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In conversation with Jonas Kaufmann

Written By The Wagnerian on Wednesday, 16 January 2013 | 11:30:00 am

Jonas Kaufmann on his Wagner album

In conversation with Thomas Voigt

What images do you associate with Richard Wagner’s music?

Most vividly of all, an intimate scene from my childhood: my grandfather sitting at the piano and playing Wagner. He was a true Wagnerian, who had vocal scores of all Wagner’s operas, and when he played from them he sang all the parts, from Hagen to Brünnhilde. As we lived in the same house, Wagner’s music was more or less part of my daily routine. I grew up with this music. I was fascinated by leafing through my grandfather’s vocal scores. These were lovingly produced editions, beautifully illustrated with old stage designs and a summary of the leitmotifs. Getting to know the magic of Wagner’s music this way was fun. The path from there to my first Wagner performance as a soloist, of course, was a long one, but my enthusiasm hasn’t diminished over all the years. On the contrary, the more often I’m involved with this music, the more I love it.
Wagner partly related these texts by Mathilde Wesendonck to himself, especially the following lines from “Im Treibhaus”: 
"Well I know, poor plant,
we share the same fate:
though bathed in light and splendour,
our home is not here! " 
That is precisely Wagner’s situation in his Swiss exile. Objectively things were going well for him, yet he didn’t feel at home. Doesn’t that lend itself to being sung by a man?

What were your criteria in choosing the pieces for this Wagner album?

The basic idea was to present a survey of Wagner’s development as a composer, beginning with Die Feen. This appealed to me because it was the first Wagner opera I performed in, as the youngest member of an additional chorus at Munich’s Gärtnerplatz Theatre. But after listening to Die Feen again, I scrapped that idea and decided to start with Rienzi.

From Rienzi to Siegfried — that’s a long distance, not just in Wagner’s composing career but also in a singer’s development.

Quite true. It spans an incredible range of styles. Rienzi’s prayer is constructed like a classical Italian aria — a singer needs to work out a conception of this music in order to bring it to life. Siegfried’s music is in a completely different style, like recitative throughout: instead of arioso and legato, mainly parlando. It has to sound as natural as spoken language, which is not be confused with what George Bernard Shaw branded the “Bayreuth bark”. This parlando must always emerge from the music, as though there were a single giant legato slur over the text. That doesn’t reveal itself at first glance. You really have to come to grips with the piece first.

Strictly speaking, the album contains only two pieces that you’ve already sung live: the “Sword Monologue” from Die Walküre and “Am stillen Herd” from Die Meistersinger.

Everything else was new territory for me — even the “Grail Narration” from Lohengrin, because we’ve recorded the complete version with two stanzas. There’s a beautiful old record of it with Franz Völker from 1936. Although I can understand why Wagner cut the second stanza at the last moment — he was apparently afraid it would have a detrimental effect on the audience’s concentration — I still think it’s a pity to leave it out. First of all, it explains an important part of the action, and, secondly, it is really beautiful music. That alone justifies including the “original version” in this album.

Up to now, you’ve only done Die Meistersinger in a concert performance at the Edinburgh Festival. Why not on stage after all this time?

That’s just the way it is in life: when I had the time, there wasn’t a suitable production, and vice versa. But the piece is at the very top of my “to do” list, and the first stage production is sure to come along soon. I can already hear a couple of critics muttering: after a heavy part like Siegmund, can he still muster the lightness for Stolzing? I could counter them by pointing out that after my first Siegmund, my next part at the Met was Faust. And since that went very well, I’m not fretting over Stolzing.

While we’re on the subject of vocal demands made on singers: what distinguishes a part like Siegmund from Stolzing or Lohengrin?

Most of all the low tessitura. Siegmund lies almost entirely in the baritone range, which is why even some baritones coveted the role — most notably Ramón Vinay. His vocal resources extended from bass-baritone to Heldentenor, and he took full advantage of that. What makes the part especially difficult is that high-lying phrases keep coming in after long stretches in the baritone range. And the first act calls for everything. It takes a lot of energy to keep up the tension through all the narrations in recitative style and the “duet” with Sieglinde.

On this occasion you haven’t selected “Winterstürme”, the role’s popular highlight, but instead the “Sword Monologue”.

This monologue contains much more of what characterises Siegmund — his suffering, his struggles, his hope for a better life. Another incentive was, of course, the “Wälse” outcry. The standard for this was set by Lauritz Melchior, especially in his live recordings from the Met. His calls of “Wälse” are endlessly long and endlessly big — extremely impressive for any listener and a special challenge for any singer coming after him.

How was your first experience with Tannhäuser?

Surprisingly good! Being a rather cautious singer, I’ve so far turned down all offers to sing the part on stage. For that reason, I wasn’t sure at first about whether I should record the “Rome Narration”. But the longer I worked on the piece, the more I found that it was vocally a much closer fit than I’d imagined. And so it turned out that the one piece I had worried about initially was my biggest treat at the sessions. This upswing from depression and despair all the way to the ecstasy of the orgiastic Venus music is just as exciting to me as a singer as it is to me as a listener. After this experience, Tannhäuser has moved way up on my wish list.

There’s a surprising bonus on this album: the Wesendonck-Lieder, designated by Wagner “for female voice”.

In the text there isn’t a single indication of the gender of the “narrator” — just the opposite of Schumann’s Frauenliebe und -leben and Schubert’s Winterreise. And now that men have recorded Frauenliebe and women Winterreise, it should not seem sacrilegious for a man to sing the Wesendonck-Lieder; in fact, Wagner partly related these texts by Mathilde Wesendonck to himself, especially the following lines from “Im Treibhaus”:

Well I know, poor plant,
we share the same fate:
though bathed in light and splendour,
our home is not here!

That is precisely Wagner’s situation in his Swiss exile. Objectively things were going well for him, yet he didn’t feel at home. Doesn’t that lend itself to being sung by a man?

Jonas Kaufmann, Donald Runnicles and the Orchestra of the Deutsche Oper of Berlin — has this combination ever happened “live”?

