Tuesday 7 January 2020

WAGNER'S DIE WALKÜRE / Orchestra of the Music Makers / Review




WAGNER’S DIE WALKÜRE
Soloists with Orchestra of the Music Makers
Esplanade Concert Hall
Sunday (5 January 2020)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 7 January 2019 with the title "Wagner's Valkyrie a long but enjoyable ride".

Richard Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung has finally arrived in Singapore. The brains behind this ambitious undertaking were however neither Singapore Lyric Opera nor Singapore Symphony Orchestra, but the 12-year-old volunteer outfit, Orchestra of the Music Makers (OMM) and its music director Chan Tze Law. Given OMM’s track record of performing Mahler symphonies and mounting semi-staged productions of Humperdinck’s Hansel und Gretel and Bernstein’s Mass, the Ring Cycle seemed inevitable, a matter of when and not if.


Die Walküre (The Valkyrie) is the second opera of the four-part cycle, and arguably its most familiar instalment. Comprising three acts sung in German and running close to six hours (inclusive of two long intermissions), this might seem a test of endurance for performers and audience alike, but its minutes passed eventfully and seemingly effortlessly.

There were two long intermissions of
30 and 90 minutes between the acts, 
and the audience was called to return when
OMM brass played the Valkyrie theme. 

Put this down to Wagner’s genius in building up dramatic edifices and his spectacular music, but this semi-staged effort directed by Edith Podesta and conducted by Chan had many plusses to its advantage. Employing a full symphony orchestra (with the luxury of four harps) rather than a mere pit band meant that the rich and opulent orchestration was heard in its full glory.

All the singers were in costume, with their facial expressions projected on a large screen, so they had to be great actors as well. Onscreen English transliterations also helped with following the plot and all its intrigues. The set design was simple but excellent, with a long dinner table placed centrestage for Act I, and two flights of stairs behind the orchestra leading skyward to Valhalla.   


The main cast of six singers has a wealth of experience in Wagner, with the tender chemistry between star-crossed and incestuous lovers Siegmund (tenor Bryan Register) and Sieglinde (soprano Lee Bisset) being immediately palpable. Just as apparent were their antagonism to Hunding (bass-baritone Daniel Sumegi), Sieglinde’s menacing and seething husband. The First Act’s love duet was literally a runaway success.


Similarly, one could easily sense the prickles between the celestials Wotan (baritone Warwick Fyfe) and Fricka (mezzo-soprano Caitlin Hulcup). How conflicted the hen-pecked Wotan became, caught between love for his earthly offspring and heavenly responsibilities, made him the most human character of this melodrama. His nearly fraying voice in Wotan’s Farewell and Magic Fire Music at the opera’s end attested to a genuine world-weariness.

Brünnhilde (5th from right)
and her sisters.

The eponymous Valkyrie was Brünnhilde (soprano Alwyn Mellor), a stunning presence who elicited much sympathy for her self-assurance and independent mindedness. Her eight sisters, including Singaporean singers Janani Sridhar and Jade Tan Shi Yu, shone in Act 3’s famous Ride of the Valkyries, possibly the cycle’s most iconic and recognisable sequence. There were no flying horses but costumes resembling jedi knights with fascist leather jackboots did the trick.


Given Walküre’s good box office showing and the tumultuous applause that greeted it, more Wagner operas are expected. OMM has already announced Das Rheingold, the first Ring cycle opera, for August 2021. One can hardly wait.



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