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Past Meetings

WAGNER SOCIETY AGM & RECITAL. Saturday 30 November 2024.

Our final meeting of the year began with the AGM for 2024, which thanked Rosemary Cater-Smith for her dedication and service as President, and welcomed the 2025 Committee led by President-elect, Peter Bassett. This was followed by our traditional Christmas party with a special added treat: violin and piano arrangements of selections from Wagner’s work performed by Warwick Adeney (former concertmaster of QSO who effortlessly segued between violin and viola) and Stephen Emmerson. They played an already-existing version of the Prize Song from Die Meistersinger; Träume, the final song of the Wesendonck Lieder – unmodified except that Warwick’s viola took the place of the voice, and Stephen’s new arrangements of two scenes from Die Walküre: Sieglinde’s narrative from Act I and the Magic Fire Music from the very end of the opera.

It might have seemed a rather quixotic thing to arrange Wagner’s eloquent orchestral narratives for the duo format. But, as Stephen noted in his introductory comments, this was a common thing before the age of recordings, indeed arrangements played as house-music would have been how many people discovered the music. And it was fascinating and magical. If the Meistersinger Prize song sounded a little like salon music, perhaps this was how the music was commonly refracted in the home. In contrast, the eloquence of Träume and the Walküre extracts was direct and moving in the performances. Especially striking was how well the viola worked substituting for Sieglinde. It was a wonderful way to celebrate the end of 2024.

Observations by Alpha Yap
Photography by Cathie Duffy and Jennifer Lawrence

 

THE FLYING DUTCHMAN – COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS by Peter Bassett. Saturday 19 October 2024.

For the text of Peter Bassett’s talk, please click here to download pdf.

 

Tour de force: Der fliegende Holländer, Dr Peter Bassett

Peter loosely structured his lecture around three domains of interest: (i) The opera’s presented content; (ii) the characters’ psychological machinations, and (iii) fate or forces beyond human control. My lecture commentary will follow suit. As members have come to anticipate from Peter, he comprehensively traversed the opera’s three acts with seven selected excerpts of duets and arias to counterpoint the deeper themes being played out: Daland’s desire for a win/win outcome (wealth and a married daughter), Senta’s belief in her higher-purpose (redemption of the Dutchman), Erik’s tedious pedestrianism, and the Dutchman’s longing for peace through eternal oblivion. Clearly much more than a poignant potion for tragedy. I might mention additionally Peter’s attention to the condemned crew of the Flying Dutchman’s ship, confused and wretched ghosts who wrote letters to long-dead loved ones at home.

Regarding the opera’s psychological insights into Wagner’s mind, Peter built the case that, indeed, Wagner was a Dutchman-like driven genius, making landfall only periodically (releasing a new work) and then setting sail for an idealised new creation to contain his music and dramatic artistry. Allied to this thesis, Peter highlighted the familial deaths (especially his beloved older sister) and emotional longing which blighted Wagner’s early development, and hence, moreover, Wagner’s need of assured women who, in turn, he could idealise. Hence, Peter revisited the standpoint of ‘the eternal feminine’ infusing the Wagnerian ‘total aesthetic’. Fascinatingly too, Peter supported the understanding that Wagner’s Paris experiences with his influential predecessor Giacomo Meyerbeer were at the root of Wagner’s later distinctive antisemitism.

Finally, what does Der fliegende Holländer reveal about Wagner’s philosophical historicity? We plainly see oblivion overturned by faith leading to transfiguration; the way is thus open for a more sophisticated analysis of apparent human reality as captured particularly with Tristan und Isolde (with a big shout-out to Mathilde Wesendonck). So, is it an esoteric sensibility which we commonly represent under the umbrella term ‘love’ which best epitomises the total aesthetic of drama and music quested for by Wagner? It’s a working hypothesis certainly, and yet we are ourselves haunted by the closing scene of The Ring, a tranquil Rhine perhaps depicting a force above gods or fate … we feel its presence.

Observations by Dr Michael John
Meeting photography by Jennifer Lawrence

 

MOVIE AFTERNOON – DIE MEISTERSINGER GLYNDEBOURNE PRODUCTION – Elizabeth Picture Theatre. Saturday 21 September 2024.

“New is my heart, new my mind, new is everything I do.” (Walther von Stolzing)

Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg Prelude

The orchestral prelude begins with a broad, confident theme of the guild of Mastersingers and their dedication to Nuremberg and to the arts of poetry and music.

The lyrical second theme, with its hint of impetuous ardour, is a foretaste of Walther’s prize song. It gently ruffles the prevailing mood of self-satisfaction.

Doubts are swept aside by the third theme, a magisterial fanfare derived from an authentic Mastersinger melody of the 16th Century. The guild draws strength from its traditions and from its patron, the harpist and poet King David – a connection emphasised by the prominent use of the harp throughout this passage.

A fourth theme emerges – a soaring expression of the Mastersingers’ devotion to poetry and music, which leads directly into a fifth theme – the final melody of the prize song expressing Walther’s love for Eva. The implication is clear (to the composer if not to the Mastersingers at this stage) – those who value art should be willing to embrace new forms if these flow genuinely from the heart.

All five themes and related motifs burst into a flowering of different ideas and feelings until the first, third and fifth combine in counterpoint to express the unity of the old and the new. The fourth theme with its soaring paean to poetry and music returns to put its seal on all that has gone before, and to bring the prelude to a radiant close.

Description of the Prelude from Peter Bassett’s eBook on Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, provided with the author’s compliments to all members of the Wagner Society in Queensland and to Melbourne Opera to use in connection with their forthcoming production. See: www.peterbassett.com.au

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The Society’s September event of a private showing of Act I of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg followed by a Reception with French cake and Prosecco in the elegant Reception room of The Elizabeth Picture Theatre in Elizabeth Street Brisbane (the former Irish Club) was one of the most enjoyable functions of the Society.

The production was sponsored by one of our members, Richard Hartley, and a complementary eBook looking at the opera in depth was donated by Peter Bassett. The Glyndebourne production by Sir David McVicar was beautifully crafted to evoke a very naturalistic approach to the opera that highlighted the various characters and the period in which the action was set, despite the costumes being a couple of centuries later! The Prelude under the baton of Vladimir Jurowski was exciting, and the high standard of the singing of all the main characters was faultless. It was wonderful to see a production that was true to Wagner’s vision and not the vision of a modern director! Gerald Finley was a very balanced Hans Sachs, and I look forward to Acts 2 and 3 when Marco Jentzsch as Walther comes into his own as his character matures and allows his singing to exude more melodic power, while maintaining the connection to nature that makes his character stand apart from the very conservative approach of the guild members. Similarly, the following Acts will give greater scope to Anna Gabler as Eva, but this Act gave a true feeling of the actual Meistersingers and even made Sixtus Beckmesser a little more human!

This is the second time that a similar event has been held by the Society, and the comfort and exclusiveness of seeing a good production on the large screen is so enjoyable that we look forward to it becoming a yearly highlight.

Observations by Rosemary Cater-Smith.

Meeting photography by Cathie Duffy, Jennifer Lawrence and Judy Xavier

 

WESENDONCK LIEDER. INTRODUCTION BY STEPHEN EMMERSON FOLLOWED BY A RECITAL BY REBECCA CASSIDY WITH STEPHEN EMMERSON. Saturday 17th August 2024.

Saturday 17th August, 2024 was the 25th Anniversary of the founding of the Wagner Society in Qld. Following the performance of The Ring Cycle in Adelaide in 1998, a number of people got together with the intention of forming such a Society. Several informal meetings were held, and assistance was given by Peter Bassett who came to Brisbane from Adelaide. On 17th August 1999 a formal meeting was held appointing a Committee, of which Hal Davis was the first President. In 2024 six of those original members were present, as was Peter Bassett, and were presented with a bottle of Champagne to commemorate the event. A further bottle was raffled and won by one of the original members!

Stephen Emmerson gave a very enjoyable and most illuminating talk on the Wesendonck Lieder before a performance was given. He outlined the situation where Wagner and his wife Minna resided in a villa on the Wesendonck Estate, and Wagner’s relationship with Mathilde. It was a close spiritual relationship, but whether it was physical will never really be known. It was a very informative talk giving rise to a completely different assessment of Mathilde and showing her as a talented woman who spoke several languages and wrote poetry and plays.

A wonderful Concert of Wagner’s Wesendonck Lieder was then performed by Rebecca Cassidy and Stephen Emmerson. Rebecca is a soprano with a wonderful talent, recognized some years ago by her winning of the Wagner prize given by the Society. She has gone from strength to strength, performing with the Qld. Symphony Orchestra, the Qld. Youth orchestra and the Opera at Jimbour event with Ensemble Q. In singing the Wesendonck Lieder her voice was powerful but rounded with a lovely tone and a soaring ability to reach the high notes with ease. Stephen Emmerson had full command of the piano and gave his usual accomplished performance, and together they gave a concert that made it a wonderful afternoon.

Members mingled to chat over afternoon tea, and a 25th Anniversary cake was enjoyed by all, accompanied, of course, with a glass of Champagne.

Observations by Rosemary Cater-Smith. Photography by Michael John, Jennifer Lawrence, Tom Elich, and Rosemary Cater-Smith

 

TONY PALMER’S FILM ON ‘WAGNER’. EXCERPT. Saturday 20th July 2024.

The Society meeting on 20th July had a slightly different format with a showing of part of the excellent film ‘Wagner’ starring Richard Burton. The film, produced by Tony Palmer, was originally seven and three-quarters hours in length, but had been reduced to a nine part mini-series. Stephen Emmerson did an excellent job in editing a section of the film that commenced with Wagner’s involvement in the 1848 Dresden uprising and concluded with King Ludwig II’s accession to the throne of Bavaria and his offer to support Wagner for the remainder of his life – an offer that was very welcome given the usual parlous state of Wagner’s finances! Richard Burton excelled in the role of Wagner, and Gemma Craven brought Minna to life as the wife who was unable to understand her husband’s genius and sought a more prosaic future for them both. The music was a highlight of the film, conducted by Georg Solti, and the scenery, shot on location was outstanding. With the supporting cast of outstanding actors, this is a film that has not dated given that its original production was in 1983, and one was left with the feeling that the mini-series in its entirety would be worth watching.

Observations by Rosemary Cater-Smith

 

RECITAL BY DALLAS TIPPET, RECIPIENT OF THE SOCIETY’S 2023 ENCOURAGEMENT AWARD, ACCOMPANIED BY MATTIAS LOWER. Saturday 15th June 2024

   

The Society was pleased to have as a recitalist at its June meeting the young baritone Dallas Tippet, winner of our 2023 Wagner Society Encouragement Award. This Award is offered on an annual basis, and those eligible are current tertiary students who, through performance in a major or minor role in a Conservatorium Opera production, best demonstrate vocal potential for a future career in large scale romantic operas in the style of Richard Wagner or Richard Strauss. The adjudicators are Heads of the Vocal and Opera Departments and all producers of opera programs during the year, and the Award is determined during the end-of-year examination period. The Queensland Conservatorium Griffith University is responsible for the administration of the Award and the managing of associated funds. We welcomed the attendance at the June 15th meeting of Associate Professor Margaret Schindler, Head of Vocal Studies of the Queensland Conservatorium Griffith University.

Accompanied on the piano by his singing teacher, tenor Mattias Lower, Dallas performed 4 musical items:

Träume – from Wagner’s Wesendonck Lieder

Mein Sehnen, mein Wähnen – from Korngold’s Die tote Stadt

Lieben, Hassen, Hoffen, Zagen – from Richard Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos

O du, mein holder Abendstern – from Wagner’s Tannhäuser

Dallas possesses a high baritone voice of beauty and flexibility, used to telling effect in meeting the challenges of technique and interpretation posed by the above musical items. The programme also included a discussion session, chaired by our Secretary Alpha Yap, when Dallas and teacher Mattias talked of Dallas’s development as an artist and his future career possibilities.

Though initially attracted to music theatre and jazz in high school, Dallas was persuaded by Mattias to give classical a go and ever since he has embraced with enthusiasm opera, art song and performance of other classical vocal music. While there are some vocal similarities to jazz, classical music demands more physically and emotionally and is for Dallas much more satisfying.

Dallas has undertaken his classical training at Queensland Conservatorium of Music, having completed his Bachelor of Music (Performance) at the end of 2022. He has just recently completed his Graduate Certificate and plans to finish his Master’s course in the middle of 2025.

Mattias has remained Dallas’s singing teacher for over 7 years. Their teacher/student relationship has been founded on mutual trust and a secure understanding of one another personally and artistically. During that time Dallas’s voice has developed from bass baritone to high baritone. In regard to the demands of performing classical repertoire, Dallas observed that movement classes at the Conservatorium aided stamina but that the singer must have mental resilience, must want to perform. Interpretatively, he felt that singers must find emotions from within themselves in response to the music rather than being too analytical.

Asked about repertoire progression and where his voice might go, Dallas was uncertain as to the ultimate destination. At this stage he is particularly interested in Mozart, Handel and Lieder, but he will continue to expand his repertoire in the high baritone range generally. Dallas added that he enjoyed English folk song, especially the songs of John Ireland. He agreed with Mattias that his voice could be suited to the lyric baritone roles of the Verdi operas.

After completing his Masters, Dallas hopes to engage in performance and further studies overseas. He intends to audition for a conservatorium in Germany or possibly the Royal Academy of Music in England. He will take every opportunity that may arise.

We wish Dallas every success as he works to develop his career as a classical singer.

Observations by Geoff Fisher
Photography by Cathie Duffy

 

WAGNER’S BIRTHDAY LUNCH, AND A PRESENTATION ON ‘RICHARD WAGNER AND THE TEPLITZ MYSTERY’ By Peter Bassett, Saturday 18th May 2024

            

A map showing the likely route taken by Johanna Rosine Wagner when she travelled by coach from Leipzig to Teplitz in July 1813.