No, it was our first collaboration, and I hope it won’t be the last. It went brilliantly. We understood each other without a lot of explanations. It was the first time that I’ve ever made an opera album with an orchestra that performs opera every day. That isn’t meant in any way to belittle the achievement of the previous orchestras — God forbid! — but there is a big difference between having to explain the dramatic context before starting work on an aria and, for example, when the musicians can play the “Rome Narration” from Act Three of Tannhäuser already knowing what happens in the first two acts. We were in “stage mode” from the very first note, and that helped incredibly. I was also extremely positively surprised by the acoustics in the broadcast studio of the old East Berlin radio building. It’s a long way out, between Treptow and Köpenick, but the fantastic acoustics are worth every metre of the taxi ride. Not as dry as most studios and not as reverberant as an empty concert hall, this is concert-hall acoustics without audience noise but with studio quality — an ideal combination. I very much hope this hall will still be around for a long time and that I can continue to record there often.

Kaufmann's new album "Wagner",  will receive its international release on the DECCA label, February 2013. Full details - including detailed track listing, can be found here:  Kaufmann: Wagner

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Listen On-demand: London Philharmonic Orchestra / Jurowski / Brahms, Wagner, Bruckner

Written By The Wagnerian on Monday, 14 January 2013 | 4:06:00 pm

Already in Bruckner’s First Symphony the influence of ‘Richard Wagner, was making itself felt. In 1863 Bruckner heard Wagner’s opera Tannhäuser in Linz, capturing its desolate yearning in his first movement’s third theme. Two years later Bruckner met Wagner for the first time at a performance of Tristan und Isolde in Munich; the opera’s romantic soul seeped into Bruckner’s Adagio, as disarming a vision of love as Wagner’s own Wesendonck Lieder. As he slipped into hopeless adoration for the German poet Mathilde Wesendonck, Wagner wrote her these songs, moments of heartfelt stillness in a whirlwind musical career.

Available till  Friday 18 January

This concert is online until Friday 18 January.

Brahms Tragic Overture
Wagner (arr. Henze) Wesendonck Lieder
Bruckner Symphony No. 1 (1877 Linz edition)

Vladimir Jurowski conductor
Anna Larsson contralto

JTI Friday Series concert recorded 14 December 2012 at Southbank Centre's Royal Festival Hall

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WNO Remixes Lohengrin


As long as we don't end-up with a dub mix that includes Wagner with N Sync. Although, that might be better than the video we found below. We hasten to add nothing to do with the WNO project. By the way, a special mention to anyone who can find an image to go with this story. Trust us, we have tried.
Lohengrin Remixed is a project which will use the Welsh National Opera Summer 2013 Wagner repertoire as a platform to create workshops in which young people in Bristol and Birmingham will have the unique opportunity to work with composer Pete M Wyer and local DJs to remix classical opera and contemporary music. Following visits to see Welsh National Opera performances, participants will receive workshops and practical experience of remixing to create a new piece of music inspired by Lohengrin.
For more information on how to get involved, please contact Caroline Alford on 029 2063 5063 / caroline.alford@wno.org.uk
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Wagner 2013 Kicks off in Bayreuth with Mnozil Brass' " HOJOTOHO"

Mnozil Brass

"Never look at the brass - it only encourages them." Richard Strauss

And so Wagner 2013 begins in the city of Bayreuth, but not with one of Wagner's works but a specially commissioned piece by the Austrian comedy brass band, Mnozil Brass named "HOJOTOHO". Alas, as yet, we have been unable to find a video of the performance but to give you a flavor of what you might expect we include a video of Mnozil Brass' interpretation of the William Tell Overture Be warned though, if your not German, the humor is. Now we know what Strauss meant about the brass.

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Quentin Tarantino to direct next Bayreuth Ring Cycle?

Well, probably not - although at the "new" Bayreuth anything is possible. However, in an interview published in Focus Magazine, Christoph Waltz - who has appeared in Tarantino's Inglorious Bastards and Django Unchained (for which he has just received an Oscar nomination) - thinks he should. "Quentin would be someone for a new Bayreuth, absolutely." he told focus, finding in his work  close ties to Wagner's thoughts on Gesamtkunstwerk.

And what convinced the Austrian actor that he was correct? When he took Tarantino to see LA Opera's Ring cycle and afterwards, Tarantino told him that he saw parallels between Siegfried and his Django Unchained - as Tarantino himself told Martin Wittmann earlier this month. Indeed, according to Tarantino, his latest film can be seen. in part,  as a retelling of Siegfried.

And what would Tarantino's Siegfried look like? Well, lets take a look at Django Unchained and find out:
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Parsifal Productions: 2013

Written By The Wagnerian on Sunday, 13 January 2013 | 3:46:00 am

Only productions that have at least announced their principle casts have been included. As always, we cannot guarantee the accuracy of any listing and recommend that you check with the box office before booking. We will attempt to add video and photos as time allows.  If you believe we have missed a production - and we have no doubt that that is the case -  please get in touch and let us know: where, when and who.

Act II,  2007 production in Naples.


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At a cinema near you: Parsifal with Kaufmann, Pape, Dalayman, Mattei, Gatti.


The much awaited - at least here at the Wagnerian - MET's new Parsifal (François Girard's production) will be available at cinemas world wide on the 2 March 2013. At least in England, we can confirm that the number of cinemas carrying the broadcast has been extended dramatically since last years MET Ring in HD offerings. Even your humble editor , who seems to spend much to much time in an area where the Les Misérables movie is a highbrow cultural event,  has found a cinema showing it locally.

To find a cinema in your area please click one of the following links:
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Contemplating Wagner and Verdi: a discussion by Peter Bassett

Written By The Wagnerian on Saturday, 12 January 2013 | 11:38:00 pm


The following essay was kindly provided by Peter Bassett and is taken from his fascinating, and beautifully illustrated book: 1813 - Wagner and Verdi.  For more information on this book - and a sneak preview of the contents - please visit Peter's website, where he also makes a large number of essay's about Wagner and his work freely availble: PeterBassett.Com.Au

About the author:

Peter Bassett is a writer, speaker and broadcaster on opera, particularly the works of Richard Wagner. He was closely involved with the 1998 production of Der Ring des Nibelungen in Adelaide and the 2001 Australian premiere of Parsifal, Artistic Administrator, Dramaturg, lecturer and coordinator of ancillary events for the 2004 State Opera of South Australia’s production of the Ring, and a consultant for West Australian Opera’s 2006 Tristan und Isolde and the State Opera of South Australia’s 2009 Der fliegende Holländer. He contributes to programme books and publications of opera companies and symphony orchestras in Australia and New Zealand.



