appear in the July edition of “Wagner News"
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Wednesday, 8 May 2013

Nike Wagner May Not Have Bayreuth But She Does Have Bonn


Nike Wagner, is to take over the Beethovenfest in Bonn beginning in 2014.  Although it is still not officially confirmed it does seem likely considering she is the only candidate for the job - as chosen by the selection committee. She will be leaving the Weimar Arts Festival this year.

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Deutsche Oper am Rhein Cancel "Nazi" Tannhauser - for "Medical Reasons"

Deutsche Oper am Rhein have decided to cancel Burkhard C. Kosminski's "controversial" production of Tannhauser. Instead, remaining dates will be filled with concert performances of Wagner's story of redemption.

According to  Deutsche Oper am Rhein, although they knew that the production would be "controversial" they did not expect the extreme reactions that it apparently induced. This included people seeking medical treatment for "psychological and physical stress".

Before cancelling, they asked  Kosminski if he would allow alterations to the production so that it would be, we assume,  "toned down" and made "less offensive".  However, Kosminski refused on artistic grounds.

We believe this may be the first time this has happened since the introduction of Nazi themes into Wagner's work became popular with a number of  opera directors.

Strangely, and we would suspect completely unknown to most opera directors including Kosminski , this was a trend that was started by the Nazis themselves as part of a program of  appropriating the greatest artists of the "western world" to give intellectual credibility and respectability to the ideology that underpinned the Third Reich. This included not only Wagner and his work, but Mozart, Beethoven, Michelangelo, Leonardo and Shakespeare. Popular examples of this could be found in  the daily "newspaper" dedicated to this cause , the Völkischer Beobachter.  For example, it published a series of articles using quotations from Henry IV Part One, Love’s Labour’s Lost and Two Gentlemen of Verona to provide "evidence"of  the playwright’s antisemitic ideology and maintained this implied support of their own twisted agenda.

In the the case of Tannhauser, things become even more complicated as it was the favourite opera  of Theodor Herzl - father of modern political Zionism and in effect the foundation of the State of Israel.

Readers interested in the manner that the Nazi propaganda machine worked in this regard might wish to check out  the very well written: Inhumanities: Nazi Interpretations of Western Culture by David B. Dennis. To pursue the links between Tannhauser and Herzl you might want to read: A Knight at the Opera: Heine, Wagner, Herzl, Peretz and the Legacy of Der Tannhäuser by Leah Garrett 
 
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Professor Richard Gombrich discusses the Pali Translation for Wagner Dream


Unlike previous productions of Jonathan Harvey’s Wagner Dream,  WNO's production this year will feature Wagner, Cosima, and other members of his circle singing in German rather than English while the many Buddhist characters, including the Buddha, will sing in Pali.
A 2,000 year old language that the Buddha would have spoken will feature in Welsh National Opera’s British staged première of Jonathan Harvey’s Wagner Dream this summer. The ancient Indian language of Pali is the best surviving clue as to how people spoke in the Buddha’s day and the oldest source for his words but few in the modern world are able to speak it.

The Buddha lived in North East India in the 5th century BC. The religion and culture around him were dominated by brahmins, a hereditary class of male priests. The language of their texts and rituals was Sanskrit, which means ‘elaborated language’. The language of daily life and of common people was derived from Sanskrit, but it was much simpler. No-one wrote anything down in these days and so there is no exact record of that language, but it is known that Pali was very close to it. In order to be widely understood the Buddha refused to use Sanskrit and subsequently the ‘Pali Canon’, which contains the earliest records of his sermons and sayings, has been preserved in Pali for over two thousand years.

WNO’s Head of Music, Russell Moreton has worked closely with Professor Richard Gombrich, Founder-President of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies, to translate the opera from the original English libretto into Pali.

However, this wasn’t always a straightforward task as Professor Gombrich explains:

“Translating the English libretto into Pali brought some amusing challenges. First, there are few short words in Pali, so in some places we had to split the musical notes in order for them to fit. Then, the English text contains howlers: guns in ancient India, for example, and pubs, and tea – none of which existed there then. So we had to make changes. I also felt obliged to insert, very briefly, some real Buddhist doctrine when the Buddha himself is speaking.”

In the opera, Wagner and his circle will speak and sing in German while the Buddhist characters will sing in Pali. David Pountney says this was something the composer was keen to see happen:

“In discussing this with Jonathan Harvey before his death, we identified our aim as seeking to enhance and clarify the cultural dialogue which is the centrepiece of this opera. This brings together a giant of the Western musical tradition, Richard Wagner, with ideas and narrative elements from the Buddhist tradition. We felt that the impact of this cultural dialogue would be enhanced by letting each of these two worlds speak in its own language rather than being confused by both being rendered in a third language, English.”