Left: Coat of Arms devised by Richard Wagner for the first printing of ‘Mein Leben’, combining a vulture (Geier/Geyer) representing Ludwig Geyer, and a constellation (Grosser Wagen) representing Carl Friedrich Wagner. Right: the heraldic eagle used by Napoleon I. Richard Wagner abandoned his coat of arms out of concern that the vulture might be mistaken for Napoleon’s eagle, with implications of ongoing Wagnerian sympathy for Napoleonic France. Richard specifically identified his father as “Carl Friedrich Wagner [1770-1813] at the time of my birth the Registrar of Police in Leipzig, with the expectation of becoming Director of Police”. He dismissed suggestions that his biological father was Ludwig Heinrich Christian Geyer, his mother’s second husband, and such claims (often repeated during the twentieth century) are based on unfounded speculation. Saxony was an ally of Napoleonic France until late 1813, and Friedrich Wagner had the confidence of the French authorities (Napoleon’s Marshal Davout appointed him Chief of the Police of Public Safety and asked him to act as an interpreter during Napoleon’s visit to Leipzig in 1813). This close association with the French must have become an embarrassment to later generations of the Wagner family and could explain the absence of any surviving portrait of Friedrich Wagner and Richard’s efforts during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71 to distance himself from the French.

Left: Albert Wagner, Richard’s elder brother by fourteen years. Right: Richard Wagner as a young man. The clear physical resemblances between the brothers Albert and Richard provide persuasive evidence of the common paternity of Carl Friedrich Wagner.

 

The Society’s annual lunch in commemoration of Wagner’s birthday was held on Saturday 18th May in the Heritage Room at The Story Bridge Hotel. Attendance numbers for both the lunch and the meeting to follow were very healthy, and our members and guests began with refreshments and a fine lunch amid delightful company. At each table we were faced with a sheet listing a range of questions – The Teplitz Mystery Quiz. Even for committed Wagnerians, I dare say that many if not all of the answers were unknown at the start of the afternoon. I guess that even “In what part of Europe is Teplitz located?” was a little hazy for many, including myself. “Who was the Wagner family friend performing in the theatre troupe in Teplitz in 1813”; “Which great composer visited Teplitz in 1812”; “Who was the great poet who visited Teplitz in 1812 and 1813; “Why was travel to Teplitz from Leipzig so dangerous in 1813”, and “What service did Richard Wagner’s father perform for Napoleon?” – these were just a few of the 20 intriguing questions posed.

After ambling back down to the Multicultural Centre after lunch, we were treated to a presentation by our former president Peter Bassett. Answers to all the Quiz questions were revealed and discussed in fascinating detail. The crux of the issue concerned the question of why Wagner’s mother Johanna risked undertaking travel from Leipzig to Teplitz to visit the family friend, the actor Ludwig Geyer. Amid the backdrop of the Napoleonic wars and at a time when country roads were notoriously unsafe, the trip seems ill-advised especially travelling with her young son Richard, then only a couple of months old. Wagner’s father would die later in the year, and his mother would before long marry Geyer. There has been much conjecture, together with more-or-less-subtle innuendo, that Richard Wagner’s biological father may not have been Johanna’s husband but in fact Geyer, and that Wagner’s mother risked taking the child to Teplitz to introduce him to his real father. Cause for such speculation can be traced back to statements by the composer himself as reported by Cosima and Nietzsche, and rumours have been spread widely by various subsequent authors. Some have also suggested that Geyer was of Jewish heritage – innuendo irresistible for some in light of Wagner’s later infamous antisemitism. (He wasn’t!) Many of us had probably heard such rumours so Peter’s setting the record straight on these issues was most welcome.

As we have witnessed many times, Peter’s presentations are always impeccably researched, clearly and persuasively argued. This was no exception. And the argument was supported by well-chosen projected images from the time and presented with his usual alacrity and gentle humour. His grasp of both the personal family dimensions as well as the broader historical context was masterly in its detail. Based on various forms of evidence, he built an argument – thoroughly convincing to this writer – that countered the speculations about Wagner’s biological father. Most persuasive were the images showing Wagner’s unmistakable physical likeness to an older brother, born long before his mother knew Geyer.

Another matter of particular interest was Wagner’s father’s relationship to Napoleon. As a senior public servant in Leipzig, Saxony (where Napoleon had appointed a sympathetic king), Friedrich was perceived to be acting on the side of the French leader – an association that accounts for why much information about him around these years was subsequently buried. The French were defeated at the decisive Battle of Leipzig later in that year of Wagner’s birth – the so-called Battle of the Nations, the largest battle before the First World War, involving around half a million men resulting in hundreds of thousands of deaths and casualties. Personal motivations and decisions can be easily misunderstood, distorted, and misrepresented by proximity to such seismic events and Peter unpacked the many interconnected threads with consummate skill.

All in all, it was a most informative presentation, rigorous in its detail but compelling in its conclusions and a pleasure to witness. The Queensland Society is fortunate indeed to have such expertise in our midst.

Observations by Stephen Emmerson
Event photography: Cathie Duffy, Judy Xavier and Michael John

 

The Late Music Dramas of Richard Wagner: Philosophy and Music. By Colin Mackerras, Saturday 20th April 2024

 

 

On Saturday 20th April, Colin Mackerras gave a very interesting and stimulating talk on the late music dramas of Richard Wagner – Philosophy and Music. He referred to Schopenhauer as the main philosophical influence on Wagner, and outlined four main areas for consideration, namely compassion, women, the environment, and nationalism, all of which feature in the later music dramas.

Schopenhauer thought that compassion was the basis of morality, and this is seen in particular in Parsifal when Parsifal kills the swan and Gurnemanz takes him to task for his action. Schopenhauer did not extend his feelings of compassion towards women, something emphasized by Colin, and in this aspect Wagner clearly parted ways in that the women in his later works were strong women, Brünnhilde being, in Colin’s view, the real hero of the Ring, and Kundry also showing strength through fortitude. It was Isolde, however, who showed that music had roots in sexual consciousness in the Transfiguration.

Wagner’s identification with nature is also seen in the Ring, particularly the Forest Murmurs in Siegfried, and his nationalism is readily apparent in his anti-French stance in the Franco-Prussian war. However, although Wagner’s works encompass and are influenced by these philosophical trends, his music embodies the concept of music as primary among the arts, a view influenced by Buddhism.

This primary position of music in Colin’s view was beautifully demonstrated in the Siegfried Idyll which dissolved the boundaries between Will and Representation, the dichotomy espoused by Schopenhauer. Altogether this was a provoking presentation and a highly enjoyable afternoon.

Observations by Rosemary Cater-Smith
Photography by Cathie Duffy

ACT 2 OF LOHENGRIN DVD. Introduced by Stephen Emmerson, Saturday 16th March 2024

   

   

 

 

Photography by Cathie Duffy

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING AND ‘AFTERSONG’. Saturday 17 February 2024.

 

 

 

 

 

Our first meeting for 2024 was held at the Story Bridge Hotel, and combined the 2023 AGM (delayed because of the many commitments associated with the Brisbane Ring) followed by Aftersong, a series of reflections on the Brisbane Ring. A key function of the AGM was to elect a new Management Committee for 2024. All of the members of the outgoing Committee were nominated for and elected to the new Committee, along with two new members: Michael John and Marion Pender. A complete list of the 2024 Management Committee is to be found on the Home Page of this website.

We had the pleasure of welcoming the Society’s Patron, Bradley Daley, for Aftersong. Bradley gave us many insights into the process of creating a new production on such a scale, taken with his experience with other recent Rings, including the Longborough and the Bendigo (Melbourne Opera) productions. Producers and production staff sought advice from experienced performers like Bradley, in a spirit of collaboration. And it was striking to learn how much was created or modified during the workshopping of the production (which was substantially done at Opera Australia’s home in Sydney, before being set up in Brisbane for technical rehearsals). We discovered much about the performers’ challenges. The digital screens that were so visually striking for the audience didn’t give as much support to project the voices as conventionally built sets. And lyrical soft passages in the orchestra can be a nightmare for singer trying to hear their cues. It was a charming insight into the depth of craft and skill that performers, technicians and producers, brought to create something on the scale of the Brisbane Ring.

Bradley’s Q and A session was followed by brief reflections from Society members (Colin Mackerras, Alpha Yap, Hal Davis, Marion Pender, and Michael John). These ranged widely, touching on comparisons with other Ring productions, telling performances in Brisbane, how the venue enhances the experience, and the immersive drama of experiencing a work of this scale as a living thing in the theatre. And Marion Pender had perhaps the best line of all: How wonderful it was to go home to one’s own bed after each performance (i.e. not be jetlagged!)

Andrew Porter, for many years The New Yorker’s music critic, once wrote of how the rhythms of life can change when one attends a Ring. The events of the week revolve around the performances, and one’s imagination is carried across the days by the evolving drama. The reflections of Aftersong and the later discussions over afternoon tea suggest that this was exactly the experience for many of us who attended the 2023 Brisbane Ring.

Observations by Alpha Yap Photography by Cathie Duffy

WSQ RECEPTIONS DURING THE BRISBANE RING. Saturdays 2, 9, 16 December 2023.

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

During the performances of The Ring Cycle in Brisbane in December 2023, the Wagner Society in Qld. arranged three Receptions to greet visiting Wagnerians. Each of these Receptions was held in conjunction with one of the cycles, and it was a great pleasure to welcome over 240 people from both National and International Societies. An outstanding attendance was approximately 45 members from New Zealand attending the second cycle. The venue for the Receptions was Tattersall’s Club, Brisbane, a beautiful Club that describes itself as the connection between Brisbane’s rich heritage and its progressive future. The lovely, elegant rooms provided the perfect background to the gathering that included the Presidents of several national societies, Esteban Insausti from N.S.W., Miki Oikawa from Victoria, Dr Geoffrey Seidel from South Australia and Alison Woodman from Western Australia. Our President welcomed all those present and acknowledged the considerable distance that some people had come to attend the Ring, including Wagnerians from New York, Frankfurt and Chile.

Prof. Dr Michael Rosemann, Honorary Consul of the Federal Republic of Germany in Brisbane highlighted the contribution made by German migrants who settled in Brisbane in a lively and stimulating presentation. Another highlight of the evenings was the playing by John Granger Fisher of the Liszt transcription of Wagner’s Liebestod, and we were delighted at the second Reception that our Patron, Heldentenor Bradley Daley, accompanied by John, sang Nothung. His attendance and singing was a wonderful addition to the evening.

It would not, of course, have been possible to hold these very enjoyable functions without the help of our sponsors. One of the first to make a significant contribution was Philip Bacon of Philip Bacon Galleries. Dr Philip Bacon AM is an art dealer and philanthropist well-known for his contribution to the arts in Australia. This was followed by a contribution from The Sydney Savage Club, known for its support of musicians. However, much support came from several of our own members who made very generous donations, and to members who participated in the other fund-raising activities organised by the Society.

Brisbane must now be considered a major arts venue having hosted a significant and highly enjoyable Ring Cycle, Symposia and Pre-Performance Talks by our immediate past President, Wagnerian scholar Dr Peter Bassett, and the wonderful and warm Receptions that brought all of us together.

Observations by Rosemary Cater-Smith, President
Photography by Cathie Duffy

 

BARITONE WARWICK FYFE – ALBERICH IN THE FORTHCOMING RING. Warwick and his wife Ruth were welcome guests during Ring rehearsals. Saturday 18 November 2023.

The Society was fortunate to have as its guest at the November meeting Warwick Fyfe, one of Australia’s most highly respected bass baritones. Warwick has built an impressive Australian and international career performing in challenging and complex roles, particularly in the Wagnerian repertoire. Warwick’s talk to the Society was especially timely in view of his forthcoming assumption of the role of Alberich in the Ring in Brisbane this December.

Warwick began by providing a candid and thoughtful overview of how his career in opera has developed from his early days at the Victorian Conservatorium to now performing in the great opera houses of the world. The professional life of a performer of classical music is at the best of times a demanding one. As well as the normal career hurdles, Warwick recounted his problems with ill-health and the vicissitudes of working at a time of Covid disruptions.

From an early age Warwick had immersed himself in Wagner’s works and in much commentary and analysis of them. But he realised that he should study more widely to become a complete opera singer over a range of repertoire. And he cautions about becoming an “opera bore”. Warwick considers that the best singers, who can penetrate the depths of a role, are those who have wide cultural interests in literature, history, art and the like.

After these observations, Warwick engaged in conversation with Peter Bassett, who first met him in 1998 when he sang Fasolt in the Adelaide/Châtelet Ring. Peter raised various matters regarding interpretation of and preparation for roles in opera. For Warwick, the vocal/musical preparation and dramatic interpretation or characterisation are aspects of the same process. With his wide background in Wagner, he does not find the need to engage in abstract analysis or theorising when assuming a role in a Wagnerian opera. His interpretative decisions emerge intuitively from his close engagement with the score. But one should always be open to fresh approaches and the insights of others. Singers can of course have different work methods in regard to the vocal preparation of a role. Warwick finds it more satisfying to start at the beginning of the score and to move carefully through to the end. By following the musical and dramatic development of the role, fresh interpretative insights may be yielded.

Turning to the Ring cycle in Brisbane, Warwick provided intriguing glimpses of what is in store, referring to matters of interpretation and presentation that have occupied the director (Chen Shi-Zheng) as he sought to realise the Wagnerian tetralogy as a “universal myth”. Questions from the floor revealed that members were looking forward to the Brisbane Ring with much anticipation.

At the conclusion of the meeting the consensus was that we had been both entertained and informed by a most engaging guest speaker.

Observations by Geoff Fisher
Meeting photography by Cathie Duffy and Colin Mackerras

 

TRAINING SINGERS FOR WAGNER. Associate Professor Margaret Schindler in conversation with Professor Lisa Gasteen AO, and a vocal performance by Kira Dooner accompanied by Sarka Budinska. Saturday 21 October 2023.

L to R: Kira Dooner, Lisa Gasteen, Rosemary Cater-Smith, Margaret Schindler, Sarka Budinska.

 

Members of the society were treated this month to a presentation from three excellent singers: Lisa Gasteen (who needs no introduction to members of any Wagner society), Margaret Schindler, Head of Vocal Studies at Queensland Conservatorium Griffith University and Kira Dooner, the winner of the Society’s 2022 Encouragement Award. So, between the perspectives of young person embarking on an operatic career and those of seasoned professionals, the presentation offered many fascinating insights into the nature of the profession and its many challenges. The afternoon began with a short engaging recital by Kira supported most ably by associate artist Sarka Budinska on piano. A delightful programme was presented including music by Gluck, Strauss, Brahms, Puccini and Dvorak. Kira’s excellent potential was abundantly clear – she has an attractive voice that is always at the service of the music, the words and character being portrayed. With secure technical control and a reliable command of languages, she is obviously being trained well but she also demonstrated abundant natural talent, temperament and communicative skills that will stand her in good stead.