Contemplating Wagner and Verdi 

To describe Verdi’s approach to opera as conservative and practical, and Wagner’s as revolutionary and conceptual is an oversimplification, but there is some truth in it. Verdi’s remark to a visiting musicologist in 1895 that he predicted success for younger composers if they did not insist on substituting new for old conventions1 reflects a basic difference between him and his German contemporary. Twenty years earlier he had told a journalist that while Wagner had done opera an incalculable service by freeing himself from the tradition of the aria-opera, and surpassed every composer in his rich variety of instrumental colour, he had gone too far in both form and style by carrying his theories to extremes.2 In 1883 he said that Wagner in his recent operas seemed to be overstepping the bounds of what can be expressed in music, and that for him [Verdi] ‘philosophical music’ was incomprehensible.3 Twelve years later he added: ‘Art and systems of art are opposites. The great Wagner left much evil in his wake’,4 a phrase regularly misinterpreted but which refers to a view that younger composers were being led astray by Wagner-inspired ‘systems’ of composition.5 ‘I have never written music following fixed ideas’ said Verdi, ‘and I have never followed or wished to found a school.’6 He had learned of Wagner’s theories second hand and, in 1870 while working on Aida, he asked Camille du Locle to send him a French translation of Wagner’s literary works.

Towards the end of his long and successful life, Verdi could afford to admit to Felix Philippi7: ‘The work which always arouses my greatest admiration is Tristan. This gigantic structure fills me time and time again with astonishment and awe, and I still cannot quite comprehend that it was conceived and written by a human being. I consider the second act, in its wealth of musical invention, its tenderness and sensuality of musical expression and inspired orchestration, to be one of the finest creations that has ever issued from a human mind.’

Wagner’s literary output was prodigious, running to nine volumes in his own collected edition, to which can be added an autobiography of his life to 1864,8 and between ten thousand and twelve thousand letters. Then there are his wife Cosima’s diaries, a million words recording his utterances between 1869 and 1883. He was one of the most significant musical polemicists in the modern age. If he has been the subject of more books than any other composer, it is because there is so much to write about. He completed only thirteen operas compared with Verdi’s twenty-six, but they are usually on a formidable scale. He wrote his own librettos based on scenarios that evolved over years, even decades, and he wove into his stage works a host of extra-theatrical ideas, often of a philosophical kind.

Nothing could have been further from Wagner’s mind than a Tabulatur or formulaic system of composition, but critics happily seized on the idea just the same. Nor was he concerned with tailoring his works to existing theatrical constraints or audience expectations. In January 1859 while working on Tristan und Isolde, he wrote to Liszt: ‘You must take me at my word when I tell you that the only thing which really gives my life purpose is my irresistible urge to complete the series of works I have conceived. I have come to recognize with absolute clarity that to occupy myself with and finish these works is the only thing that satisfies me and makes me want, in some inexplicable way, to go on living. The prospect of actually seeing these works performed, on the other hand, is something I can quite do without.’9 It is impossible to imagine Verdi saying such a thing. The business of turning his later works into stage productions was for Wagner a separate exercise entirely, necessitating advances in auditorium layout, stage machinery and orchestra pit design epitomised by the Bayreuth theatre. It can hardly be doubted that in terms of expectation (if not always realization), Wagner was well ahead of his time. His vision was cinematic long before that art form had been invented.

Opera had had its birth in the ducal courts of northern Italy in the late 16th century, and evolved there over the next century, moving from palaces into public theatres. Italian opera provided models for non-Italian composers; theatres in different countries were habitually designated ‘Italian Opera Houses’, and works were sung in the Italian language regardless of the nationality of the composer or librettist. That Verdi was heir to this tradition goes without saying, but so too was Wagner, in more ways than one. The desire of the Florentine musicians and poets - the so-called Camerata of Giovanni de’ Bardi - to recreate the drama of Greek theatre in which, they believed, music and poetry had been ideally combined, anticipated to a remarkable degree the aims of the young Richard Wagner. Although he came to the view that Italian opera in his day was neither treated nor taken seriously, there was a time when both he and Verdi seemed to be heading along the same path. Wagner’s admiration in the late 1830s for the works of Bellini and Rossini – composers also admired by Verdi – marked an undeniably Italianate phase of his development. One need only consider his early operas Das Liebesverbot and Rienzi, not to mention several unfinished projects, to find examples of this enthusiasm. Even Tristan und Isolde of 1859, Wagner’s most revolutionary score, has roots in Bellinian soil, as the composer freely admitted to Cosima in 1878: ‘My model was Romeo and Juliet [I Capuleti e i Montecchi, which he had conducted many times] nothing but duets!’ He also employed Bellini’s technique of melodic sequence, involving the repetition of a phrase at a higher or lower pitch, as can be heard towards the climax of the second act of Tristan.

Verdi bridled at suggestions in later life that his works were becoming ‘Wagnerian’ and, in a literal sense, he was right. However, he was happy to borrow ideas when these suited his purposes. The French critic Étienne Rouillé-Destranges went too far when he wrote in 1895 that ‘If Wagner had not existed, Verdi would certainly not have written Aida, Otello and Falstaff’.10 However, it is hard to believe that, for instance, the inverted arch form of the prelude to Aida, beginning and ending on high, pianissimo strings, does not owe something to the prelude to Lohengrin which Verdi had been studying at that time. He made a point of attending the Italian premiere of Lohengrin in Bologna on 19 November 1871 and made copious notes. One can recognize in Falstaff Verdi’s answer to Die Meistersinger whose score he had obtained in 1885. Meistersinger was given its Italian premiere at La Scala in 1889 when Falstaff was in the early stages of composition. Both works incorporate older musical forms with wonderful effect, and share similarities in the endings of their first acts.11

Political and military developments in their common birth year of 1813 had similar implications for both composers. By the beginning of the 19th century, the thousand-year-old Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation, nominally ruled by Francis II of the house of Habsburg-Lorraine, was in serious decline and barely justified its name. A puff from Napoleon in 1806 blew the imperial house down, leaving the constituent kingdoms and principalities as targets for French military and cultural ambitions. Even Napoleon’s eventual defeat and abdication could not block out memories of a decade of major upheaval and uncertainty, memories that would fuel Wagner’s concern to rescue German cultural values.