Professor Gombrich says the study of the language is in crisis worldwide:

“It is what our government labels a ‘minority subject’, so when the cuts come, as they constantly do, it is first for the chop. Neither Oxford nor Cambridge now has a post in Pali, and no British university offers a degree devoted to the subject. The situation in other Western countries is as bad or even worse, as all governments agree that they should not subsidise the study of a subject which brings no direct economic benefit.

“Those Buddhists, in Sri Lanka and parts of South East Asia, who use Pali as their scriptural language often know some Pali texts by heart, but hardly ever understand the language thoroughly. I teach it in classes all over the world, but how much can one person do? At the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies we are trying to raise funds to create a permanent lectureship in Pali, so that there will still be a few people in the world who can read the Buddha’s message in the original. Please go to our website www.ocbs.org and contribute anything you can to keep this great tradition alive.”

The first performance of Wagner Dream is on Thursday 6 June at Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff with further performances in Cardiff and Birmingham.

For More about WNO's Wagner Dream or their new production of Lohengrin please visit: WNO


As an aside, for anyone interested in reading modern translations of the so called Pali Cannon from the Theravada Buddhist, tradition, the finest we have ever found comes from the publisher Wisdom Publications. These appear not only to be "faithful" but remove many of the "repetitions" in the original that make many translations somewhat boring to read . (The originals contain so many repetitions because they were told or "chanted" and not written down. Repetition of important "texts" is common where there is no written language as they aid clear memorization).  You could start with any of the volumes but perhaps the best introduction would be  "In the Buddha's Words: An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Cannon" Other volumes below. Note, this will take you to Amazon, it goes without saying we recommended should you be interested to "shop around". We are sure your local independent book shop could order them in for you if you so wished.





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Ivan Hewett, talks with Daniel Barenboim about Proms 2013

Talking about Wagner with Daniel Barenboim is fascinating, but you have to be quick on your feet. His thoughts come so fast it’s hard to get a word in edgeways. “The thing about Wagner is we’re always wrong about him, because he always embraces opposites,” he says, àpropos nothing in particular – the thought just pops into his head. “There are things in his operas which viewed one way are naturalistic, and viewed another way are symbolic, but the problem is you can’t represent both views on stage at once.”

I’m with Barenboim in the director’s office at the Schiller Theatre in Berlin, the temporary home of the opera company Barenboim has led for the past 21 years, the Berlin Staatsoper. It’s the morning after a performance of Götterdämmerung, the final part of the company’s new production of the four-part epic that makes up Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung. This summer, Wagner fans in Britain can savour the production when Barenboim brings his company to the Proms, for the first complete Ring cycle in a single season.

If Barenboim is tired after conducting that five-hour marathon, he’s not showing it. Wagner fires him up in a special way, as if between these two short, forceful men there’s a special affinity. Barenboim’s involvement with Wagner goes back more than 30 years, to a production of Tristan and Isolde on the other side of town, at the Deutsche Oper. “I prepared for that like a military campaign,” he laughs. “I immersed myself in Liszt and then Berlioz and then Bruckner, so I could encircle Wagner from every angle.”

After that Barenboim became a favourite at Wagner’s own theatre in Bayreuth, where, among other productions, Barenboim worked on a now-legendary Ring with Harry Kupfer. He’s conducted five productions of Tristan and Isolde, and recorded all Wagner’s major works with stellar casts. Wagner has become a kind of crusade for him, even to the extent of causing a scandal back in 2001. That was the year he conducted the Tristan prelude in Israel, where Wagner’s music is informally banned.

Barenboim is keen to put the record straight about that. “I and the Staatsoper were invited by the Israel Festival to perform the first act of the Valkyrie [the second part of the Ring]. Then at the last minute the Israeli Ministry of Education found out and threatened to withdraw the festival’s entire subsidy. I didn’t want to cancel, so we went and played a different programme of Schumann and Stravinsky. Then I thought, let’s at least try to play something of Wagner as an encore, if the audience agrees, which they did. But then there was a scandal…” He sighs at the memory.

Continue Reading at: The Telegraph
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Tuesday, 7 May 2013

Salzburg Parsifal to get DVD release, followed by Thielemann Ring Cycle



This year Christian Thielemann and the Dresden Staatskapelle saved the day at the Salzburg Easter Festival after Simon Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic decided another location was more to their taste. And so it was that Thielemann and the Dresden Staatskapelle took over musical duties for a production of Parsifal, originally designed with another conductor and orchestra in mind. And all to fine reviews - at least for the music.

However, should you have not been able to make it to Salzburg this year you will still able to see and hear it in your living room. It seems the production was captured on DVD by Deutsche Grammophon and will see a release at the end of May.