Her performance was followed by an interview with Margaret Schindler where Kira shared some of her experiences of studying singing at Queensland Conservatorium with Lisa as well as her future aspirations. Her personality shone through describing herself as a “Drama Queen” who is most attracted to music that expresses strong emotions. It was clear that she fully inhabits the music/roles she sings. She is realistic about her career prospects giving sensible responses to questions about her short-, medium- and long-term goals. But with her musical talent, her personality and communicative skills, her prospects seem very strong.

Then Margaret interviewed Lisa about her career, specifically about the training she received. The training of an operatic voices is clearly a demanding and complex process that requires many years, indeed decades, of careful development and sensitive guidance. Moreover it entails a deep responsibility, of which Lisa and Margaret are well aware. Even for talented young singers who attain some early recognition, the opportunity to study overseas with renowned teachers, within esteemed institutions and in cities with rich operatic traditions is no guarantee of success. Only a very small proportion of hopeful young talents will attain the professional opportunities they dream of, let alone maintain a long and successful career. Lisa recounted gratefully how well her initial undergraduate studies in Queensland with Margaret Nickson set her up. Surprisingly, by contrast, the lessons she took with distinguished overseas teachers invariably “ended in tears”. She returned to Margaret Nickson to get herself and her voice back on track. It was gratifying to hear that, on returning to Brisbane after studies overseas, Margaret Nickson and John Matheson – Tahu Matheson’s father – both gave most generously and unstintingly of their time and experience. Ultimately they cemented the strong foundations from which her career could take off. Recognising the need here for young singers to access training of the highest level was the impetus for establishing the Lisa Gasteen National Opera Program that, for over a decade now, has done so much for aspiring young Australian and New Zealand singers.

The interview touched on many aspects such as the challenges of finding the right teacher, the right manager and the right country in which to study – not necessarily a big centre such as London or New York where a talent can easily get lost. (Scandinavia was strongly recommended above Italy!) Most tellingly, Lisa observed that one does not set out specifically to train a Wagnerian voice – any teacher claiming to do that should be avoided at all costs! For her, a teacher should develop the individual vocal instrument, build the muscles carefully over time for healthy, open sound production. Only down the track will the nature and potential of that individual’s instrument reveal itself. Careful choice of repertoire at each stage of this process is obviously crucial. For any young artist, singing Wagner – even the lighter roles – is necessarily some way down the track. The presentation was among the best attended of the year and lively conversation continued over afternoon tea.

Observations by Stephen Emmerson
Photography by Judy Xavier

Also see the Essays & Reviews page of this website for: Wagner’s plans for Training Singers, by Peter Bassett. A paper presented to the 8th International Congress of Voice Teachers, Brisbane, on 13 July 2013.

 

110 YEARS OF THE RING IN AUSTRALIA, by Dr Peter Bassett. Saturday 16 September 2023.

Thomas Quinlan, impresario 1912 and 1913.

Richard Eckhold, conductor of the 1913 Ring.

Richard Eckhold, conductor of the 1913 Ring.

Maud Percival Allen 1913.

Florence Austral, star of the 1934 opera tour.

The 1998 Adelaide Ring.

Marilyn Zschau, Australian Opera 1989.

Froh, Adelaide Ring 2004.

The 2004 Adelaide Ring.

Lisa Gasteen, Adelaide Ring 2004.

Comparing Rhinemaidens. Armfield’s 2013 OA Ring above; Kosky’s 2009 Hannover Ring below.

Comparing Valkyries. Armfield’s 2013 OA Ring above; Zambello’s Washington DC/San Francisco Ring below.

Fasolt, Loge and Fafner, Melbourne Opera’s Ring 2023.

Our society members were treated to another excellent presentation on 16th September by our former president Peter Bassett. For some years we have been exceedingly fortunate to have such a committed, deeply knowledgeable Wagnerian in our midst who shares his passion and deep expertise so generously.

This presentation, titled 110 YEARS OF THE RING IN AUSTRALIA, outlined the fascinating history of Wagner’s music in this country, specifically through performances of his Ring cycle. Peter’s talk spanned from a Lohengrin performance in 1877 – we were even shown Wagner’s letter of appreciation for that production – through to Brisbane’s upcoming productions this year. Following the first staged performances of the Ring before the First World War, over 8 decades would pass before Australians could witness a production of the full cycle in this country. Astonishingly, a touring company directed by English entrepreneur Thomas Quinlan presented productions of virtually all of Wagner’s mature works in Melbourne and Sydney in 1913. (The only omission was Parsifal which was, at least up until that year, the exclusive preserve of Bayreuth.) In Melbourne, the company presented 25 different operas in eight weeks including two full Ring cycles as well as Aida that coincidentally will also be presented in the upcoming Brisbane season. And several Ring cycles were presented in Sydney together with some extra performances of Die Walküre and Götterdämmerung. Clearly after the world war(s) the many diverse challenges of producing a complete Ring cycle proved to be prohibitive for many subsequent decades. Benjamin Fuller in the 1930s brought productions of Wagner’s works (including around a dozen performances each of Die Walküre, Tristan and Tannhäuser among other operas). The star soprano of these performances was Australian soprano Florence Austral and we were treated to hear a recording of that remarkable voice from 1928 (in an extract from the Prologue of Götterdämmerung). Peter also drew our attention to another famous Australian Wagnerian soprano Marjorie Lawrence. Though she never performed a Wagnerian role here on stage, her concert performances were memorable events in the musical life of our country.

No productions of the Ring were seriously contemplated in Australia in the decades immediately after World War Two. Peter then described the attempts of Australian Opera to produce a Ring cycle in the late 1970’s that were thwarted by internal disputes and personal rivalries. A concert performance of Das Rheingold in Sydney in 1979 and Die Walküre two years later in Sydney seemed promising but Richard Bonynge’s intention of presenting a complete cycle that decade did not eventuate. A 1984 production of Das Rheingold was unfortunately decisive. Peter cited Moffatt Oxenbould’s opinion that it was “one of those performances one would like to forget, but never can, because the memories of a horribly bad performance remain so vivid.” As a result, from that point on, plans to complete the cycle were regrettably buried for over a decade.

And so South Australian Opera’s presentation in Adelaide of the Ring cycle in 1998 was the major turning point for Wagner performances in this country. Pierre Strosser’s 1998 production (imported from the Châtelet in Paris) was followed by our first fully-staged Parsifal in 2001 and the first Australian production of the Ring cycle in 2004. Many of us present will have recalled the exhilarating experience of these performances and it was a delight to be reminded of what these productions looked and sounded like. In particular, extracts from a documentary film on the 2004 performances reminded us of the hugely ambitious nature of the production directed by Elke Neidhardt, showed us conductor Asher Fisch at work preparing the orchestra (a band of over a hundred musicians that, from all accounts, excelled itself) and to hear again some of Lisa Gasteen’s glorious – dare one say incomparable? – Brünnhilde. Taken with a video of rehearsals of the 1998 production, it was a vivid reminder of the extraordinary dedication required to put on a Ring cycle: extraordinary singers supported by a musical staff whose work finishes when the curtain goes up; many months of rehearsal by the orchestra(s); and dedicated technical teams who tackle the challenge of making the productions work!

Beyond its notable place in Australia’s operatic history, the 2004 production should be recognised as an outstanding landmark in our broader cultural history and not just for Wagnerians. It is great to be informed that videos of that extraordinary production have become available to view online and that a new book of photographs from it will be available soon.

Disappointingly, plans to restage the 2004 Adelaide production elsewhere in Australia failed to materialise and it wasn’t until 2013 that Opera Australia presented a production of the Ring in Melbourne. Peter noted the interstate rivalries that were operating behind the scenes. I suspect that many of us shared his reservations about that particular production directed by Neil Armfield, noting that many of the directorial concepts were “a bit of a hotch potch” (and he demonstrated its unacknowledged debt to some previous productions). And so, now a decade later, hopes are high that the Ring in Brisbane this year will be more original, more coherent and more compelling.

The Ring presented by Melbourne Opera in Bendigo from this year was also considered – a commendable achievement to be sure but Peter expressed and justified his reservations about ‘fairy tale’ or ‘folk tale’ stagings of Wagner’s works.

Peter’s presentation concluded with an audio extract from Warwick Fyfe and Daniel Sumegi singing from the Alberich-Hagen scene in Götterdämmerung – two wonderful Australian Wagnerian voices who were featured decades ago in Adelaide Ring cycles but will be heard again this year in the Brisbane performances. The sense of anticipation is palpable – only not to hear these fine voices again but to experience first-hand what will hopefully be another landmark in Wagner performance in Australia. Our heightened expectation was only enhanced by Peter’s superb and deeply authoritative presentation that put the event into a broad historical perspective.

Observations by Stephen Emmerson

Meeting photography by Judy Xavier and Colin Mackerras

 

Tahu Matheson’s Conversation with Stephen Emmerson. Saturday 19 August 2023.

On 19 August, the Wagner Society in Queensland was given a special treat when Professor Stephen Emmerson, adjunct professor with the Queensland Conservatorium of Music, part of Griffith University, interviewed Tahu Matheson, Head of Music of Opera Australia.

I liked everything about this occasion. In particular, I liked the easy style of both Tahu and Stephen, expressed in the enthusiasm both clearly feel for their subject. Secondly, I liked the content and especially the attention given to Wagner’s Ring Cycle, part of the preparation for the performances later this year. Thirdly, I liked the piano performances Tahu gave us, illustrating the complex music of Das Rheingold, especially the last part of it. I thought I knew this music well, but am happy to concede that Tahu’s presentation taught me a good deal about the brilliant ways Wagner varied his main thematic material. Tahu also said it was clear from the music that, although Wotan and the gods thought they were enjoying triumph through their entry into Valhalla, in fact their success was hollow.

Tahu Matheson is unusually tall and has a commanding presence. But his style is relaxed and informal, as well as informative. He did a degree at the Queensland Conservatorium and lived for a time in Brisbane. So, in fact Stephen was among his teachers and his abiding respect was obvious during the interview, both in manner and content. Stephen began by observing that it was Parsifal that had first got Tahu into admiration and love of Wagner, its sublimity and the calm way in which tensions are resolved, at least relative to Tristan and Isolde or the Ring.

It was the Ring that dominated the discussion, with some references also to Tristan and Parsifal. Tahu emphasized the influence of Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) on Wagner’s music. One of the main sources of Schopenhauer’s appeal to Wagner was his notion that the truth of the world should be seen not in scientific but in aesthetic terms, music being “a copy of the Will itself” and the greatest of the arts. Wagner developed his own theory of the arts, but the libretti of his later works show the influence of Schopenhauer’s The World as Will and Representation. A concrete example is in the wonderful first scene of Act III of Siegfried between Wotan and Erda, one of the turning-points of the Ring. Wotan needs Erda’s advice on how to “stop a rolling wheel” (wie zu hemmen ein rollendes Rad), that of the gods’ downfall. When she makes it clear she can’t help, he responds: Um der Götter Ende grämt mich die Angst nicht, seit mein Wunsch es will (“The downfall of the gods does not grieve me, since my wish wills it”). Again, in Parsifal we see a very important example of Schopenhauer’s view that compassion is the basis of morality. Who will save the Grail and return the spear? It is “the pure fool who gains understanding through compassion” (durch Mittleid wissend, der reine Tor). Tahu emphasized this crucial passage, acknowledging also the influence of Buddhism, in which compassion is central (Schopenhauer is famous for his interest in Indian philosophy).

As we come out of COVID-19 and can enjoy afternoon tea together after our Wagner experiences, let’s have more shows like this!

Observations by Colin Mackerras

Photography by Judy Xavier

 

SCHOPENHAUER IN TRISTAN: Beyond a usual love duet. Saturday 17 June 2023.

Presentation by Professor Stephen Emmerson.

Stephen Emmerson

Ian Storey and Waltraud Meier as Tristan and Isolde

Arthur Schopenhauer photographed in 1859, the year in which Wagner completed Tristan und Isolde.

While modestly disavowing expertise in philosophy, Professor Stephen Emmerson nonetheless proceeded to give an informed and interesting presentation concerning the influence of the German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) on Wagner and how this influence manifested itself in Tristan und Isolde.

Stephen focussed on the works of two distinguished and prolific modern philosophers: Bryan Magee (1930-2019) and Sir Roger Scruton (1944-2020). Some members of our Society would be acquainted with a few of the many books that these two polymaths and ardent Wagnerians wrote on a large variety of subjects.

Wagner first discovered Schopenhauer in 1854, working through his great treatise The World as Will and Representation (1818, expanded 1844 and 1859) four times in the course of the year. For Wagner this discovery was life changing. Till the end of his life Wagner stood in awe of Schopenhauer (as Stephen observed, Wagner was not exactly known for being in awe of any person). Schopenhauer’s influence pervades Tristan und Isolde, which Wagner composed in 1857-1859.

Schopenhauer, following Emmanuel Kant, drew a distinction between the phenomenal world of appearances and the noumenal world of absolute or true reality. According to Kant, the noumenal realm, ultimate knowledge of ourselves and the world outside us, is beyond the capacities of humanity to comprehend. Schopenhauer revised Kant by adopting a pessimistic view of our life in the phenomenal world while suggesting that humans might yet gain some access to the absolute. For Schopenhauer the world of appearances is illusory and characterised by suffering and frustrated desires. His pessimism is grounded in his concept of the ‘will’: a blind irrational force that animates all being in the universe. For humans this will manifests itself in continual wanting and striving which inevitably fail to satisfy. The way to overcome suffering, to achieve tranquillity of mind, is through the renunciation of the will.

Renunciation of the will can be achieved by ascetic self- abnegation and the submergence of individual identity, for absolute reality at its fundamental level is united and undifferentiated. All this has a close relationship to Hinduism and Buddhism, as Schopenhauer became happily aware when translations of Eastern religious texts appeared in Europe. But Schopenhauer did not believe in any afterlife and dismissed the possibility of reincarnation. Throughout Tristan, the lovers express their desire to merge their separate identities in the undifferentiated cosmos. They wish to escape the world of illusion, represented for them as the ‘day’, into the ‘night’ which is regarded as the realm of transcendence. Death might presumably seem to provide the only ultimate release from the sufferings of the world. But Schopenhauer did not advocate suicide, regarding it as an assertion of the will. Tristan and Isolde though express a longing for death as liberation from the realm of day: ‘Let us die and never part – united – nameless – endless – no more Tristan – no more Isolde…’

Not everyone is cut out to gain awareness of ultimate reality through asceticism or a mystical renunciation of the will. But as Magee recounts, Schopenhauer considered that people could see into the heart of things, if only momentarily, in two other ways: through sexual love and the arts, especially music.