Italy too had become fragmented and culturally weakened, being ruled variously by the Holy Roman Emperor, the Spanish Bourbons, the Papacy and sundry other governments. Again, Napoleon was to play a crucial role in unifying the peninsula under Bonapartist rule, thereby prompting the first stirrings of Italian national sentiment. The Congress of Vienna of 1814-15 was more concerned with restoring the status quo ante than meeting Italian aspirations, and so one imperial power replaced another.12 The views of Giuseppe Verdi were shaped by these experiences and he, as much as Richard Wagner, set about defending the integrity and traditions of his people.

Peter Bassett

Taken from: 1813 - Wagner and Verdi

References

1 Arnaldo Bonaventura, Un ricordo personale, in Marcello Conati ed. Encounters with Verdi, p. 283.
2 Anon. Verdi in Wien article in Neue Freie Presse, Vienna, in Conati, p. 109.
3 A. von Winterfeld Unterhaltungen in Verdis Tuskulum, in Conati, p. 147.
4 Arnaldo Bonaventura, op.cit. p. 284.
5 What he would have thought of Schoenberg’s twelve-tone technique and the compositions of the Second Viennese School can only be imagined.
6 Paul Fresnay, Verdi à Paris, in Conati, p. 168.
7 Felix Philippi was a journalist with the Berliner Tageblatt who visited Verdi in late 1898/ early 1899. Quoted in Conati op.cit. p. 329
8 The year in which he was rescued by the young King Ludwig II of Bavaria and entered into a relationship with Cosima von Bülow who would become his second wife. The autobiography, dictated to Cosima from 1865, was inspired by the King’s request to know more of the composer’s early life. It was printed in a small number of copies for ‘true and trusted friends’, and was only published more widely after Wagner’s death.
9 Quoted in Ronald Taylor, Richard Wagner, His Life, Art and Thought, p. 136.
10 Étienne Destranges, in Conati, p. 211.
11 See Julian Budden, Verdi, p. 304.
12 The German states were, by and large, spared this ignominy since they had been self-governing prior to Napoleon’s intervention. Saxony, Wagner’s homeland, was an exception, losing much of its territory to Prussia as punishment for siding with the French.



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Update: Wagner at 30. Peter Bassett responds

Written By The Wagnerian on Friday, 11 January 2013 | 11:16:00 pm

Update: It seems the debate is far from concluded as the Kaplan Collection have brought in the assistance of a specialist in facial recognition . More as we get it. In the mean time you can still vote in the Wagner Societies poll regarding this image by clicking here: The Kaplan Collection. Is it Richard Wagner?



Following publication of the Kaplen Collections response  to Peter Bassett's analysis of the Kaplan daguerreotype, we have just received the following from Peter: 


An answer to further claims about the Kaplan daguerreotype

In response to my observations on a daguerreotype which Albert Kaplan claims to be of Richard Wagner, Mr Kaplan has acknowledged that the daguerreotype in his possession could not have been prepared before the 1850s (in my view not before 1855, when Rudolph Turnau & Co commenced business in Hamburg). However, he now argues that his daguerreotype is a copy of an earlier daguerreotype prepared in Hamburg in 1844 when Wagner was in that city for several weeks during March/April. Following are my observations on this latest claim.

Is there any evidence that the Kaplan daguerreotype is a copy?

Daguerreotypes could only be copied by making another daguerreotype (or later, a photograph) of them. The original plate was a ‘one-off’. The initial report from expert examination was that ‘It is possible that the daguerreotype is a copy of a portrait made at an earlier date. … The technical quality of the daguerreotype is not very high. It is slightly out of focus, tonally flat, and overexposed. … The characteristics of this daguerreotype are commensurate with copy daguerreotype work.’ Subsequently, after the primary housing package was opened, it was determined that ‘no information was evident that would confirm that it is a copy’.

Is there any evidence that an earlier version of the portrait in the Kaplan daguerreotype was prepared in 1844 in Hamburg?

There is no evidence whatever that an earlier version of the portrait was prepared either in 1844 or in Hamburg or, for that matter, at any other time in any other city. It is a circular argument to say that the portrait was made in Hamburg in 1844 because Wagner was there at that time, and therefore it must be a portrait of Wagner.

What would be the implications for the orientation of a portrait of daguerreotyping a daguerreotype?

If the Kaplan daguerreotype is a copy of an earlier daguerreotype, it would have reversed the first one and therefore would have restored the actual appearance of the sitter as opposed to the mirror image of the first daguerreotype. In which case, we must assume that the sitter parted his hair on his right. Wagner parted his hair on his left as we can see from other portraits. It seems unlikely that a copy made in 1855 would have deliberately printed an image back to front if the advantage of the copy was to have restored the sitter’s actual appearance.

Did Wagner make any reference to having a daguerreotype portrait made when he was in Hamburg in 1844?

No. In his autobiography, Wagner records that during his time (alone) in Hamburg in 1844 he was pretty miserable - the city was still a mess after the fire of 1842, the Rienzi production was poor, the sky was gloomy and the weather wintery, he had constant colds and spent most of his time in his hotel room. Not exactly the cheery and healthy young man looking out of the daguerreotype.

Does the sitter resemble any of the known portraits of Wagner from the 1840s and ‘50s?

The answer continues to be ‘No’.

Peter Bassett

11 January 2013
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Mutiny on the Buses? No, but Wagner is.

Source: Slipped Disc
As part of Leipzig's 2013 Wagner celebrations, they have put Wagner's image the sides of certain buses. Well, it makes a change from ads for accident claims companies or condom adverts for ENO's opera productions -  as you might find in the UK. Plus, it allows us to make a pun and include a video of that rather odd 70's sitcom.
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The Kaplan Photo of Richard Wagner? New evidence emerges

Anyone who has been following the controversy regarding the claims by the Kaplan Collection to have found the earliest photograph of Richard Wagner will have no doubt read Peter Bassett's critique of the photo. In these he seemed to clearly demonstrate that the image could not be that of Wagner (read here for more ). As the Kaplan Collection now say:

"Widely known Wagner authority, Peter Bassett, has written an essay, “The Kaplan Daguerreotype of Wagner: A Case of Mistaken Identity”, based on the indisputable facts that the Turnau label listed two offered services that were not available until the 1850s, years after Wagner was in Hamburg. As the label is a veritable fingerprint of the daguerreian, Mr. Bassett makes what had seemed to me, and others, to be a very strong case against the image being of Richard Wagner because, if the young man is Richard Wagner, the only time this image could have been made in Hamburg was 1844."

