Götterdämmerung
Siegfried | Stefan Vinke |
Brünnhilde | Iréne Theorin |
Gunther | Károly Szemerédy |
Gutrune | Lilla Horti |
Alberich | Péter Kálmán |
Hagen | Albert Dohmen |
Waltraute | Deniz Uzun |
Woglinde | Orsolya Sáfár |
Wellgunde | Gabriella Fodor |
Floßhilde | Zsófia Kálnay |
1. Norn | Erika Gál |
2. Norn | Judit Németh |
3. Norn | Andrea Brassói-Jőrös |
Commanding Götterdämmerung brings Müpa’s Ring to a blazing end
The Budapest Wagner Days Ring often ends in spellbound silence, a testament to the joint power of Wagner’s work and the performances in which they come alive. This year’s Götterdämmerung earned just such a reception.
Much praise for it is owed to Iréne Theorin. After a rather pale Walküre, it was as if a switch had been flipped for her Götterdämmerung Brünnhilde. Her voice gained body and a remarkable clarity of tone, and though there was a somewhat shrill edge to her high notes, they came out powerfully as ever, riding comfortably over the orchestra. From Act 2 onwards, she commanded the stage completely, rendering the process of Brünnhilde’s fear and helplessness turning into mounting ire with blood-curling intensity – “Helle Wehr!” and the revenge trio had you on the edge of your seat. The Immolation Scene, though not faultless, was mesmerisingly dramatic, from a touchingly rendered “Wie Sonne lauter strahlt mir sein Licht” to the final conflagration. This wasn’t a pristine performance, but it was certainly a magnetic one. The production worked well here once again, and quite in Theorin’s favour; particularly striking were the moments showcasing Brünnhilde’s loneliness and captivity, and the gutting staging of her assault and defeat by the disguised Siegfried.
Stagewise, Theorin was ideally matched by Stefan Vinke, their chemistry and comfort notable in Act 1. Vocally ever reliable, Vinke blazed through Siegfried’s part in his usual full-throated, no-holds-barred fashion – always an impressive feat, though it leaves one wanting for the occasional moderation in volume and tone. There can be little complaint about his devastatingly delivered “Brünnhilde! Heilige Braut!” though, nor about his stage presence, vividly portraying an almost childish brute. His rough-and-tumble interactions with Károly Szemerédy’s wimpy, prim-and-proper Gunther provided the evening’s brief comic moments.
Szemerédy’s resonant, appealingly dark baritone was almost too noble for the sorry figure his Gunther cut onstage, holding his own aplenty against Vinke in their blood oath. As the beguiling Gutrune, Lilla Horti’s charming, youthful soprano was initially beset by a rather unruly vibrato, much improving from Act 2 onwards. On villainous double duty in this Ring, Albert Dohmen’s icy schemer Hagen rounded off the Gibichung court with aplomb. Deniz Uzun showed off an earthy, powerful mezzo as a highly dramatic Waltraute, while the Hungarian ensemble of Erika Gál, Judit Németh and Andrea Brassói-Jőrös as the Norns, and Orsolya Sáfár, Gabriella Fodor and Zsófia Kálnay as the Rhinemaidens gave strong performances. The combined forces of the Hungarian Radio Choir and the Budapest Studio Choir proved appropriately momentous.
At the helm, Ádám Fischer kept things tightly moving – no mean feat considering the two-hour Prologue and Act 1 marathon. His ability to build dramatic momentum shone throughout, in the ecstatic first entrance of Brünnhilde and Siegfried, a jubilant Rheinfahrt, and the glum, looming sense of catastrophe woven throughout Acts 2 and 3, exploding into an apocalyptic frenzy with the Immolation Scene. Though a few beauty spots marked Siegfried’s horn calls from the brass, the Hungarian Radio Symphonic Orchestra played with a fierce energy, offering, in turns, a severe, overwhelming wave of sound, then redemptive beauty from the wonderfully articulated strings and golden-toned woodwinds. A highly laudable achievement for the Budapest Wagner Days once more – and hopefully one that, despite the precarious financial situation of Hungarian cultural life and the festival itself hanging in the balance, may be repeated again next season.
Orsolya Gyárfás | 20 Juni 2023
Fulminante „GÖTTERDÄMMERUNG“ beendet „Ring“ am Budapest MÜPA
Gestern Abend gingen mit einer fulminanten „Götterdämmerung“ des „Ring des Nibelungen“ von Richard Wagner die diesjährigen Wagner Tage am Palast der Künste – Müpa in Budapest zu Ende. Ein großes Lob dem durchwegs und verständlicherweise begeisterten sowie kenntnisreichen Publikum im völlig ausverkauften Haus: Nach dem letzten Takt des 3. Aufzugs, unter den Wagner bekanntlich schrieb „Ich sage nichts weiter!“ gelang es Ádám Fischer tatsächlich etwa acht Sekunden völlige und somit kontemplative Stille zu halten, bevor der erste anfing zu klatschen. Das erlebt man so gut wie nie! Auch schon lange nicht mehr in Bayreuth…
Es war ein Sängerfest: Stefan Vinke sang selbst nach einem erstklassigen und mit voller Kraft gesungenen jungen Siegfried zwei Tage zuvor nun den „alten“ mit einer beachtlichen Stimmkraft bis zum bitteren Ende und konnte einmal mehr mit dezidiert und detailliert ausgesungenen hohen Cs am Ende des 2. und in der Rheinszene des 3. Aufzugs glänzen. Das macht ihm auf der Welt niemand nach! Iréne Theorin hatte an ihrem 60. Geburtstag ebenfalls große Momente als Brünnhilde, war die alles erlösende wissende Frau am Ende. Albert Dohmen war wieder der finstere und Respekt einflößende Hagen, Péter Kálmán ein erstklassiger rachsüchtiger Alberich, Deniz Uzun eine „neue“, sehr engagiert und mit kraftvollem Mezzo singende Waltraute, Károly Szemerédy mit Lilla Horti ein gutes Gibichungenpaar, Erika Gál und Andrea Brassói-Jörös eine gute Erste bzw. Dritte Norn, Judit Nemeth mit leichten Abstrichen die Zweite. Und Orsolya Sáfár, Gabriella Fodor und Zsófia Kálnay glänzten wieder als Rheintöchter.
Ádám Fischer wurde mit dem Hungarian Radio Symphony Orchestra frenetisch gefeiert.
Klaus Billand | 19.06.2023
A production by Hartmut Schörghofer
This recording is part of a complete Ring cycle.