Schopenhauer recognised that the most intimate knowledge of the human will to live is found in the ecstasy of sexual congress; however, the will to live is essentially selfish and the transports of sexual love cannot endure. Here Wagner departed from Schopenhauer, holding that sexual love may lead the will not only to some momentary self-awareness but to self-denial and transcendence. Tristan and Isolde sing: ‘O descend upon us night of love make me forget I live’.

Schopenhauer thought that the arts could reveal ‘the universal behind the particular, the universal through the particular’ (Magee). He privileged pure music as the most metaphysical of the arts, embodying abstract forms of feelings allowing for tranquil and transcendent states of mind. Responding to this Wagner moved away from his earlier ideas of Gesamtkunstwerk and the equivalence of the various arts in an opera. Stephen recounted that this resulted in Wagner now according primacy to music over the libretto, and in adopting a more symphonic conception along with more ensemble singing (duets/trios etc). This new approach is manifested in Tristan, particularly Act 2 which has been regarded as one long symphonic poem where the music drives the drama (Stein). But it must be cautioned that the words in Tristan cannot be disassociated from the music (Bassett).

Employing his musicological expertise, Stephen gave an insightful analysis of the structure of Act 2 of Tristan and the place within it of the extended love duet ( ‘O sink hernieder’) between Tristan and Isolde. The presentation concluded with a showing of the love duet from the La Scala production directed by Patrice Chereau and conducted by Daniel Barenboim, with the principal roles sung by Waltraud Meier and Ian Storey.

Prior to Stephen’s presentation, Colin Furnival spoke briefly about a production of the Ring he recently attended at the Staatsoper in Berlin. Another attendee of this production, Marion Pender, added some comments. Both speakers provided informative and interesting remarks. Conductor, orchestra and singers were of predictably high standard in the production. But the staging was a confusing and bizarre example of the Regietheater which has bedevilled Wagner’s operas.

Observations by Geoff Fisher

WAGNER BIRTHDAY LUNCH, STORY BRIDGE HOTEL. Saturday 20 May 2023.

Photography by Gidia Timmerman

PARSIFAL ACT III SCREENING FOR MEMBERS AND GUESTS, ELIZABETH PICTURE THEATRE. Saturday 15 April 2023 

Brenda Beck and Tom Wohlmut, welcome guests from Santa Fe, a renowned centre for Wagnerian performances.

A different and highly enjoyable afternoon was held on Saturday the 15th April, with a showing of Act III of Parsifal followed by a Reception. The venue was the old Irish Club in Elizabeth Street which has now been converted to a very comfortable cinema, and the Reception rooms adjoining have retained the original charm and character of the building. The production of Parsifal chosen was that of the Metropolitan Opera in 2013, and the high quality sound made it quite a thrilling performance. What better to follow it than French cakes and Prosecco? Members are already asking for a repeat experience, and the Society is very grateful to the member who donated this wonderful afternoon. 52 members and their friends attended, and several visitors from overseas. It was a very good start to what promises to be an exciting year.  Rosemary Cater-Smith, President

Cast and Production Team, New York, February 2013.  Parsifal: Jonas Kaufmann. Gurnemanz: René Pape. Amfortas: Peter Mattei. Kundry: Katarina Dalayman. Klingsor: Evegny Nikitin. Titurel: Rúni Brattaberg. Conductor: Daniele Gatti. Production: François Girard. Designer: Michael Levine. Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus.    

Peter Bassett’s Introduction to the screening of Parsifal Act III from the Metropolitan Opera.

Parsifal was Richard Wagner’s most deeply personal work, and it is a perfect example of how he constructed his mature dramas. He was drawn to myths and legends that lent themselves to musical treatment; and music, like myth, uses the language of feeling.

Musically, Tristan und Isolde and Parsifal have one thing in common – they use what has been called ‘sonic clusters’ from which musical strands are drawn and developed. This was a revolutionary approach in the mid-19th century, and it influenced many later composers. Wagner explained it this way: “Even before I set about writing a single line of the text or drafting a scene, I am already thoroughly immersed in the musical aura of my new creation.” It is useful to know that because it tells us that Parsifal is not just a story set to music – the music is the main vehicle for the story, and that can’t be ignored by stage directors.

In Tristan und Isolde, insatiable desire – a perpetual longing for things beyond our reach – can only be extinguished by entering “the wondrous realm of night” which lies outside a life of illusions and appearances as we know it – the world of day. But in Parsifal, there is another way to find inner peace – not through the portals of death but through compassion for the suffering of others. And “compassion”, said Schopenhauer, “is the basis of all morality”.

In 1857, Wagner and his first wife Minna had moved to the estate of Otto and Mathilde Wesendonck on the outskirts of Zürich, where they were given a cottage in the grounds. There, shortly after Easter, he was encouraged by the beauty and tranquillity of his surroundings to think of the Good Friday references in the old story of Parzival by Wolfram von Eschenbach. And, at once, he sketched out a drama in three acts that became Parsifal. So, work on Parsifal began while Wagner was in the midst of composing Tristan und Isolde. This is often forgotten because Parsifal wasn’t completed until 1882 and became his final work. The spirit that moved him on that spring day in 1857 was captured in the Good Friday scene in Act Three which we are about to watch. “Thus, all creation gives thanks for all that here blooms and soon fades, now that nature, absolved from sin, today gains its day of innocence.”

Traditionally, Good Friday was a day of miraculous happenings, and it seems to have been an especially propitious day in early literature. In Dante’s Divine Comedy, the poet set out on his spiritual journey on the vigil of Good Friday. In Wolfram’s Parzival, we read that on each Good Friday, a dove brought a wafer from heaven to lay upon the Grail and renew its powers. This is the origin of the final stage direction in Wagner’s Parsifal, according to which a white dove descends and hovers over Parsifal’s head.

The prelude to Act Three took western music into regions that were even stranger and more remote than those of Tristan. Today we can recognise in it a path to the music of Gustav Mahler and Arnold Schoenberg. It paints a desolate picture. Many years have passed, and the community of the Grail has been dispersed; the leaderless knights have been forced to forage for food like beasts. Gurnemanz emerges from his hut and encounters Kundry, now sleeping in the undergrowth. Gurnemanz is the elderly knight who had hoped that Parsifal would be able to save the stricken Grail community, but he had eventually abandoned him as just a foolish boy.

Kundry had been a tormented creature and a seductress, longing for sleep and death but condemned to endless rebirths. In the first Act, Gurnemanz had wondered whether she carried a burden of sin from a previous life, which is a curious remark for a Christian knight to make. In time though, we learn that in a former life she had laughed at the Saviour on the cross, which was the very antithesis of compassion. His own compassionate gaze fell on her, she says, and now she seeks him again “from world to world” – which is to say, from life to life.

At the end of Act Two, when Parsifal had rejected Kundry’s repeated attempts to seduce him, she was finally released from her suffering by the triumph of compassion over desire. The sorcerer Klingsor had told her: “He that rejects you will set you free”. Now it only remained for her to be reconciled with the Saviour through baptism.

A stranger approaches wearing black armour and carrying a spear. He sits wearily on a grassy mound and removes his helmet. Gurnemanz chastises him for being armed on such a holy day, but then recognises him as the boy who had killed the swan, the fool he’d driven away in anger. He also identifies the sacred spear and rejoices that he has lived to witness the day of its return. Parsifal remembers Gurnemanz and he learns that Amfortas, the Grail King, can no longer bear the pain of a wound once inflicted by the holy spear during his seduction by Kundry. He refuses to have anything to do with the Grail because of the agony it causes him, and the knights are in a pitiful state. The ancient Titurel, deprived of the Grail’s life-giving support, has died – a man like all men.

Parsifal laments his failure to do anything to prevent this misery. Realising that the youth must indeed be the one they have been waiting for, Gurnemanz helps him to a spring where Kundry bathes his feet. Gurnemanz scoops up some water and sprinkles it on Parsifal’s head. Kundry pours oil on his feet and dries them with her hair, and the old knight anoints him as the new Grail King. What is the point of all these details, so reminiscent of the Gospel accounts? Put simply, they illustrate Kundry’s path to reconciliation with the Saviour she had once mocked. That is what this scene is all about.

Parsifal’s first duty is to baptise the kneeling Kundry. He then remarks on the beauty of the meadow, contrasting it with the sorcerer Klingsor’s rank garden. Gurnemanz tells him that he is experiencing the magic of Good Friday, and we hear serene diatonic music that contrasts so wonderfully with the chromaticism of Klingsor’s sorcery in Act Two. Parsifal thinks that this should be a day of sadness, when all that blooms and breathes must weep. But Gurnemanz replies that this is not so. The tears of repentant sinners have sprinkled the meadow, and nature no longer sees the Saviour in agony on the cross, but man redeemed through God’s loving sacrifice.

In the distance is heard the sombre pealing of bells. It is midday, and Gurnemanz leads Parsifal and Kundry through the forest, through the rocky walls and into the hall of the Grail. This repeats the wonderful scene in Act One in which Parsifal says: “I scarcely tread and yet already seem to have come far.” To which Gurnemanz famously replies with Einsteinian prescience: “You see, my son, here space and time are one”. Einstein, by the way, was only three when Parsifal was first performed.

Two processions of knights enter, one bearing Titurel’s coffin and the other Amfortas on his litter. The two groups confront each other with mutual accusations in the centre of the hall at the covered shrine of the Grail. Now, the air is rent with the agony of a community utterly without hope. This is the music of pain, anger and despair, and it is one of the most dramatic scenes in Parsifal – indeed in all opera.

Titurel’s coffin is opened, and the knights break into cries of despair. They demand that now, for the last time, Amfortas must perform his duty and uncover the Grail. But he defies them, courting death and tearing open his bandages, imploring the knights to end his torment by plunging their swords into his body.

Meanwhile, unobserved, Parsifal has been watching these events. He steps into the midst of the knights, stretches out the holy spear and touches Amfortas’s side with its tip. The wound miraculously closes and Amfortas is healed. Compassion has achieved what nothing else could. Parsifal offers the Grail’s blessing to the worshipping knights and, high above, voices proclaim a heavenly benediction: Highest holy miracle! Redemption to the redeemer!

Wagner’s Parsifal was completed in Palermo, Sicily, on 13 January 1882, and its first performance took place in July that year at Bayreuth. Its impact on great composers who attended the earliest performances was overwhelming. Debussy described it as “one of the most beautiful monuments that has ever been erected to the eternal glory of music”. And Gustav Mahler said: “When I came out of the Festspielhaus, unable to speak a word, I knew that I had experienced supreme greatness and supreme suffering.”

And so, to Act Three from the Metropolitan Opera. This production was first staged ten years ago, in February 2013, and the video recording was made at that time. We are fortunate in being able to see it projected onto a large cinema screen and to hear the wonderful music in ideal circumstances. I add my sincere thanks to our generous benefactor who has made this possible, and has requested this introduction.

Stage productions can only proceed from limited perspectives – that’s the theatrical reality – and this 2013 production is no different. Here are a few comments by reviewers at the time. From David Allen in Bachtrack: “It is another in a long line of Wagner productions set in a post-apocalyptic world. …. In Girard’s telling, nature has been desecrated, and the steady, minimal staging grows with almost unbearably powerful images. … Girard, like Wagner himself, leaves questions unanswered – unlike the composer, he leaves too many.”

And from Robert Levine in Classics Today: “Despite Wagner’s instructions, the landscape consists of arid land and small mounds of earth. There is no forest or lake in Act One or springtime in Act Three, and neither the first nor third Act transformation scene offers any physical transformation. Gurnemanz and Parsifal stroll – the transformation is clearly inner…. Parsifal returns in Act Three utterly exhausted. He is not a knight in armour come to heal the world’s wound caused by the spear and, by association, by women; he doesn’t bring springtime and renewal. He simply comes back to do his job and to perform a ritual that for some reason brings comfort to a group of men and women. Some wounds have been healed, but the world outside is still barren. Kaufmann’s is a divinely beautiful performance …. but almost stealing the show is Peter Mattei as Amfortas, whose agony and self-hatred are terrifyingly real. The Met orchestra and chorus play and sing magnificently. You leave this performance wandering, like an imperfect fool, but fascinated.”

You can decide whether you agree with these observations made a decade ago. But, as I said at the beginning, Parsifal is not just a story set to music; the music is the main vehicle for the story, so please listen to it with that in mind. It is Wagner’s original creation that will survive, and Parsifal was, in many ways, his Credo and his farewell to the world. As Toscanini put it: “Every time I glance at the score of Parsifal, I say to myself: This is the sublime one.”

So, here is an intriguing modern perspective on Act Three from the Metropolitan Opera.

Peter Bassett.

Photography by Cathie Duffy.

 

POST-WAGNER GERMAN OPERA: WORLD WAR I BY PROFESSOR COLIN MACKERRAS. Saturday 18 March 2023 

 

Professor Colin Mackerras was the speaker for our meeting on March 18th, 2023. He spoke about “Post-Wagner German Opera: World War I”. In a presentation lavishly illustrated with musical examples, Colin painted a vivid picture of the diverse directions that German opera took, despite the enormous historical weight of Wagner’s artistic legacy. He placed creativity during and after World War I within the context of the leadup to the end of empires throughout the world; the growth of nationalism and also human displacement both after the War and with the rise of Fascism in the 20s and 30s; and also the enormous artistic vitality and adventurousness in the first quarter of the twentieth century.

One implication of all this change was a loss of centrality of German art music, as had been epitomized by Wagner’s legacy at the end of the 19th century. How composers reacted was the theme of Colin’s talk, which he discussed by considering four examples.

Colin began with Hans Pfitzner’s Palestrina. Pfitzner was a superbly accomplished composer and conductor, and a major figure of musical conservatism in the first half of the century. Palestrina is often considered his masterpiece (by Thomas Mann and Bruno Walter, amongst others), highly valued still within Germany, but a work that has struggled to find a place in the repertory in non-German-speaking countries. Its story is the creation of Palestrina’s Mass for Pope Marcellus and, with it, the preservation of musical polyphony at a time when the Catholic Church was considering its prohibition (in favour of plain chant). To that extent, Palestrina upholds the power of individual artistic creativity in uncertain times.