However, the Kaplan Collection has now had the image re-examined based on Bassett's critique. And the findings?

"Unbeknown to me, both Grant Romer and Michael Hager, both of whom meticulously examined the daguerreotype, had come to the conclusion that they were examining a copy daguerreotype.

Here is Grant Romer’s analysis:

“The stereographic format for photographs was not popularized until 1851; and the Panotype is a collodion based process which had no currency before 1850. However, those indisputable facts are not conclusive evidence that the original portrait was made in the 1850s. It is possible that the daguerreotype is a copy of a portrait made at an earlier date. Photographic studios were frequently called upon to copy unique images. I have seen many copy daguerreotypes.”

“The technical quality of the daguerreotype is not very high. It is slightly out of focus, tonally flat, and overexposed. This puzzled me since a studio photographer in the 1850s, capable of working both the daguerreotype and collodion processes, should have been able to produce a better daguerreotype. However, copying daguerreotypes presented unusual difficulties, and did not always equal the studio standard of direct camera work. The characteristics of this daguerreotype are commensurate with copy daguerreotype work.”

“At the time of my intervention into the frame I saw no reason to enter the primary housing package since it was functionally intact, and evidently original. Occasionally, the conservator will find evidence on the plate which confirms that it is a copy daguerreotype. In this instance, part of the plate’s edge is covered, concealing that possible evidence. I will see what is there. However, its absence will not alter my opinion that this is a copy daguerreotype.”

“It is wrong to absolutely declare that the portrait could not have been made earlier than the 1850s, even if no further evidence of the plate being a copy is found”.


To continue reading - and to view further new images - please visit: "Wagner at the Kaplan Collection"
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BBC 3 to Broadcast Met and WNO Wagner in 2013


Along with Verdi and Britten, BBC Radio 3 will broadcast all of Wagner's dramas in  2013. Included will be Parsifal, with Jonas Kaufmann in the title role (March 2), Das Rheingold (April 6), Die Walküre (April 13), Siegfried (April 20) and Götterdämmerung (May 11), all live from the Met, as well as Lohengrin, broadcast live from Welsh National Opera (May 26).

A series of programs based around Wagner (and also  Britten and Verdi) will also be broadcast throughout 2013
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Simon Rattle resigns from Berliner Philharmoniker

Written By The Wagnerian on Thursday, 10 January 2013 | 8:35:00 pm

Or at least he will in 2018. Now, that's what one calls giving adequate notice.

During an orchestra summit Sir Simon Rattle has announced that he will finish his tenure as chief conductor and artistic director of Berliner Philharmoniker in summer 2018 after fulfilling his current contract with the orchestra.

Sir Simon Rattle: “In 2018 I will have been with the orchestra for 16 years. Before this I was Chief Conductor in Birmingham for 18 years. In 2018 I will be nearly 64 years old. As a Liverpool boy, it is impossible not to think of the Beatles’ question, ‘Will you still need me.., when I’m 64?’ and I am sure that then it will be time for somebody else to take on the magnificent challenge that is the Berliner Philharmoniker. This was not an easy decision. I love this orchestra and therefore wanted to tell them my decision as early as possible. I deeply hope that this will give them enough time to start new plans. I look forward with great pleasure to our next five years together and hopefully many years afterwards. I am thankful for the time that we have spent together so far.”

Peter Riegelbauer/Stefan Dohr, Orchestra Chairmen: “We regret Simon Rattle’s decision not to continue as Artistic Director of the orchestra when his contract expires in 2018. At the same time, we respect his personal decision. Our collaboration with him is characterized by great mutual sympathy and a respectful artistic and human relationship. This is a wonderful basis for our work with Sir Simon as Artistic Director during the coming five years. We look forward to many exciting projects which are already in the planning stage. After 2018 we will continue our close and friendly relationship with him.”

Martin Hoffmann, General Manager: “This is very sad news for the Berliner Philharmoniker Foundation and the city of Berlin. I have great respect for Sir Simon Rattle’s decision. With his outstanding musicality and creativity he has filled new listeners with enthusiasm for the orchestra every day and has shaped the national and international perception of the Berliner Philharmoniker as a vital cultural ambassador for Berlin. I look forward to our future collaboration on behalf of the orchestra and the Foundation.”

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Video: Jonas Kaufmann discusses his new Wagner album.


Kaufmann’s fifth solo album on Decca is specially recorded for the Wagner anniversary year.

A selection of the great Heldentenor scenes and arias coupled with the complete (and rarely recorded by the tenor voice) Wesendonck Lieder. Also includes scenes from Die Walküre, Siegfried , Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Tannhäuser and Lohengrin (extended Grail Scene – Gralserzählung - with its original second verse).

Released 11 February 2013. 

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Wagner and the esoteric meaning of Lohengrin

Lohengrin: Lyric Opera of Chicago

There have, of course,  been many "esoteric" analyses of Wagner's works. In 1948 "mystic" Corinne Heline published her book "Esoteric Music Based on the Musical Seership" of Richard Wagner, (still available if you look around). The book as a whole is an interesting read - and recommend. It may not be "correct" but it is no more "incorrect" than any other interpretation of Wagner's work.

Anyway, the book can now be found with generous excerpts  on Google Books - including the entire chapter contain a discussion of Lohengrin. This can be found and read  below.

Hopefully the Lohengrin chapter should appear in your browser. If not simply search for Lohengrin the search box within the book.  Clicking the link below the book will take you to google where you can access a full screen version.

An overview  was made available sometime ago at the Wagner Blog which you can read by clicking here
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Wagner Discusses Verdi

Written By The Wagnerian on Wednesday, 9 January 2013 | 8:02:00 pm



"Richard has remembered a Verdi theme which he heard sung yesterday on the Grand canal as a duet; he sings it to me, laughing at the way this outburst of rage was bellowed out yesterday. He made a note of its broken rhythm - "And that one is asked to call a natural line!" - and there is nothing like it in Rossini" Sunday, April 23 1882. Cosima Wagner - Diaries. 
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Wagner or Verdi? Really? You need to ask?

Over at the Telegraph, Ivan Hewett asks a number of opera "experts" who is the better composer: Wagner or Verdi. The panel consisted of Philip Hensher, Rodney Milnes, Antonio Pappano, Robert Jay QC, Roger Scruton, David Pountney, Mark Elder, Peter Konwitschny and John Tomlinson.

