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SEEN AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL OPERA REVIEW
            
            Wagner,  Die Walküre: 
            
            Soloists, 
            
            Orquesta Sinfónica del Liceu. Conductor: Sebastián Weigle, Gran 
            Teatre del Liceu de Barcelona. 28. 5.2008. (JMI)
            
            Concert Version.
            
            Cast:
            Brünnhilde: Evelyn 
            Herlitzius
            Sieglinde: Waltraud Meier
            Siegmund: Plácido Domingo
            Wotan: Alan Held
            Hunding: René Pape
            Fricka: Jane 
            Henschel.
            
            
            It is interesting 
            to see  how things change over time  in the world of the opera. Not 
            too many years ago, when there was a good cast in a Wagner opera, it 
            was normal to say that the line-up was worthy of Bayreuth. No Wagner 
            fan could say this  now however  after looking at the stellar cast 
            list  for this  Liceu  Walküre.  What we enjoyed in Barcelona would 
            never be available on the Sacred Hill although the mystique of the 
            place is a different matter, as is the Orchestra.
            
            Although this 
            
            Walküre
            was advertised as a concert version, taking into account 
            the great experience of all the singers, it became more of a kind 
            of   semi staging. as  all the singers moved round the stage and 
            none of them used a score:  the orchestra was in the pit and the 
            singers sang from the front of the stage. Usually  operas are 
            offered in concert, when they are rarities, and then mostly to avoid 
            building new productions, but   the reason here was simply due to 
            the exceptional  casting. Managing to get  superstars like Domingo, 
            Waltraud Meier and René  Pape together for  a longer period of time 
            than a concert,  would be  almost  a pipe-dream these days.
            
            The musical direction of this opera in concert was in the hands 
            Sebastián Weigle, whose performance was very uneven, with some good 
            moments and some others that were  truly disappointing. I had the 
            impression that conducting two such complicated works as Death in 
            Venice and Walküre one immediately  after the other 
            requires more preparation time than he probably had availablt to 
            him, . but although this may be  an explanation, it isn’t enough to 
            justify such  a poor performance by  the musical director of a world 
            class  opera house. The first act did not go much beyond correctness 
            in the notes, with a love duet that was very short  on inspiration 
            indeed. Weigle improved in the second act, the best part of his 
            reading, mainly in the Todesverkundigung. The worse came in the last 
            act with a very poor Ride of the Valkyries and disappointing Magic 
            Fire music. The  cast was worthy of better conducting than this and  
            the Liceu Orchestra was not on its best form either, with some  
            catastrophic  failures from the brass during the first act and a 
            constant lack of strength in the string section.
            
            Separate from  the other singers in term of  star quality, 
            the valkyrie giving the opera its title is of course Brünnhilde, 
            interpreted here by  Evelyn Herlitzius. If Jennifer Wilson were able 
            to sing with the intensity and conviction that this  German soprano 
            does, we would have the perfect Brünnhilde. Herlitzius’ voice is 
            not  exceptional and is even rather unattractive in some registers, 
            but her intensity and her capacity for living the role is such  that 
            these flaws almost become secondary sconsiderations. She had slight 
            difficulties in the initial ‘Hojotoho’, but she overcame them with 
            power and artistry. Very few singers these days have her capacity to 
            move me so much.
            
            Waltraud Meier was a very convincing Sieglinde, in a role that suits 
            her  far better than some others she sings, since its tessitura is 
            very much in the middle range. She does not need to overplay her 
            hand to be completely convincing, since Sieglinde is a part of her 
            that everything flows out from her naturally and easily. I am  
            almost tempted to say that I prefer her in concert, since her 
            everyday appearance is so elegantly gorgeous.
            
            Placido Domingo becomes more like Superman every day. The pact of  
            Faust’s pact  with Mephistopheles to retain youth seems like a  
            children’s game compared with  him. It is almost impossible to  
            understand how at  67 (that’s official) he can maintain the 
            affecting so many of his colleagues much earlier. He  is in fact 
            unique and a phenomenon never likely to be  repeated: . his Siegmund 
            was extraordinary in every sense. It is evident that he has lost his 
            very top notes – if he hadn’t he would actually be Supergod - , but 
            he  has enough intelligence  to produce the high A at the end of Act 
            I with tremendous dignity, if not brilliance. He is definitely from 
            another planet.
            
            American Alan Held was a powerful Wotan, more in the line of 
            Falk Struckmann than James Morris or Albert Dohmen and his voice is 
            well suited to singing the God, although finishing the opera with 
            some signs of tiredness. All in all a  good Wotan, though perhaps 
            slightly  on interpretative nuance.
            
            What I can say of 
            René Pape? He actually is Hunding.   
            One does not know whether to admire his sumptuous true bass voice 
            more , more than his  interpretation or his general way of singing. 
            I cannot remember any Hunding able to  sing so softly as he does.
            
            American Jane 
            Henschel was an outstanding and powerful Fricka, too often reduced 
            almost to a secondary role in some cast lists. Not so here though 
            with Ms Henschel providing the perfect  complement for a stellar 
            cast.
            
            The group of 
            Valkyries was  rather poor, with some significant failures. The 
            worse came from the best known, ie Silvana Dussmann (Helmwige) and 
            Renate Spingler (Siegrune). Every opera house needs to be careful 
            casting Helmwige, because she has to reach a high C in a clear and 
            sonorous way but Silvana Dussmann hurt my ears with her shouts and 
            something similar happened with Ms.  Spingler. This is very  
            surprising considering that the group also included Eugenia Maria 
            Bethencourt singing Ortlinde, who was a remarkable Helmwige in 
            Valencia and Florence. Michelle Marie Cook, who replaced Maria 
            Rodriguez as Gerhilde, was not very convincing either. The other 
            sisters were Jane Dutton (Waltraute), Nadine Weissmann 
            (Schwerleite), Inés Moraleda (Grimgerde) and Gemma-Coma Alabert 
            (Rossweisse).
            
            Obviously, the 
            Liceu overflowed with people, many coming from distant places. I 
            witnessed Superman’s  arrival  for the performance when  he was 
            almost covered by flowers from  his numerous fans. He was more 
            “infiorito” than la Madonna in Tosca. This was huge triumph for all 
            the artists: I left the theatre after 1 a.m. and the ovations were 
            still continuing. Maesto Weigle was received with a mixture of 
            applause and extremely loud sonorous booing, which did not stop, but 
            continued to crescendo
            
            Any  theater that 
            can offer offers this dream cast two days after a marvellous 
            production of
            
            Death in Venice however deserves hearty congratulations.  
            Bravo, Joan Matabosch!
            José M Irurzun
            
            
              
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