Colin’s second example – Richard Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos – was quite a contrast to this. Strauss’s third opera written jointly with librettist Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Ariadne is an opera within an opera within a play: a lyrical Greek tale (with heroic soprano and tenor) mixed in with a comic troupe. Yet it is also a thing of its time: perhaps a reaction by the composer against the violence of his earlier operas (Salome and Elektra), but also a self-referential work (with a Composer as one of its characters) that mixes high drama with lower jokes. A comedy with a chamber orchestra very different from the weight of Wagner’s work or, indeed, Strauss’s early work.

Erich Korngold’s Die Tote Stadt was Colin’s third example. Korngold was a creative prodigy: maturely creative as a child, admired by Mahler and Richard Strauss, Korngold was to emigrate to the USA and create some of finest scores for Hollywood films of the 30s and 40s. To an extent that success has eclipsed his concert music (though his late symphony is currently being revived by the Berlin Philharmonic). Die Tote Stadt (“The Dead City”) was written by Korngold in his 20s (before he left Europe) and was fabulously successful (premiered simultaneously in Hamburg – conducted by Klemperer – and Cologne). Written in a richly post-Romantic language with many achingly beautiful melodies, it tells the story of a man who is trapped within himself (the dead city, perhaps) after the loss of his beloved. Perhaps, like Palestrina another surrogate for music in the centre of German culture? Like much of Korngold’s art music, Die Tote Stadt was banned by the Nazis, but has been regularly revived in the past two to three decades (notably a recent Bavarian production directed by the Australian Simon Stone, with Jonas Kaufman, Marlis Petersen and led by Kirill Petrenko).

Finally, Colin discussed Alban Berg’s Wozzeck, the darkest of the four dramas – an adaptation of Georg Buchner’s play about an Untermensch, an impoverished soldier driven to madness and murder. There is no nostalgia, comedy or idealism (in contrast to the Korngold, Strauss or Pfitzner works that he’d earlier discussed). But it also exemplifies the creative diversity and energy in German opera at that time. And its vivid music language retains its power and pungency today (as was very evident in the examples that Colin chose). It represented a confident, alternative direction to the legacy of Wagnerian opera – and a language, with its dissonance (atonal, but not yet serial) and powerful orchestra – that might not have been possible without Wagner’s example.

This diversity of German opera after the First World War then reflected both the creativity of the times and the different voices that their composers sought to forge in the wake of Wagner’s legacy.

Observations by Professor Alpha Yap. Photography by Cathie Duffy.

 

GENERAL MEETING & A NEW LOOK AT THE RING BY PETER BASSETT. Saturday 18 February 2023

The Society’s new Patron, Heldentenor Bradley Daley

Conductor of the Ring in Brisbane, Philippe Auguin

Director and Production Designer of the Ring, Chen Shi-Zheng

Costume Designer of the Ring, Anita Yavich

 

In a wide ranging presentation, Dr Peter Bassett offered entertaining and informative observations about aspects of modern performances of Wagner’s epic Ring Cycle.

In December this year Brisbane is to see a new production of the Ring Cycle, so it was appropriate that Peter’s initial comments were directed to that production and its participants. The Brisbane Ring promises to be a “streamlined, portable, digital production” while avoiding the excesses of many modern stagings. The Director of the Brisbane Ring, Chen Shi-Zheng, has been quoted as saying: “Wagner productions in recent history, are always trying to relate the story of the Ring to current Western society. But this story is fantasy, a myth.” He intends not to impose too much visual baggage on the music, allowing Wagner to speak for himself. He compares his task to that of a Chinese painter; knowing where to provide detail, and what to leave to the imagination. The Costume Designer, Anita Yavich, appears to be in agreement with this thoughtful approach. The French maestro Philippe Auguin, who has conducted more than a dozen Ring productions around the world, will conduct the Ring performances in Brisbane. In a short snippet from an interview he gave recently in Finland he revealed himself to be a sensitive and committed interpreter of Wagner music drama. He will lead an accomplished cast of singers from Australia and abroad. Peter reminded the meeting that he has organised pre-performance talks and Symposia to be held throughout the three cycles of the Ring performances. These Symposia will include sessions with the producer, conductor and costume designer as well as with some of the cast.

The presentation then moved into an examination of various modern forms or techniques in Ring staging:

• Open air opera performances with hidden orchestras. While open air stagings of Wagner’s operas have occurred in the past, only modern audiotechnology has enabled really successful outcomes, as demonstrated by the Bregenz Festival on Lake Constance and by Opera on Sydney Harbour.

• Location of some musicians outside of the pit. Technology has liberated the Wagnerian orchestra from the confines of a cramped, stuffy pit and even allows the pre-recording of certain instruments e.g., the Nibelheim anvils.

• Combination of professional and semi-professional resources. Reference was made to initiatives such as the pioneering The Valkyrie (sung in English) produced by the London Wagner Society in 1974 and the various stagings of the Ring Cycle by Longborough Festival Opera.

• Video performances against a green screen. A 2022 Los Angeles staging of Die Walküre regrettably took digital opera to extremes by creating a sort of video game animation which ignored music and action on stage.

Under the category of “curious directorial interpretation”, the presentation considered how the Valkyries have been represented in modern Ring productions. Many productions were shown to ignore the true nature of the Valkyries as harpie-like creatures, young and terrifying. Instead, the Valkyries were depicted variously as benign beings or put-upon women or straightlaced 19th century matrons. Of course, after Wotan kisses Brünnhilde’s godhead away and Siegfried awakens her to a new life, it is appropriate that her transformation from fierce harpie into a beautiful, vulnerable woman should be conveyed visually by a change in appearance.

Peter cast a critical eye on modern Regietheater (‘director’s theatre’) which arose in Germany in the second half of the twentieth century largely to sweep away tainted symbols and reminders of the past. It involves changes to opera plots, the insertion of modern controversies and the performance of gratuitously shocking (often sexual) acts. None of this, of course, has anything to do with what Wagner actually created. Some egregious excesses of Regietheater in Wagner stagings were instanced, such as bizarre aspects of the current Ring at Bayreuth.

In conclusion, Peter offered his personal reflections on the over-arching meaning of the Ring Cycle. He has long seen The Ring of the Nibelung as being an extended love story. Love is the thread that binds the whole story together – love as the alternative to hatred and revenge, power and property, greed and envy. But Peter now sees that the four dramas are also about the power of self-delusion, self-imposed prejudices, superstitions and beliefs. Those who possess the ring are actually powerless to do anything with it. What really matters is what the characters think the ring represents and so the entire Ring Cycle is fundamentally about the capacity of human beings to deceive themselves and so harm others.

Observations by Geoff Fisher. Meeting Photography by Cathie Duffy

CHRISTMAS LUNCH, STORY BRIDGE HOTEL. Saturday 26 November 2022


                Photography by Cathie Duffy

23rd ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING & SCREENING OF PARSIFAL ACT I. Saturday 22 October 2022

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         A very efficient and friendly Annual General Meeting began at 3:00pm with a good representation of members. The President’s and Treasurer’s Reports were received and accepted. Committee Members were elected (see the “Home Page” of this website for current Management Committee membership) and thanks and congratulations were given to outgoing and incoming committee members. Life Membership of the Wagner Society of Queensland was awarded to the Immediate Past President, Dr Peter Bassett. The excerpt screened from Parsifal was wonderful. Today, theatre critics may say it was a traditional interpretation set in the legend’s time. The director – Wolfgang Wagner – studiously respected the composer’s concept of the music and drama. The acting of the principal characters in this Act was great. Even though Parsifal stands to one side of the central activity for much of the scene, his acting presence shadowed over it.  A really enjoyable and spiritual production. The conductor was Horst Stein. Parsifal was a youthful looking Siegfried Jerusalem; Gurnemanz – Hans Sotin; Amfortas – Bernd Weikl; Titurel – sung off stage by Matti Salminen, and Kundry was Eva Randova.  The DVD set by Deutsche Grammophon is still available through some retail classic music sites.                                                                                                                         Observations by Paul Caesar.  Photography by Cathie Duffy and Colin Mackerras            

                                                                                                                                                                                                                              RICHARD WAGNER FINDS HIS VOICE, BY PETER BASSETT. Saturday 17 September 2022                                                                                                                                                                                                                An enjoyable and most interesting presentation by our President, Dr Peter Bassett, tracing the young Richard Wagner’s musical journey from his earliest opera compositions to his greatest works. As a young man, Wagner was attracted to the music of Vincenzo Bellini. He admired the “song, song, and yet again song” in Bellini’s compositions. Growing up, the young Wagner had no real encouragement or guidance from the musical elite of his time; he was self-motivated and searched out local musicians and theatre people in Leipzig who helped him to form a belief in himself. What benefited his compositional and dramatic development were the numerous conducting engagements he undertook. The composers who inspired him in his formative period were Mozart, Beethoven, Meyerbeer and Weber. And, at 20 years of age, he completed his first opera Die Feen. Then followed Das Liebesverbot and Rienzi. These operas, now rarely performed, were heavily influenced by the aforementioned composers. Our members may be interested to know that, at a recent Leipzig Festival (2022), all of Wagner’s operas were performed. His long period of exile from the German states and disillusionment with politics inspired a new clarity of vision for Wagner. He said that the change in his compositions came when he put his trust in his intuitions, even when he did not understand them. From this self-awareness emerged The Flying Dutchman, Tannhäuser, and Lohengrin. No longer just preoccupied with ‘songs’ – the mature Wagner was combining poetry, psychoanalysis, theatrical drama and music – as never conceived before. Peter gave an interesting quote by the music critic Eduard Hanslick (a contemporary): “Wagner’s most recent reform does not represent an enrichment, an extension, a renewal of music in the sense that the art of Mozart, Beethoven, Weber and Schumann did; it is, on the contrary, a distortion, a perversion of basic musical laws, a style contrary to the nature of human hearing and feeling ….. there is music in it but it’s not music.” Perhaps people like Hanslick failed to recognize the evolution in Wagner’s compositions from the practices of Bach, Mozart and Beethoven. The greatest point of Peter’s presentation was the excerpt played from Tristan und Isolde. The mature Wagner “gave himself up entirely to music” – as the maid Brangäne warns her mistress that the hunting horns are still within earshot. Our members were transfixed! The appreciation of Richard Wagner was present there – Christa Ludwig as Brangäne in the Karajan recording with the Berlin Philharmonic. As Peter concluded, by the time that Wagner came to the Ring and Parsifal, he had certainly found his voice. He knew exactly what he wanted, and how to achieve it.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       It was a wonderful presentation. Thank you, Peter.                                                                                                                                         Observations by Paul Caesar.  Meeting photography by Cathie Duffy and Colin Mackerras

 

WAGNERISM – ART AND POLITICS IN THE SHADOW OF MUSIC, BY ALEX ROSS. STEPHEN EMMERSON. Saturday 20 August 2022

 

This was a fascinating meeting with an unusual subject – a recently published encyclopaedic study of the influence of Richard Wagner on composers, writers, visual artists, and political figures up to modern times. The author of the book discussed by Stephen Emmerson is American writer, music critic, and Pulitzer Prize finalist, Alex Ross, and the scope of his book goes far beyond the composer’s musical legacy. Ross was not primarily concerned with Wagner’s life and works or even his musical impact, but with his extraordinary influence on broader culture and society. The book features an unlikely cast of characters ranging from philosophers, French symbolists, English and German writers, Adolf Hitler, modern novelists, film makers, cartoonists, and even members of Wagner Societies! Mindbogglingly, it also addresses “half-forgotten understandings of the composer … socialist Wagner, feminist Wagner, gay Wagner, black Wagner, Theosophical Wagner, satanic Wagner, Dadaist Wagner, sci-fi Wagner, Wagnerismus, Wagnerismo, Wagnérisme.”

Ross began researching his book in 2008 and it was published in 2020. His achievement was not only “monumentally ambitious – a cultural history of the modern world”, as one critic described it, but also lucid in style and evocative in language. Stephen quoted many extravagant reviews: “A virtuoso feat of scholarship and supple writing”; “a singular achievement of scholarship, sensibility and storytelling”; “a masterpiece! … probably the most informed work on Wagner and his aesthetic and cultural significance that I have ever read.” But there were also sceptics such as Peter Conrad who, in his review in The Guardian, declared that “The story diverges and digresses and soon gets out of Ross’s control. … After (his) hungover postlude, I recalled his claim, made 700 arduous, enfevered, over-charged pages earlier, that Wagner’s influence was actually less extensive than those of Monteverdi, Bach or Beethoven.” In fact, Ross had written: “Wagner’s effect on music was enormous, but it did not exceed that of Monteverdi, Bach, or Beethoven. His effect on neighbouring arts was, however, unprecedented, and it has not been equalled since, even in the popular arena. He cast his strongest spell on the artists of silence – novelists, poets, and painters who envied the collective storms of feeling that he could unleash in sound”.

Stephen noted that the breadth of Wagner’s cultural influence on subsequent generations was virtually unparalleled. He also made the point, taken up by the three panellists who joined the discussion (Colin Mackerras, Peter Bassett, and Geoff Fisher), that those who had been inspired by Wagner invariably focused on a favourite work or at least an element of it, and brushed aside everything else. There has been much selective ‘Wagnerolatry’ to use a term from Bryan Magee’s splendid (and splendidly compact) book Aspects of Wagner. The panel noted that Ross drew almost exclusively on European and North American examples. The meeting concluded with perceptive comments and questions from members of the audience.