And their conclusions? They are both great but in different ways. See what happens when you ask an inane question? You may also, get the odd inane answer.


"Both of them are special, and work their magic through accumulation, and huge forms: both of them should be the objects of pilgrimage" Ivan Hewett
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Wagner Spotify Playlist 2: Wagner's Vision. 50 CDs

Written By The Wagnerian on Monday, 7 January 2013 | 10:43:00 pm


We have already mentioned the 50 cd box-set: "Wagner's Vision: Bayreuth Heritage" here (includes full track listing and details)  and so will not comment further. However, if you are undecided whether it is right for you, or simply wish to listen to it, and you have access to Spotify the full box set can be listened to below. Located and compiled here by the excellent, adverting free, and highly recommended Spotify classical site and associated app Spotify Classical (click the link to visit the Website) after a brief conversation with its owner over at Twitter. Who said social media was without uses.
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The Wagnerian's Review of 2012

Written By The Wagnerian on Sunday, 6 January 2013 | 10:29:00 pm

"Will this ever end?
The Wagnerian is at heart somewhat "idiosyncratic". Yes, it is true that much of the major Wagner news is recorded here but its style might not be "typical" of Wagner reporting elsewhere - and alas, for this we remain shamelessly unapologetic. However, we do, in the main, try to stay neutral (and in the world of Wagner were everyone seems to have an opinion, that isn't easy)  and  suppress a natural urge to throw personal opinion around like pieces of gold in Fafner's cave. But as this is a  year long review we hope we can be forgiven for throwing caution to the wind - just this once.  We promise, it wont happen to often.  Now, with this in mind, it might not come as some surprise that any round-up of 2012 might exclude much that one might expect to be included and contain much it might not.

During each discussion, any highlighted text will take you to an article or interview printed here during the year that discuses each item in more detail. Finally,  it should be noted that as everything here it is the express and personal opinion of your humble editor it is thus of no value whatsoever..

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DW: "Richard Wagner's year in the spotlight"

Wagner will be all over music programs in 2013, as this year marks the 200th anniversary of his birth. Travelers in Germany can choose from no shortage of traditional to provocative takes on the composer's work.

Every summer, Bayreuth means sold-out shows, red carpet treatment and appearances by the chancellor herself. But right now, the opera mecca is dead. At a recent guided tour, just two local women and a tourist couple showed up. One of the locals has lived for 30 years in Bayreuth, but this was her first time in the town's famous opera house. The other is guide Claudia Dollinger, who works at Wagner's musical temple. She explains with a touch of pride that she was finally able to snag tickets to the opera fest in 2012.
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Seattle Opera Celebrates Wagner Bicentennial in 2013 - Full Details

Written By The Wagnerian on Thursday, 3 January 2013 | 6:06:00 pm

Seattle—Under General Director Speight Jenkins’ 30 years of leadership, Seattle Opera has become known as “America’s Bayreuth,” drawing worldwide audiences to its acclaimed productions of all of Richard Wagner’s major works, especially to the company’s signature work, Wagner’s ambitious four-opera cycle, Der Ring des Nibelungen. To date, opera-goers from 22 countries and all 50 states (plus the District of Columbia) have purchased tickets for Seattle Opera’s 2013 Ring.

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Updated: Complete Ring Cycles Productions: 2013

Written By The Wagnerian on Monday, 31 December 2012 | 10:34:00 am


Rheingold, Bayreuth 1876


Only productions that have at least announced their principle casts have been included. As always, we cannot guarantee the accuracy of any listing and recommend that you check with the box office before booking. We will attempt to add video and photos as time allows.  If you believe we have missed a production - and we have no doubt that that is the case -  please get in touch and let us know: where, when and who.

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Contributors/Articles Wanted

Written By The Wagnerian on Friday, 28 December 2012 | 10:20:00 pm

Over time, we have found some of our best articles, reviews,  monographs and academic papers  submitted by external sources. With that in mind, we would like to extend an official and open invitation to anyone who would like to contribute articles, papers, reviews, etc. In keeping with our rather idiosyncratic style - and the best interests of philosophical anarchist thought (one feels Wagner would have been pleased) - there are few rules regarding submission within the outlines explained below:

The item must relate to Wagner, his live, works, etc.
The item must be of interest to those with an interest in Wagner - even if only casually.
The item must be submitted in English.

Although all submissions will of course be read, we cannot guarantee using everything submitted - but will try our best.

Alas, the author will receive no monetary reward but will have our undying gratitude - and your name "in lights".

Submissions please to the following address: press@the-wagnerian.com

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Watch Glyndebourne's Tristan und Isolde now & free.

Written By The Wagnerian on Wednesday, 26 December 2012 | 5:48:00 pm


If  you missed our earlier article on this Glyndebourne's first Tristan und Isolde, it is now being streamed free live at the Guardian's website. Available till the 6 January 2013. We could think of much worse ways to spend a Boxing Day evening


Cast

Conductor: Jiří Bĕlohlávek
Director: Nikolaus Lehnhoff
Set and Lighting Designer: Roland Aeschlimann
Costume Designer: Andrea Schmidt-Futterer
Associate Lighting Designer: Robin Carter
Assistant Director: Daniel Dooner

Cast includes:
Isolde: Nina Stemme
Brangäne: Katarina Karnéus
Kurwenal: Bo Skovhus
Tristan: Robert Gambill
Melot: Stephen Gadd
King Marke: René Pape
Young Sailor/Shepherd: Timothy Robinson
Steersman: Richard Mosley-Evans

London Philharmonic Orchestra
The Glyndebourne Chorus
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The Third Man? Both Barry Millington & Wagner Society Victoria reply

We have noted what has become in some quarters a rather "heated" debate about a Daguerreotype found by the Kaplan Collection which they believe maybe the earliest photograph of Wagner (at 30) so far found. We have also, noted the Wagner Society's (London) balanced analysis of the image and its history which can be found here. Now, Peter Bassett of the Victoria Wagner Society has published an article which seems to prove that the image in question could not possibly be that of Richard Wagner. Using close analysis and pursuing the historical records, Peter seems to prove that the image could not have been taken before 1855 - while Wagner was in exile in Switzerland. The full article can , and should in our opinion, be read here.