But wait. This is not the only Thielemann Wagner that you can buy this year, as his reading of Wagner’s complete Ring Cycle at the Wiener Staatsoper in 2011 is  being released in June as a box set containing 14 CDs  plus 2 DVDs featuring four introductory films to each opera. 


Das Rheingold:

Albert Dohmen (Wotan), Markus Eiche (Donner), Herbert Lippert (Froh), Adrian Eröd (Loge), Janina Baechle (Fricka), Alexandra Reinprecht (Freia), Anna Larsson (Erda), Tomasz Konieczny (Alberich), Wolfgang Schmidt (Mime)

Die Walküre:

Christopher Ventris (Siegmund), Eric Halfvarson (Hunding), Albert Dohmen (Wotan), Waltraud Meier (Sieglinde), Katarina Dalayman (Brünnhilde), Janina Baechle (Fricka)

Siegfried:

Stephen Gould (Siegfried), Linda Watson (Brünnhilde), Albert Dohmen (Der Wanderer), Tomasz Konieczny (Alberich), Anna Larsson (Erda), Wolfgang Schmidt (Mime), Ain Anger (Fafner) und Chen Reiss (Stimme des Waldvogels)

Götterdämmerung:

Stephen Gould (Siegfried), Markus Eiche (Gunther), Eric Halfvarson (Hagen), Linda Watson (Brünnhilde) Caroline Wenborne (Gutrune), Janina Baechle (Waltraute)


The 4 documentary films were directed by Eric Schulz, complementing the audio recordings, providing an introduction, commentary and analysis by experts, including conductor Christian Thielemann. They will also be broadcast by the German/Austrian TV channel 3Sat in April – one feature per week starting on 4th April.

Booklet contains synopses in German, English and French and libretti in German and English.
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Gottfried Wagner Calls For A New Gotterdammerung

Gottfried Wagner calls for a different kind of Gotterdammerung

After the premiere of Bayreuth's new Tannhauser, Nike Wagner suggested that the end of the Wagner family's time as directors at the festival was near. Now, nearly two years later, Gottfried Wagner, great-grandson of Richard Wagner, brother of the festival head Eva Wagner-Pasquier and half brother of Katharina Wagner has said the same-thing in an interview with Focus.

Never shy about being critical of Bayreuth or indeed his great-grandfather, Gottfried believes that someone else rather than a Wagner - an experienced opera director he suggests - should take over. This one person would then be assisted by an advisory committee.
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Monday, 6 May 2013

MET/Lepage Ring: Revival Cancelled As "The Planks" Are Retired?

Even the Gods can be made "to walk the plank"
The normally accurate, as far as MET rumors are concerned, La Cieca has published that the MET/Lepage Ring will not be revived for three cycles in 2016/17 as originally thought. Indeed, according to "MET insiders" the Lepage Ring is unlikely to see the light of day anytime in the future.No obvious reason is being given as yet. However, given the sudden slash in ticket prices to this season's cycle, the reason may be closely related to simple economics. Especially as much of the arts is struggling in the present financial climate. Perhaps not even the MET is immune.

This of course begs the question as to what will replace it. Another, new Ring production? According to La Cieca this is not the case - and given the timescales this should probably come as little surprise. Instead, the now empty slots in the 2016/17 season will be filled with "the company’s current production of Der Fliegende Holländer (which) will return for five performances, featuring Michael Volle, Christine Goerke and Jay Hunter Morris". The rest of the Rings slot will be filled with a new production of Rusalka.

All of which means, if this is true,  that if you live in or near New York it may be a long time before you see another Ring Cycle locally.


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Kosminski's "Nazi" Tannhauser leads to audience walkouts and protests from Jewish Community

Burkhard C. Kosminski's new production of Tannhauser for the Deutsche Oper am Rhein has lead to booing, audience members walking out (some loudly slamming theatre doors as they left) and complaints from the local Jewish community.

The protest's came as it was found that Kosminski's first opera production is set during the Third Reich and is filled with Nazi and Holocaust imagery. This includes: Third Reich uniforms, Swastikas and what appears to be a gas chamber. For example, Venus is found dressed as an SS Officer with Tannhauser as one of her SS thugs - forced to murder a family

However, protests were not only from opera goers, as local Jewish community leader Michael Szentei-Heise was equally disturbed by the production calling it "tasteless". "Wagner had indeed been a fervent anti-Semite" he noted but went on to say, that Wagner's antisemitism was not to be found in the music or libretto and thus the production did the composer a disservice. "Wagner had nothing to do with the Holocaust" he told Die Zeit. He also noted that as head of the Jewish community in Dusseldorf  "It strikes me as odd to have to defend Wagner".

Images from the production can be found below.