Comment: Richard Wagner’s ideas and musical forms evolved over a lifetime, and each one of his stage works is unique, culminating in Parsifal, the embodiment of his mature thoughts on the transformative power of compassion. As a young man, his views on music and opera were in line with a contemporary movement called ‘Musical Idealism’, which was a reaction to the commercialisation of art in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Musical Idealists were wary of transitory fashions and empty virtuosity, and it was against that kind of superficiality in the works of Meyerbeer and Offenbach that Wagner rebelled during his experience of the Second Empire of Napoleon III and earlier years in Paris. This commitment to musical idealism also partly explains his enormous appeal to other idealists in artistic and political circles across Europe. For some readers, the label ‘Wagnerism’ might seem to imply uniformity and predictability, but this could hardly be further from the truth. PB

Observations by Peter Bassett
Photography by Cathie Duffy and Colin Mackerras

THE INFLUENCES OF WAGNER ON THE WASTE LAND BY T.S. ELIOT. GEOFF FISHER. Saturday 23 July 2022

Top photo from June 1960: Louis MacNeice; Ted Hughes; T.S. Eliot; W.H. Auden; Stephen Spender. Lower photo from July 2022: Timothy Cooney; Jim Spence; Geoff Fisher; Peter Bassett; John Granger Fisher

 

Geoff Fisher gave an engaging and thought-provoking presentation on the poetry of Thomas Sterns Eliot (1888-1965) and its links (sometimes indirect) to the music dramas of Richard Wagner. Geoff had first become aware of Eliot’s poetry as a school student, reading and discussing Journey of the Magi and The Hollow Men. At university he enthusiastically explored the rest of Eliot’s oeuvre, including his most famous poem The Waste Land (often described as one of the most important poems of the 20th century) and his final achievement The Four Quartets. Since then, Geoff’s enthusiasm for Eliot’s poetry has remained undiminished. It has often been noted how creative artists of all kinds – composers, writers, visual artists and even movie makers – have been inspired by Wagner, and Geoff remarked on this phenomenon.

Eliot’s first significant encounter with Wagner’s works came in 1908, when he attended a performance of Tristan und Isolde at New York’s Metropolitan Opera, conducted by none other than Gustav Mahler. After that experience, he attended other performances, including at Munich and Boston, and was encouraged by ardent Wagnerian friends and acquaintances. When working on The Waste Land, he also studied Parsifal and the Ring, and so it is hardly surprising that in his remarkable work there are references to several of Wagner’s music dramas but especially Tristan, from which are drawn the words of the Young Sailor at the masthead in Act I: Frisch weht der Wind der Heimat zu: mein irisch Kind, wo weilest du? (‘Fresh is the wind that blows me home, my Irish child, where do you roam?’), and the Shepherd’s melancholy song in Act III: Oed und leer das Meer (‘Desolate and empty the sea’, when there is still no sighting of Isolde coming to join her beloved Tristan).

In December 1956, Igor Stravinsky and Eliot met in London for tea, and Stravinsky later remarked that “Tristan must have been one of the most passionate experiences of Eliot’s life”.

The Grail legend too, as Geoff noted, was a powerful source of imagery for Eliot. The writings of Jessie Weston (whose numerous works drew on medieval legends and romances and characters such as the Fisher King who has much in common with Wagner’s Amfortas) and Sir James Frazer (The Golden Bough) played important parts in fostering his ideas. Most of all though, it was the impact of the (mainly French) Symbolist poets and painters, themselves fired by Wagner’s creations, that exercised a profound influence on T.S. Eliot. The writings of the French symbolist poet Jules Laforgue, who had died in 1887 aged just 27 from tuberculosis and was an ardent disciple of Schopenhauer, played a key role in fostering the poetical ideas of both the young Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot.

Geoff’s talk was full of intriguing references and details, and his and Annette’s highly talented pianist son, John, assisted with recorded items including a memorable reading by Paul Scofield of part of the text of The Waste Land.

Observations by Peter Bassett
Photography by Cathie Duffy and Colin Mackerras

RECITAL BY Christie Eckersley and Vikram Goonawardena, 2020 and 2021 RECIPIENTS OF THE WAGNER SOCIETY ENCOURAGEMENT AWARD, with John Woods, Piano. St Mary’s Church, Kangaroo Point, Saturday 25 June 2022

 

The Society and friends were treated to an excellent recital on Saturday afternoon, 25 June, by two highly promising young singers: soprano Christie Eckersley and bass Vikram Goonawardena, most ably supported by John Woods on piano. Both singers are recipients of the Wagner Society’s encouragement award in recent years, but it was a particular pleasure to hear them share a programme which included duets in addition to some demanding solo numbers. Both have strong vibrant voices that carried effortlessly in the beautiful acoustic space of St Mary’s. Our thanks go to Secretary Rosemary Cater-Smith and her working group for coordinating the event, and to Associate Professor Margaret Schindler from Queensland Conservatorium for assisting and guiding the young singers with professional advice, and Dr Phillip Gearing at St Mary’s.

The programme was well conceived with three Wagner extracts in the middle: Der Engel from Wesendonck Lieder together with two excerpts from The Flying Dutchman. These were preceded by extracts from Weber, Mozart and Beethoven that clearly presaged Wagner’s style of Romantic opera. Then, after an interval, came two beautiful excerpts from subsequent German operas (by Korngold and Strauss). The recital opened with three divine Schubert Lieder and closed with not only some Puccini and Verdi, but with a famous Gershwin duet. So, a wonderfully rich and generous selection of glorious music was shared to the obvious delight of the audience.

The young artists introduced each number throughout the programme, communicating their personalities and winning over the audience from the start. I understand that Christie was leaving the following day to participate in a programme at the Deutsche Oper Berlin, and there’s no doubt the quality of Vikram’s voice will soon be noticed by opera companies here and abroad. We all look forward to seeing how their careers develop over the coming years.

Observations by Stephen Emmerson
Photography by Colin Mackerras and Cathie Duffy

RICHARD STRAUSS, A WAGNERIAN COMPOSER, BY PROFESSOR COLIN MACKERRAS. A CELEBRATION OF RICHARD WAGNER’S BIRTHDAY Saturday 21 May 2022

Professor Colin Mackerras presented a wonderful and vibrant discussion to members and guests on the life and music of the composer Richard Strauss (born 1864 – died 1949) and the influence of Richard Wagner’s music on that composer.

The tradition of great German opera was carried on by Strauss. He worshipped Wagner’s music and was highly influenced by Wagner’s orchestration and musical texture. Strauss attended the premiere of Parsifal in 1882, in which his father, Franz Strauss, was principal horn-player. He met Richard Wagner and was mentored by the conductor Hans von Bülow. Strauss also conducted Wagner’s operas at Bayreuth and at other leading German opera houses. Yet, the content of Strauss’s operas differ from Wagner’s – with Strauss, the story is not German myth and there is less tragedy.

Strauss’s cooperation with the Austrian playwright Hugo von Hofmannsthal is among the most famous of all composer-librettist duos in musical history. Hofmannsthal was librettist for:

Elektra (1909)
Der Rosenkavalier (1911)
Ariadne auf Naxos (1912, rev. 1916)
Die Frau ohne Schatten (1919)
Die ägyptische Helena (1928)
Arabella (1933)

Strauss’s marriage to the soprano Pauline de Ahna (1894) profoundly influenced his music. The marriage was very turbulent but basically happy – Pauline had a stormy temper, was outspoken and eccentric. Her singing career was closely tied to her husband’s career as a conductor and composer. She sang leading roles at opera houses where Richard was principal conductor. Strauss described his wife as “very complex, very feminine, a little perverse, a little coquettish, never herself, at every minute different from how she had been a moment before”. However, she was a great source of inspiration to her husband, and Strauss credited his wife’s voice as a muse for the roles of Salome and the Countess Madeleine in Capriccio.

Strauss loved the soprano voice, and it dominates his operas – largely due to Pauline’s influence. In virtually all his operas it is the principal woman who dominates.

Colin discussed the change in style of Strauss’s operas from the shocking, deviant themes of Salome and Elektra; where there is much dissonance, revenge themes and soprano “screaming”; changing to lush harmonies in the orchestration and lyrical female voice of, for example, Der Rosenkavalier up to the Four Last Songs. Hofmannsthal was pivotal in this development of Strauss’s compositions. Hofmannsthal is quoted as saying: “I want to create Joy”. And the subsequent operas are not tragic, with deaths of principal characters, but social dramas, domestic and intimate.

Colin illustrated his talk with excerpts of recordings of several of Strauss’s compositions. It was a very instructive and enjoyable discussion.

After the presentation, members celebrated Richard Wagner’s birthday with Framboise cake and Prosecco!

Welcome guests Jordan Kahler, an opera singer from Melbourne and member of the Victorian Wagner Society, and her father Richard.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Meeting photography by Peter Bassett

WINIFRED WAGNER AND HER EXTENDED REIGN/INFLUENCE OVER BAYREUTH. BY PROFESSOR STEPHEN EMMERSON Saturday 19 March 2022

It was a fascinating lecture that Stephen Emmerson presented to members. What a life Winifred Wagner lived – the kind that is found in gothic novels. To summarise: An ill nine-year-old English orphan, Winifred Marjorie Williams, was sent to Berlin in 1907 to stay with two distant, elderly relatives (Karl Klindworth and his wife Henrietta), friends of the Wagner family. At age eighteen, Winifred married Richard Wagner’s only son, Siegfried, he was aged 45 years and was homosexual, but was expected to produce heirs to continue the Master’s dynasty. Four children were born in quick succession. After the death of Siegfried Wagner in 1930, Winifred Wagner took over managing the Bayreuth Festival, running it until the end of World War II.

Her life became more fascinating and controversial in 1923 when Winifred met Adolf Hitler, who greatly admired Richard Wagner’s music. She developed a close friendship with Hitler and supported the Nazi regime. Haus Wahnfried, the Wagner home in Bayreuth, became a favourite retreat of Hitler’s and he gave the festival significant government assistance. Winifred encouraged Hitler’s affection towards her four children.

Winifred was a capable manager of the Bayreuth Festival. She refreshed and modernized the productions there, employed conductors Wilhelm Furtwängler and Arturo Toscanini and the leading stage director Heinz Tietjen.

Winifred Wagner believed profoundly in the cult of German ethno-nationalism and was supportive of Hitler and the Nazi party’s propaganda regime. After the war, a denazification court banned her from the Bayreuth Festival, the management of which was passed to her sons Wieland and Wolfgang. Winifred Wagner died on 5 March 1980 at the age of 82 and was interred at Bayreuth.

Stephen Emmerson illustrated his discussion with excerpts from Hans-Jürgen Syberberg’s film production “Winifred Wagner and the History of Haus Wahnfried, 1914–1975”. These video clips revealed Winifred as quite delusional in her attitude towards her husband’s encounters, but particularly, in her friendship and belief in Hitler. Some of the video may be viewed online<https://youtu.be/-MmBlDG62z4>.

As a member commented in the discussion following Stephen’s presentation: “In her extraordinary life she may have started her maturity as a Norn but ended it as a Valkyrie”.

Thank you, Stephen for such an interesting and reflective discussion.

Wilhelm Furtwängler, Heinz Tietjen, Winifred Wagner and Arturo Toscanini, 1931

Observations by Paul Caesar
Meeting photography by Colin Mackerras

NOTE: For an Australian connection with Bayreuth of Winifred Wagner’s day, see the essay on this site: The First Australian to sing at the Bayreuth Festival, the story of Norma Gadsden, who sang at Bayreuth in 1937.

 

“HURRY AWAY THEN, TOWARDS THE EAST” (BRÜNNHILDE’S WORDS TO SIEGLINDE IN ACT III OF DIE WALKÜRE). BY PETER BASSETT Saturday 19 February 2022

Examples of Meissen porcelain

The oriental scholar Hermann Brockhaus, who was married to Wagner’s sister Ottilie

Wagner’s ultimate text for the ending of the Ring. It was not set but, instead, its meaning was conveyed entirely by the orchestra

 

Our first meeting for 2022 was very well attended with over thirty members and guests present and with all COVIDSafe protocols adhered to.

President Peter Bassett’s discussion on the influences of Eastern cultures and philosophies on Richard Wagner gave members wonderful new insights into his music dramas.

From an early age, Richard Wagner was familiar with Chinese artistry, Persian stories and poetry and Indian ideas and philosophies. Wagner gained his fascination of the theatre and things oriental from his stepfather Ludwig Geyer, a German actor, playwright and painter whose theatrical troupe performed at Schloss Pillnitz, the summer residence on the Elbe of the Electors and Kings of Saxony. Another influence on him came from his brother-in-law Hermann Brockhaus, a scholar of Eastern languages and ideas. The Brockhaus family firm was the publisher of Schopenhauer’s philosophical masterpiece The World as Will and Representation, a work destined to make a profound impression on the composer.

Interestingly, after the failure of the 1848-49 Dresden Revolution, Wagner thought of moving to the Orient, although nothing came of this, as the growing need for income and patronage was more achievable in Switzerland.

Schopenhauer’s philosophy had much in common with key doctrines of Hinduism and Buddhism. Peter pointed out the interesting parallel here in the relationship between Wagner’s ideas and Schopenhauer’s writings. The impact of those writings on the composer sprang less from a source of ideas than from the fact that they seemed to confirm and clarify notions that were already apparent to him. In the writings of Schopenhauer, Wagner found a coherent explanation of his treatment of Wotan. His intention had been to show nothing less than the breaking of the god’s proud spirit by, what Schopenhauer would call, the annihilation of the will – the negation of compulsive striving and yearning that leads inevitably to disappointment and pain. The Buddha would have called it the renunciation of craving and desire which lies at the root of suffering.

Wagner had a serious interest in the two great religions of India. In his essays he cited contemporary research suggesting that Buddhist ideas had flowed westward after the spread of Alexander’s empire in the Indus in 327 BC and had influenced Christian doctrine (a view shared by Schopenhauer). This notion shaped Parsifal which, despite its overtly Christian setting, is replete with Buddhist imagery. Tristan und Isolde contains echoes of the Hindu Upanishads.

There was significant Buddhist influence on the Ring in the final scene of Götterdämmerung when Brünnhilde, made wise through suffering and her love of Siegfried, refers to herself as the “enlightened one”. She is enlightened not through ‘passionate’ love so much as ‘compassionate’ love that becomes Brünnhilde’s prime catalyst for change. The Buddha had taught that desire was at the root of the fires of greed, hatred and delusion. Victory over these sufferings could only be won by their ‘blowing out’ – entering Nirvana.

Thank you, Peter for enlightening members and taking us on our journey “towards the east”.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Meeting photography by Colin Mackerras

 

CHRISTMAS LUNCH
Saturday 11 December 2021

 

Members gathered on Saturday 11 December to enjoy our Christmas Lunch at Deery’s Restaurant at the Story Bridge Hotel at Kangaroo Point. Thank you Rosemary for organising a lovely occasion! The following photos, taken by Carol Bassett and Colin Mackerras, capture the spirit of this happy event. Merry Christmas everyone!