On a related note - but not connected to either of the analysis already cited - Barry Millington (editor of the Wagner Journal and author of a new book on Wagner and his works:  Wagner: The Sorcerer Of Bayreuth) has recently been in contact and made the following statement:

"For the subject of an anonymous daguerreotype to be identified with Wagner, you would expect as a basic minimum that there would be a facial resemblance. Albert Kaplan's picture unfortunately bears no resemblance to any known portrait or photograph of Wagner. He's not deterred, however, even by the dimple, but is there even any history of attribution to Wagner? Apparently not. Mr Kaplan acquired the picture and decided immediately that it was Wagner. What can one say? "

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A Digital Christmas Card from the Wagnerian: Kirsten Flagstad, Eugene Ormandy,: Ah, Perfido (1937)

Written By The Wagnerian on Monday, 24 December 2012 | 7:09:00 am

Yes, it's that time of year again, and as I hate wasting paper (all those poor trees) you, regular readers (and contributors, bloggers,  re-tweeters, artists, houses, etc especially) , get a digital Christmas card . From 1937, with Eugene Ormandy, conducting the Philadelphia Orchestra, the legend that is Kirsten Flagstad, sings Beethoven's lesser heard "Ah, Perfido" in a wonderfully clear recording. Yours to download free (courtesy of Archive.org, as it's in the public domain. Well, you know how mean I am ).

Happy Christmas, and all that other hum bug!

TW

The Festspielhaus while under construction





BEETHOVEN: Ah, Perfido!, Op. 65

Kirsten Flagstad, soprano
Philadelphia Orchestra
Eugene Ormandy, conductor

Victor 78rpm Album M-439 (14844, 1879)
Recorded October 17, 1937
Digital transfer by F. Reeder
Creative Commons license: Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0


Download by clicking here: - BEETHOVEN - Ah, Perfido 8.0 MB(MP3 Vbr) (hosted at Archive.org)

Found here

Lyrics (Not very christmassy I know, but hey!)

BEETHOVEN: Ah, Perfido!, Op. 65

Ah! perfido, spergiuro,
Barbaro traditor, tu parti?
E son questi gl'ultimi tuoi congedi?
Ove s'intese tirannia più crudel?
Va, scellerato! va, pur fuggi da me,
L'ira de' numi non fuggirai.
Se v'è giustizia in ciel, se v'è pietà,
Congiureranno a gara tutti a punirti!
Ombra seguace, presente, ovunque vai,
Vedrò le mie vendette,
Io già le godo immaginando.
I fulmini ti veggo già balenar d'intorno.
Ah no! Fermate, vindici Dei!
Risparmiate quel cor, ferite il mio!
S'ei non è più qual era, son io qual fui,
Per lui vivea, voglio morir per lui!

Per pietà, non dirmi addio!
Di te priva che farò?
Tu lo sai, bell'idol mio!
Io d'affanno morirò.

Ah crudel! Tu vuoi ch'io mora!
Tu non hai pietà di me?
Perchè rendi a chi t'adora
Così barbara mercè?
Dite voi se in tanto affanno
Non son degna di pietà?
======================
Ah! You treacherous, faithless,
barbaric traitor, you leave?
And is this your last farewell?
Where did one hear of a crueller tyranny?
Go, despicable man! Go, flee from me!
You won't flee from the wrath of the gods.
If there is justice in heaven, if there is pity,
all will join forces in a contest to punish you.
I follow your trail! I am wherever you go,
I will live to see my revenge,
I already take my delight in it in my imagination.
I already see you surrounded by flashes of lightning.
Alas! Pause, avenging gods!
Spare that heart, wound mine!
If he is not what he was, I am still what I was.
For him I lived, for him I want to die!

Have mercy, don't bid me farewell,
what shall I do without you?
You know it, my beloved idol!
I will die of grief.

Ah, cruel man! You want me to die!
Don't you have pity on me?
Why do you reward the one who adores you
in such a barbaric way?
Tell me, if in such a grief
I do not deserve pity?

 Translation © Bertram Kottmann
(Please see here for more of Mr Kottmann's wonderful translations)
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Wagner at the 30? The Wagner Society speaks

Written By The Wagnerian on Friday, 21 December 2012 | 12:31:00 am

"In March 1844 Richard Wagner was 30 and living in Dresden. In his autobiography, Mein Leben, he recounts “no recollections of any importance in [early] 1844 other than two enterprises: the first to Berlin early in the year, for the production of my fliegender Holländer, and the other in March to Hamburg for Rienzi” Ken Sunshine: Wagner News 

We often receive many replies to articles published here (so much so that we are thinking of a producing a "letter to the editor page") but nothing seems to have stirred as many replies - or indeed controversy - as The Kaplan Collections proposed photo of a 30 year old Wagner, as reported here. We will publish more on this later but for now would like to draw your attention to a wonderfully lucid examination presented in the Wagner Society (London) "Wagner News" written by their Webmaster Ken Sunshine -  the opening of which is quoted above.

This has now been made freely available to none Society members and can be read by following the link below. Highly recommended.

Read the full article here:  Wagner at 30?
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Is this the earliest photo of Richard Wagner?

Written By The Wagnerian on Saturday, 15 December 2012 | 11:54:00 am

The Kaplan Collection have published the daguerreotype below -  taken in either March or April 1844. Making an not unreasoned argument, Kaplan suggests that this may well be the earliest photograph of Wagner found so far. Before dismissing it completely,  might we suggest you investigate the argument, evidence and a detailed examination of the daguerreotyp, its origin and restoration by visiting The Kaplan Collection where the publisher also seeks feedback


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Watch act 3 of ROH Walkure internationally and on demand

Written By The Wagnerian on Wednesday, 12 December 2012 | 8:27:00 pm

As part of the new partnership between the Guardian and the ROH, the Guardian website will broadcast Act 3 of this years Walkure - from multiple and unusual perspectives.

On January 7th 2013, visitors to the site will be able to view and listen to Walkure (recorded earlier this year) from one of 3 perspectives available on three separate but simultaneous streams: from cameras backstage, cameras following Antonio Pappano in the pit or cameras giving a wide angle view of the stage.

This will be included in a day of events on the Guardian's website starting at 10:30 and finishing at 9:00 pm (GMT).