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Saturday, 4 May 2013

"Der Ring des Nibelungen - Explorations". 4 CD Set Exploring The Ring Cycle

To mark the worldwide bicentenary celebrations of Wagner’s birth, a set of four CDs has been recorded for the Decca label by Australian Wagner scholar, author and lecturer Peter Bassett, as an introduction to and commentary on Richard Wagner’s great cycle of four music dramas: Der Ring des Nibelungen. The recording uses extensive musical excerpts from the famous Decca recording featuring the Vienna Philharmonic conducted by Sir Georg Solti – a recording voted recently by BBC Music magazine as the greatest classical recording ever made. The set is distinguished from the fine introduction to the system of leitmotifs recorded by Deryck Cooke in 1967 by addressing Wagner’s magnum opus more broadly through its narrative, intellectual and aesthetic qualities. Its tone is engaging and directed at the general but discerning listener. Each CD in the set is devoted to each of the four operas that forms this tetralogy.

Peter Bassett has been speaking and writing about Wagner’s works for more than four decades, and is well known to audiences of the Ring cycles performed in Adelaide in 1998 and 2004 when, on each occasion, he gave extended pre-performance talks attracting some 6,000 people. Peter still receives requests to record those talks. His frequent speaking engagements in Australia and New Zealand as well as in Europe and the United States have brought him to the attention of wider audiences. Since 2001 he has led 25 opera tours on five continents. He has published five books on Wagner’s works, the most recent being a large format, full-colour volume to commemorate the bicentenary in 2013 of the births of both Wagner and Verdi.

The celebrated Solti recording of the Ring is key to this project, one especially chosen by Peter to reflect his talks on the Ring: 'I can truthfully say that in forty years of “Ring”-going, no performance has made a greater impression on me than Solti’s famous studio recording for Decca. I count it amongst the most powerful artistic influences of my life.'

Scheduled for release on 17 June 2013

Der Ring des Nibelungen
Festival stage play for three days and a preliminary evening ∙ Libretto by the composer
EXPLORATIONS
Devised, presented and produced by Peter Bassett
CD 1 Das Rheingold
CD 2 Die Walküre
CD 3 Siegfried
CD 4 Götterdämmerung
Peter Bassett, speaker
with musical illustrations from ‘Der Ring des Nibelungen’
Wiener Philharmoniker
Sir Georg Solti

Click Here To Visit Peter's Website
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Stephen Moss in discussion with Nina Stemme

Nina Stemme is one of those artists who, if you are having difficulty submitting yourself to the multiple absurdities of opera, makes you believe in the artform afresh. I am jetlagged when I see the Swedish soprano in Tristan und Isolde at the Houston Grand Opera, but she is riveting, that concluding Liebestod thrilling and transcendent. In July she will sing Brünnhilde in the first-ever complete Ring cycle at the Proms, conducted by Daniel Barenboim. Kill for a ticket.

We meet the morning after her performance, in the plush, gated apartment block that is her temporary home. She is the least diva-ish diva imaginable – fetches me a coffee, talks for two hours when we had agreed one, seems to forgive me when I keep getting facts about her career wrong. As the outstanding Isolde and now Brünnhilde of her generation – she has already conquered the US in the latter role and this month sings her first complete European Ring in Vienna – she could swagger and drip with jewellery. In fact, she is friendly, approachable and wearing a sensible linen dress.

"One of my daughters calls me a diva at home sometimes," she says, "and I can be one on stage if I have to be. That's enough for me. Divas have a reputation for being quite complicated, and we can't really afford that in our operatic world. I want this artform to develop."

Stemme tells me she is exhausted but still full of adrenalin after the previous day's performance. She makes the epic role of Isolde look straightforward, but don't be deceived. "It has taken 10 years to get there," she says. "My aim is to make it seem effortless. You learn how to tackle these parts. At the moment it feels, knock on wood, almost easy. Almost. Though you still wonder what you bring across the pit to the audience. I am never sure, never secure. I am always questioning myself – could it be better? Yes, it could. All it can get is better for each performance, even if it's a tiny detail."

She is 50 this month and at her peak as a dramatic soprano. Before 2000 she had performed mainly lyric roles, but she then sang Senta in The Flying Dutchman at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, and was surprised by the results. "I thought Senta was on the limits of what I could sing, but with that production my voice developed and it has kept on developing."

Three years later she triumphed as Isolde at Glyndebourne, giving a performance the Guardian's Tim Ashley described as "ravishing". "An Isolde can be sung by a lyric dramatic soprano," she says, "and that's exactly what I was at that time," adding that Glyndebourne was perfect because it was a relatively small house with a very good orchestra. Bad orchestras, she explains, tend to overcompensate by playing too loud, and you have to fight against them. "I didn't have a typical big dramatic voice then, but my voice grew a couple of years after that."

Continue Reading at: The Guardian
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