 

 

22nd ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING AND SCREENING OF ACT II OF GÖTTERDÄMMERUNG FROM THE BAYREUTH CENTENARY RING
Saturday 20 November 2021

A very efficient and friendly Annual General Meeting began at 3.00 pm with 33 members present. The President’s and Treasurer’s Reports were received and accepted. Committee Members were elected (see the ‘Home’ page of this website for current Management Committee membership) and thanks and congratulations were given to outgoing and incoming committee members.

Looking at the centenary Ring production some forty years after it was first staged at Bayreuth (1976), it is hard to understand the criticism that it received at that time. A list of criticisms hit the opera review journals – a ‘Marxist Ring’, a ‘mere reworking of George Bernard Shaw’s ideas’, an ‘unknown producer (Patrice Chéreau) who had very little experience with the works of Richard Wagner’, shocking the conservative old guard, eroticism qualifying for an X-rating. The opening night of Götterdämmerung contributed to a pandemonium that twice nearly brought the performance to a halt. When the producers presented themselves on the stage alongside the conductor (Pierre Boulez) they were greeted by a sustained howl of rage.

Our President Peter Bassett screened Act II of the production filmed at the Bayreuth Festspielhaus in 1980. Well, how differently it is viewed now! The ‘Centenary Ring’ is now seen as the fulfilment of Richard Wagner’s dictum that the Ring Cycle should represent a synthesis of the arts. With staging, set design and lighting, costumes, musical interpretation and last, but not least, the exceptional singing and acting of the soloists and choir, a legend was born. Over the time, this production has been celebrated as an event of the century. Its brash modernity established a standard for later productions around the world.

The performers seen in Act II were outstanding;

Alberich Hermann Becht
Hagen Fritz Hubner
Siegfried Manfred Jung
Gutrune Jeannine Altmeyer
Gunther Franz Mazura
Brunnhilde Gwyneth Jones

Thank you, Peter for managing the AGM and screening the great production of Act II Götterdämmerung.

Observations by Paul Caesar.  Meeting photos by Peter Jansen.

 

 

HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE VALENCIA RING
Saturday 18 September 2021

 

Our President Peter Bassett introduced highlights of the Ring from a 2007-2009 production at the architecturally spectacular modern opera house in Valencia – Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía. ‘Thank you’ to Stephen Emmerson for sharing his DVD ‘Wagner, Der Ring des Nibelungen, Highlights’, released by Unitel Classica/ Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía in 2010.

As a background to the staging of this extraordinary production, something should be said about its origins. It was at the suggestion of Zubin Mehta (conductor of this production) that the Catalan theatre company La Fura dels Baus undertook the staging with their stage director Carlus Padrissa. La Fura was originally a troupe of strolling players in Catalonia. By the late 20th century, they had morphed into producing gargantuan spectaculars that marry the showmanship of Cirque du Soleil and Industrial Light and Magic shows. Their fame includes the opening ceremonies of the Barcelona Olympics in 1992 and grand productions at various European arts festivals.

The cast assembled was marvellous:

Wota – Juha Uusitalo
Loge – John Daszak
Alberich-Franz-Josef Kapellmann
Mime – Gerhard Siegel
Fasolt/Hunding/Hagen – Matti Salminen
Fafner – Stephen Milling
Fricka – Anna Larsson
Erda – Christa Mayer/Catherine Wyn-Rogers
Brunnhilde – Jennifer Wilson
Siegmund – Peter Seiffert
Sieglinde – Petra Maria Schnitzer
Siegfried – Lance Ryan
Gutrune – Elisabete Matos
Gunther – Ralf Lukas

La Fura told the story of the Ring in a straightforward manner, using imagery for a 21st century audience familiar with the visual language of the Star Wars and Harry Potter films. Their use of 3D computer animation was at the vanguard of an emerging trend in opera production. Such technology was taken up in the San Francisco Ring (2011) and will be a feature of the Brisbane Ring production. The German opera magazine Opernwelt thought that with the use of video on multiple projection surfaces, “The visual codes of the digital era become elemental and dazzlingly employed means of narration.” However, such production approaches can prove controversial with both purists and those attached to complex intellectual production concepts.

Looking at the highlights, one could see why this was a polarizing production. Matthew Gurewitsch in Opera News 2010 wrote: “Depending on one’s point of view, the Valencia Ring soars on the wings or staggers under the weight of its cosmic ambitions”. He continued: “Video feeds on giant monitors transport us from a God’s-eye view of the universe into the bloodstream and even the genome. A similar vision takes shape in three dimensions at the end of Das Rheingold, when flesh-and-blood gymnasts on wires assemble into an airborne column that may symbolize the Rainbow Bridge, Valhalla, some abstraction in the mind of the demiurge, or all of the above. Projections of flowing water, roaring flames, ecological disasters, golden star-children in zero gravity, razor-sharp mountain ranges, slow-motion comet showers and much, much more add up to a veritable symphony in pictures. … What takes place before the moving tapestries is often strange in the extreme. The three Rhinemaidens, each confined to an aquarium of her own, give birth effortlessly to a breed of gilt babies in glass bubbles. Cocooned in their costumes like astronauts in their space pods, Wotan and Fricka zoom around the stage and up and down on cherry-pickers powered by stagehands in camouflage, while Freia perambulates on her own two feet, perpetually caressing a giant apple. The Nibelung horde consists of slithering gymnasts in vaguely golden body suits. Hunding’s dwelling is littered with bones arranged in a circle. The Valkyries wear blinkers, like horses, along with the hoods of cloistered nuns. Mime’s cave is a eugenics lab, where golden extras pass by, hung up like carcasses at a slaughterhouse. … Whatever one’s complaints – and the restricted range of motion for the divinities stuck on their cherry-pickers would be a big one – Das Rheingold and Die Walküre certainly hold a viewer’s interest.”

The Gramophone review had this to say about the production: “The production as a whole is an uneasy combination of quasi-high-tech effects and a largely bare stage with projection: these soon become distracting through being overly repetitive.”

Summing up the comments from members who watched the highlights, the video projections maybe draw too much attention to themselves at the expense of the emotion of the music. There was too much video and gymnastic distraction that overrides the performances of the singers.

The wildly different concepts and interpretations in Ring productions is a testament to the complexity of the music-drama that Richard Wagner gave to us.

Members were certainly able to enjoy a visionary and impressive production.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Meeting photography by Bette Jansen

 

PARSIFAL: STRUCTURE AND MEANING IN THE GOOD FRIDAY MUSIC. BY DR MICHAEL O’LOGHLIN
Saturday 21 August 2021

 

The Queensland Wagner Society continues to meet each month at the Queensland Multicultural Centre, as we have, without interruption, since July 2020. However, masks were the order of the day when Dr Michael O’Loghlin addressed us on Parsifal: Structure and Meaning in the Good Friday Music. When introducing Michael, our President Peter Bassett recalled attending a beautiful concert performance of this work in Brisbane on 27 May 1995 during the Biennial International Music Festival. A check of the printed program confirmed that Michael O’Loghlin had been performing in the double-bass section of the Queensland Symphony Orchestra on that occasion.

Michael referred to the significant overall theme of Parsifal: the human journey from naivety to wisdom. For Parsifal this journey is not an easy one, nor is there any straight path to enlightenment – durch Mitleid wissend – ‘enlightened through compassion’. The innocent fool (Parsifal) is made wise by his willingness to share the sufferings of others, and, in the process, he brings a new type of order to the community of the Grail. Parsifal becomes aware of this upon the baptism and redemption of Kundry, and then follows the Good Friday music. Dr O’Loghlin also discussed in detail the musical keys and orchestral highlights that Wagner used to express this journey. Parsifal is a sublime artwork, radiant in its apparent simplicity.

The Good Friday music occurs in Act III. Parsifal has been anointed Grail King by Gurnemanz, and then he performs his first duty and baptizes Kundry. He gazes in gentle rapture on the wood and meadow, glowing in the morning light, and he remarks how beautiful it is. Gurnemanz explains that “This is the magic of Good Friday, my Lord”, and so the Good Friday music begins. The section opens with Parsifal’s own leitmotif, a fanfare, and the musical phrase that is most widely associated with the drama is heard – the ‘Dresden Amen’. The principal Good Friday theme is entrusted to the oboe, which sings it forth with a combination of calmness and expressiveness. The overarching sensation in the passage is transcendent love. This section lasts around 14 minutes.

With the vocal lines stripped away, this music is often played as a stand alone orchestral piece. The ‘Dresden Amen’ was originally composed by Johann Gottlieb Naumann (1741-1801) for use at the Kreuzkirche in Dresden. Its harmonic progression and its melodic line, rising stepwise, serves as the unifying force of this section.

Members and guests were delighted to have Michael O’Loghlin with us on this occasion, and to benefit from his scholarship and from his experience of performing this sublime music.

A personal recollection by Paul Caesar. The first fully staged production of Parsifal in Australia was in September 2001 at the Adelaide Festival Theatre. The conductor was Jeffrey Tate and, in the program notes, he said of the music: “So the magician can conjure both evil and good, aesthetic contradictions that delight and deceive for a few hours, atheist and believer satisfied. But is it so simple? Why am I, the unbeliever, still moved almost to the brink of tears each time Gurnemanz ushers in the great interlude that links forest and temple in an unhurried depiction of time becoming space, the ultimate breaking down of our limited perceptual capacity? Are we not being invited to be seduced by, and therefore to ‘feel’, the very rhythm of our universe, the cycles of birth and rebirth that metaphysics tries to grasp, to ‘feel’ this as only music can make us feel? Perhaps this is the greatest achievement of the conjurer, once we see beyond the all-too-obvious trappings of Christianity and fin-de-siècle naughtiness that so deceived Nietzsche: to have created this powerful aural metaphor for our natural world and its patterns, and to have created the acoustic Zaubergarten (magic garden) to allow its fullest expression. A theatre is not a vaulted chapel, but they can both be arenas of illusion that can lead to greater awareness of fundamental truths, the music sensually resonating in the darkened spaces, and this time no faith to be lost, only experiences to illuminate.”

Observations by Paul Caesar

Meeting photography by Annette Fisher

 

THE NIBELUNGENLIED. BY GEOFF FISHER
Saturday 17 July 2021

Medieval manuscript (‘Manuscript C’, c.1230) of the Nibelungenlied.

Hagen kills Siegfried. Mural painting by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld, father of Ludwig Schnorr von Carolsfeld, the first to sing Tristan.

Brunhild, who was instrumental in bringing about the death of Siegfried. Still from Fritz Lang’s silent film ‘Die Nibelungen’ (1924).

Gunther, Hagen and Siegfried. Still from ‘Die Nibelungen’.

The arrival of Siegfried at the court of Gunther at Worms. Still from ‘Die Nibelungen’.

A study for Kriemhild (in her benign state) by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld.

 

Geoff opened his presentation with a wonderful Nietzsche truism: “Without music, life would be a mistake”.

The Nibelungenlied translates as ‘The Lay (or Song) of the Nibelungs”. It is an epic poem written around 1200 in Middle High German. Its anonymous poet was probably from the region of Passau. It draws on an oral tradition that has some of its origins in historical events of the 5th and 6th centuries. It parallels the Scandinavian Norse sagas.

The poem is divided into two parts. In the first part, Siegfried comes to Worms to acquire the hand of the Burgundian Princess Kriemhild from her brother King Gunther. Gunther agrees to let Siegfried marry Kriemhild if Siegfried helps Gunther win the warrior-queen Brunhild as his wife. Siegfried does this, with some trickery, and marries Kriemhild. However, Brunhild and Kriemhild become rivals, leading eventually to Siegfried’s murder by the Burgundian vassal Hagen, with Gunther’s involvement. In the second part, the widow Kriemhild is married to Etzel (Attila), King of the Huns. She later invites her brother and his court to visit Etzel’s kingdom, intending to kill Hagen. Her bloody revenge results in the deaths of all the Burgundians who came to Etzel’s court, including Gunther and Hagen, as well as the destruction of Etzel’s kingdom and the death of Kriemhild herself.

The poem was forgotten after about 1500 AD but was rediscovered in the mid-18th century. Dubbed the “German Iliad”, the Nibelungenlied began a new life as the German national epic. The poem was appropriated for nationalist purposes and was heavily used in National-Socialist propaganda before and during the Second World War. Its legacy today is most apparent in Richard Wagner’s operatic cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen, which, however, is mostly drawn from Old Norse sources.

The form and style of the poem combines chivalric romance, courtly modes, Christian influence, and oaths taken and never to be dishonoured. The Nibelungenlied is written in four-line stanzas. Although no melody has survived for the text, melodies for similar stanzas in other German heroic poems have, so it is certain that the text was meant to be sung. Geoff showed a beautiful illustration of this with a film excerpt of a young man singing some stanzas and accompanying himself on an ancient harp.

The inter-war period saw the Nibelungenlied enter the world of cinema in Fritz Lang’s two-part film Die Nibelungen (1924/25), which tells the entire story of the poem. Geoff showed illustrations from Fritz Lang’s epic film. Lang was heavily influenced by Richard Wagner’s Ring Cycle, and the film strays from a strict interpretation of the poem. It is a masterpiece of early film-making, using geometrical patterns on the sets and costumes. There is an arresting kabuki-like quality in the actors’ performances, and startling expressionist ideas. The musical score for the film is by Gottfried Huppertz and is strikingly good.

Thank you, Geoff, for introducing Wagner Society members to the world of the Nibelungenlied.

Observations by Paul Caesar

Meeting photography by Hal Davis

 

WAGNER IN CHINA. BY PROFESSOR COLIN MACKERRAS
Saturday 19 June 2021

The Mariinsky production of Parsifal, staged at Nanjing in 2019.

Part of the audience for Parsifal at Nanjing. Jiangsu Grand Theatre. Architects East China Architectural Design and research Institute.

Götterdämmerung prologue from the entirely Chinese production in 2015. National Grand Theatre, Beijing.

National Grand Theatre, Beijing, opened 2007. French architect Paul Andreu.

Harbin Grand Theatre. Chinese architect agency MAD, led by Ma Yansong.

This was a great presentation by Professor Colin Mackerras and, if a single observation could be made, it was that cultural exchanges between countries deliver great benefits to those countries and their peoples. Exposure to other cultures and the histories of their peoples, advances human and political understanding and acceptance of each other.

Generally speaking, Richard Wagner has not been as popular in China as a few other western composers – Mozart and Beethoven in particular. The theatre of music-drama in China has a tradition quite different from the European model – plots are different and the music and musical instruments are different. The Chinese theatrical tradition involves an integration of acting, make-up, dance, costume and gesture. It is musical drama, in some ways not so different from Wagner’s “Gesamtkunstwerk” concept. However, there is no evidence Wagner was influenced by these Chinese traditions.