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Johannes Debus to take the baton from Jiří Bělohlávek : Tristan und Isolde, Canadian Opera Company



Toronto – Canadian Opera Company Music Director Johannes Debus conducts his first Tristan und Isolde when he leads the COC Orchestra and Chorus this winter in the company’s production of Wagner’s epic masterpiece. He replaces Jiří Bělohlávek, who has regrettably withdrawn due to health reasons.

“Jiří Bělohlávek is one of the foremost conductors in the world and I regret that he will not be making his COC debut at this time. When my appointment to the COC was announced in 2008, Jiří was one of the first people to contact me about coming to work with the company, and he has an open invitation to conduct one of our productions in the future,” says COC General Director Alexander Neef. “I am very grateful to Johannes for agreeing to take over for Jiří, especially on such short notice. Tristan und Isolde is one of the most revolutionary and influential works in music history and it is the rare conductor who can command the piece with the necessary skill and musicianship. I look forward to watching Johannes lead his first Tristan on the COC’s opening night in January.”
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Trailer: Lohengrin - Teatro alla Scala 2012-2013

Written By The Wagnerian on Tuesday, 11 December 2012 | 6:50:00 pm



11, 14, 18, 21, 27 December 2012

Cast


Lohengrin - Jonas Kaufmann
Elsa - Anja Harteros / Annette Dasch
Telramund - Tomas Tomasson
Ortrud - Evelyn Herlitzius
Heinrich der Vogler - René Pape
King's Herald - Zeljko Lucic


Conductor: Daniel Barenboim
Director: Claus Guth
Set Designs: Christian Schmidt 


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Wagner makes the front pages of the Italian media - again

Written By The Wagnerian on Monday, 10 December 2012 | 5:53:00 am

"This choice is a smack for Italian art, a blow for national pride in a moment of crisis,"  Corriere della Sera

One hundred and fifty years after they helped forge their home nations' ideas of pride and patriotism, Wagner and Verdi have proved they can still provoke a bust-up between Germany and Italy.

As opera houses around the world gear up to celebrate the 200th birthdays of the composers – they were both born in 1813 – the decision by Milan's La Scala to seemingly overlook its local hero and instead open its season on Friday with Wagner's Lohengrin has sparked angry criticism.

The theatre's decision to opt for Wagner, whose pounding operas were the soundtrack for German unification, over Verdi, whose uplifting works inspired Italy's own Risorgimento, comes as Italians feel the bite of austerity policies they see as dictated by Berlin, a humiliation lightened only by Italy's beating of Germany in the European championships this summer.

"This choice is a smack for Italian art, a blow for national pride in a moment of crisis," Milan's daily newspaper, Corriere della Sera, declared, claiming there was disquiet in the orchestra at La Scala, where Verdi made his professional debut. "Would the Germans have inaugurated a Wagnerian year with a work by Verdi?" asked the paper.

Peter Conrad, the British author of Verdi and/or Wagner, a study of the lives of both men, agrees. "As La Scala's musical director and a Wagner specialist, [Daniel] Barenboim has put his tastes ahead of Italy's," he told the Guardian. "This reminds me of how a German banker paid for a bust of Wagner to go up in Venice at the start of the 20th century before the local town hall then shamefully put up one of Verdi next to it. Italy gets trampled on because it is not good at celebrating its own culture."

However, Stéphane Lissner, La Scala's general manager, pointed out that next year the theatre will stage five works by Wagner against eight by Verdi and open next season with Verdi's La Traviata, "which is chronologically exact, because Verdi was born in October, while Wagner was born in May," he said. "The rest is just stupidity and ignorance." Moreover, Barenboim – a Wagner expert – was only free this month, he added.

Barenboim has chimed in, saying: "What difference does it make inaugurating the season with one or the other when almost all the works of both will get performed?"

Continue Reading at: The Guardian


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Dijon Opera announce new Ring Cycle in 2013 - in two days!

Written By The Wagnerian on Saturday, 8 December 2012 | 1:04:00 pm

Dijon Opera have announced that in 2013 they will perform an entirely new, fully staged Ring Cycle in a festival lasting just two days! Each day will see performances of two of Wagner's Dramas: Rheingold and Walkure on day one followed by Siegfried and Götterdämmerung on day two.

In an laudable attempt to make Wagner accessible to more people, seats prices will range from 5 euros to 25 euros for a full cycle. Top seat prices at 150 Euros for a full cycle. What looks like a fine cast will include Daniel Brenna - a performer whose lyrical Siegfried we have enjoyed greatly on the past.

And the "concept and theme" that informs this cyclce? A very interesting one it would seem  In the words of Dijon Opera:

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Video: Jonas Kaufmann In Conversation



Originally brought to our attention by the always excellent Sounds and Fury. In English - despite the French titles. And if you have access to Spotify...

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Jonathan Harvey: 3 May 1939 - 4 December 2012,

Written By The Wagnerian on Thursday, 6 December 2012 | 1:49:00 pm

Included below is both part of the obituary in yesterdays Guardian and his opera about Wagner's last few minutes - Wagner Dream. If you are in the UK in 2013 WNO will be performing Wagner Dream for the first time fully staged in the UK. More information here (Trailer below). Last year we also reprinted an explanation he gave regarding the composition of Wagner Dream - that can be found by clicking this link



The composer Jonathan Harvey, who has died aged 73 after suffering from motor neurone disease, was unique in the way he put digital technology and a strenuously rational approach to music at the service of a deeply spiritual message. In terms of international profile and honours, Harvey's status was almost on a par with his slightly older colleagues Harrison Birtwistle and Peter Maxwell Davies. While they have always been in the news, thanks to their pugnaciously unfashionable views and hard-edged modernism, Harvey's rise was so inconspicuous that even the musical world seemed not to realise just how eminent he had become.
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Wagner Spotify Playlist: Wagner Complete Operas (DG: 2012)

Written By The Wagnerian on Sunday, 2 December 2012 | 5:01:00 am


We have already mentioned the DG "Wagner: The Complete Operas" If you are thinking of buying it but would like to listen to it first , or if you are like us and just wanted,yet another, quick Wagner playlist for your Ipod then the entire set is now available on Spotify (our apologies for a number of readers that do not have access to Spotify)

The other Wagner Box set that you might be interested in - Wagner's Vision" - is also available but alas, Spotify's meta-tagging is so poor we are struggling to collect it all. Once we have, we will make the playlist available to you.


But for now:

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