Wagner had been seen in China as a composer swinging between revolution and republicanism to conservatism and chauvinism of various kinds – an aesthetic not easily accepted politically in China. Wagner was condemned during the Cultural Revolution 1966-1976, but by the late 20th century his works were being taken more seriously. One interpretation of the message of the Ring is that private wealth and power are sources of evil in the world, which is a bit like Marxist doctrine. As China opened itself to Western influences, it was to be expected that attention would be paid to a great composer of the European tradition like Wagner.

The first full performance of a Wagner opera in China was of Der fliegende Holländer in the Shanghai Grand Theatre in 1999. The first Ring production was at the Beijing Poly Theatre in 2005 – a production from the Nuremberg State Theatre. In 2010, during the Shanghai Expo, a full cycle of Wagner’s Ring was performed at the Shanghai Grand Theatre by Cologne Opera.

Shanghai audiences have developed a liking for Wagner. In 2015 a concert performance of the Ring was staged at the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra Concert Hall. This was the production from the Tyrolean Festival at Erl led by Gustav Kuhn. And before this performance at Shanghai, the Tyrolean Festival presented Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg and Tristan und Isolde at the Beijing Music Festival.

Then in 2015 the Opera House of the National Centre for Performing Arts in Beijing commenced an all-Chinese Ring Cycle (ie. All singers, orchestral musicians and directing staff were Chinese nationals). It commenced with ‘Götterdämmerung’ and annually added another opera of the cycle.

In June 2013 a Wagner Society was established in China.

In 2018 Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg was again performed in Beijing. This was of interest to Australian music followers, since it was a co-production by the National Centre of Performing Arts, Covent Garden and Opera Australia. The production was also staged in Melbourne in 2018. It was directed by Kasper Holten who set the story in a London gentlemen’s club, and there were politically correct and strong feminist themes.

Colin also showed some of the recent buildings of centres for the arts in China, including the National Centre for the Performing Arts in Beijing, Shanghai Grand Theatre, Harbin Grand Theatre and Jiangsu Grand Theatre in Nanjing. They are all grand opera houses in the European style.

Colin’s discussion finished with a DVD excerpt from the all-Chinese production of the 2015 Götterdämmerung – the end of the Prologue to Act 1, as day breaks and Siegfried and Brünnhilde declare their love before Siegfried heads off on his Rhine journey. Sung in German, it was a lavish production with a grand, expensive set.

This was a very enjoyable and interesting presentation, and Members asked numerous questions and expressed their appreciation to Colin.

Observations by Paul Caesar

Meeting photography by Annette Fisher

WAGNER BIRTHDAY LUNCH, AND ‘WAGNER IN RUSSIA’ BY DR PETER BASSETT.
Saturday 22 May 2021

   

Lunch photography by Carol Bassett

An intriguing discussion by Dr Peter Bassett our Queensland Society’s President. It was a very engaging presentation of Wagner’s visit to Russia and the subsequent performances of his compositions there.

Richard Wagner visited St Petersburg in February 1863 at the invitation of the St Petersburg Philharmonic Society. His goal was to earn some desperately needed money and, hopefully, to secure an on-going patronage. Wagner’s 13 years exile from German kingdoms and principalities had just come to an end; there was the disaster of the Tannhäuser Paris performances in 1861, and advance payments by his publisher had dried up. Ludwig II of Bavaria wouldn’t be coming to the rescue until 1864.

Russia was an uncertain world for Wagner. The authorities knew of his revolutionary past, and Russian composers, musicians and patrons were inclined to be parochial. Also, Wagner had a questionable tolerance of the Russian autocratic State. He was sympathetic towards the Polish nation, or what remained of it. After the defeat of Napoleon, Poland had been divided among Russia, Prussia and the Habsburg Empire. Tsar Nicholas I (reigned 1825 – 1855) added King of Poland to his titles and lands, and showed little tolerance towards any freedoms for his Polish subjects. In 1831 the Poles revolted, but the superior Russian armies triumphed. Wagner was only 18 in 1831, and the plight of the retreating Polish army and refugees fleeing through Leipzig made an indelible impression on him. Wagner met the heroic Polish revolutionary leader Count Vincenz Tyskiewitsch at this time and was inspired to compose several Polish-themed pieces of music.

Wagner’s earlier experience of living within in the Russian Empire had not been successful. In 1837 he had been appointed music director of the theatre in Riga, then part of the Russian Empire. The priority of the large German community in Riga was to diplomatically appease the Russification of Latvia and the other Baltic States. Wagner was not sympathetic towards that policy.

Wagner’s arrival in St Petersburg in 1863 was close on the heels of yet another doomed Polish uprising. However, by this time he had lost interest in revolutionary activities. He had discovered Schopenhauer and now he looked at the world through very different eyes.

Wagner gave six concerts in St Petersburg, mostly at the Hall of the Nobility, offering excerpts from his operas and also six Beethoven symphonies. His conducting style made a huge impression; he faced the orchestra instead of the audience, which was a major departure from the usual concert practice in those days. Musicians from the Imperial Orchestra were placed at his disposal. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, aged 23, attended all six of these St Petersburg concerts, and later wrote of his admiration of Wagner to his patron Nadezhda von Meck. Wagner travelled to Moscow where he was assisted by Nikolay Rubinstein. At the Bolshoi Theatre he conducted excerpts from some of his operas and also two Beethoven symphonies.

Wagner found patronage in St Petersburg from the Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna. As Princess Charlotte of Württemberg she had married Tsar Paul I’s youngest son, Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich, the grandson of Catherine the Great. The Grand Duchess gave Wagner 1,000 Roubles and discussed making an annual grant of such an amount until his situation improved. They also discussed a return visit although, in the end, this did not happen. Wagner never returned to Russia. Still, he had fond memories of his visit and the quality of the musicians, especially in St Petersburg.

Peter showed members some wonderful illustrations both visual and musical during his discussion and, information on some productions of Wagner’s operas in Russia:

• In 1889 Angelo Neumann brought the ‘Ring’ to Russia. He used the sets and costumes from the first Bayreuth Festival. 

• In 1891 Nellie Melba was invited to St Petersburg to perform Elsa in ‘Lohengrin’.

• The current Mariinsky ‘Ring’ has been staged around the world.

Peter’s presentation was much appreciated for its interesting, informative content and the detailed research he had undertaken. Members asked enthusiastic questions. It was a splendid afternoon that followed the celebratory lunch of the 208th anniversary of Richard Wagner’s birth.

Observations by Paul Caesar

Audience members at a concert in the Hall of the Nobility, St Petersburg, where Wagner conducted six concerts in 1863. Painting by Ilya Repin.

The Bolshoi Zal (Grand Hall) of the Hall of the Nobility, now the St Petersburg Philharmonia.

Richard Wagner as photographed in St Petersburg in March 1863, and the Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna (formerly Princess Charlotte of Württemberg) who became an important patron of his visit to Russia.

The 23-year-old Tchaikovsky, who attended all six of Wagner’s concerts in St Petersburg in 1863.

A Palekh miniature depicting the arrival of Lohengrin at Antwerp and, in particular, the celebrated Russian tenor Leonid Sobinov.

Leonid Sobinov as Lohengrin and Antonina Nezhdanova, Elsa, who recorded excerpts from Lohengrin in 1910.

Stage design for Act I of Tristan und Isolde, by Vsevolod Meyerhold, who was executed during the Stalinist purge of 1940.

A scene from the Mariinsky Ring which toured around the world. It drew on images from the legends and myths of Ossetia in the Caucasus.

THE FRENCH SIEGFRIED – ERNEST REYER’S ‘SIGURD’. BY DR GRAHAM BRUCE
Saturday 17 April 2021

The Nibelung legend is so identified with Richard Wagner’s gigantic ‘Ring’ cycle that it is hard to imagine this legend in any other musical garb. But here it is, and French at that, and in the grand French operatic tradition. Dr Graham Bruce introduced members to Ernest Reyer’s ‘Sigurd’.

So, who was this French composer? Ernest Reyer (1823-1909) was born in Marseilles, a largely self-taught composer and prolific critic and writer on music. In Paris, he sought the company of writers and composers (Theophile Gautier, Gustave Flaubert, et al) and became a particular friend of Hector Berlioz. Reyer had a considerable output of compositions, including symphonic works, ballets and five operas. He was well recognised, and his compositions were popular over the later part of the 19th century and into early 20th century. He was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1862. Little by little, however, his reputation began to decline, and performances of his compositions are rare today.

‘Sigurd’ is an opera in four acts with a libretto by Camille du Locle and Alfred Blau. Like Wagner’s ‘Der Ring Des Nibelungen’ the story draws on aspects of the ‘Nibelungenlied’. Reyer began working on this opera in 1862 and it was virtually completed in draft by 1867. The work waited many years before it was performed in full; Reyer could not persuade the Paris Opera to stage ‘Sigurd’. Finally, it was first performed at the Theatre de la Monnaie in Brussels on 7 January 1884. It was a huge success in Brussels, and the Paris Opera decided to mount it soon afterwards. It was given 252 performances there, the last in 1935, and the role of Brunehild then was sung by the great Australian soprano Marjorie Lawrence.

‘Sigurd’ basically covers the story of Wagner’s ‘Götterdämmerung’ and the 3rd act of ‘Siegfried’. It centres on the trickery by which Sigurd is induced by Gunther to forget Brunehild and marry Hilda (Wagner’s Gutrune), with similar tragic results. But the story is taken at face value, courtly rather than prehistoric in atmosphere, and without Wagner’s political subtext or his susceptibility to psycho-musical analysis. As Graham commented when playing several excerpts from ‘Sigurd’, there is hardly a trace of Bayreuthian influence, and nothing like the symphonic complexity with which Wagner used his leitmotivs. The score comes across as 19th century French romantic opera; there are fine choruses and arias that showcase the voice and dramatic duos. Graham used Manuel Rosenthal’s 1973 recording with a star line-up of French singers.

It was a novel presentation from Graham, introducing members to a largely unknown French composer, Reyer, and his composition on a theme similar to Richard Wagner’s.

An enthusiastic appreciation was given to Graham for his wonderfully researched discussion.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Damjana Simončič 

SIEGFRIED WAGNER – SON, HUSBAND, DIRECTOR AND COMPOSER. BY PROFESSOR STEPHEN EMMERSON
March 20, 2021

Siegfried Wagner was the only son of the great Richard Wagner, and the grandson of Franz Liszt. Professor Emmerson asked members: “What do we know about him?” Other members of the Wagner clan may be more familiar to us. Stephen’s discussion gave us a wonderful insight into the talents and character of Siegfried Wagner. He was raised in the household of a dominating mother and four strong-willed sisters. He was a young teenager when his father died, and Richard Wagner, although a loving father, was preoccupied with composition (including the opera Siegfried!), building the Bayreuth Festival Theatre, and managing the first Festival during his son’s formative years.

Siegfried composed eighteen operas (not all completed) and a significant volume of orchestral works and vocal music. Stephen played several extracts of these compositions from historical recordings, including with Siegfried as the conductor. Interestingly, like his father, Siegfried wrote all his own opera libretti. Music critics have tended to be harsh in their judgment of his compositions and, regrettably, they are rarely performed today.

His personal life was complex. The greatness of his father overawed Siegfried but, in fact, the son was multi-talented: composer, orchestral conductor, performer of several musical instruments, architectural student, painter, fluent speaker of several languages, and a writer and poet. For years, his mother Cosima urged her son, who was bisexual, to marry and provide the Wagner dynasty with male heirs. A suitable marriage was arranged with an 18-year-old Englishwoman Winifred Williams, an orphan who had been raised by distant relatives, the Klindworths, in Berlin. Siegfried was 46 at the time of his marriage. Siegfried and Winifred would go on to have four children.

Siegfried assisted his mother with the annual Bayreuth Festival after the death of his father in 1883. Cosima was obsessive in maintaining performances exactly as they had been seen by “The Master”, and she discouraged Siegfried from making directorial changes. In time, radical changes to the interpretation and direction of the Bayreuth Festival operas were to be made by Siegfried’s sons Wieland and Wolfgang – changes that their father had begun to explore, notably in relation to symbolism and lighting. Interestingly, at the 1896 Festival, Siegfried Wagner was associate conductor for the performances of the Ring.

Professor Emmerson’s presentation was deeply researched, and a picture emerged of Siegfried Wagner as a genial, humane and humorous person, who had applied himself with commitment and dedication to maintaining his father’s legacy.

Members were enthusiastic in their appreciation of Stephen’s presentation.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Damjana Simončič 

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Postponed from 2020 – February 20, 2021

It was noted at this AGM that the Queensland Society is the only Wagner Society in Australia and New Zealand to have held ‘live’ meetings each month, without exception, since July 2020. A full program is also planned leading up to the Ring performances in Brisbane later this year. Remarkably too, our meetings have attracted consistently higher levels of attendance than was the case before COVID-19. Scarcely a month goes by without applications for new memberships being received.

A new Management Committee was elected at the AGM, comprising President Peter Bassett, Vice-President Graham Bruce, Secretary Rosemary Cater-Smith, Treasurer Kerry Ward, and Members Stephen Emmerson, Annette Fisher, Geoff Fisher, Colin Mackerras and Judy Xavier. Congratulations to our new team in this exciting Wagnerian year! A presentation by Geoff Fisher on the Nibelungenlied had been scheduled to follow the AGM but, unfortunately, Geoff was unwell and could not attend. To fill the gap, Peter Bassett invited those present to sample some productions (including the Brisbane Ring!) that would have taken place around the world in 2020 if COVID-19 had not intervened. A still from one such postponed production – Parsifal at the Deutsche Oper Berlin – is included below. Geoff Fisher’s presentation on the Nibelungenlied will now be given on Saturday 17 July.
Photography by Damjana Simončič 

 

 

A FILM CONDUCTED AND DIRECTED BY HERBERT VON KARAJAN. DAS RHEINGOLD 1978 PRODUCTION
January 16, 2021

This film production has been controversial since the soundtrack was laid down in 1973 and “staged” for film in 1978. Partly, the criticism arose because the actors lip-synced, and some roles were acted by people other than the singers who originally recorded them. The orchestra was the Berliner Philharmoniker, and the production was a rework of Karajan’s 1968 Salzburg Easter Festival staging.

There was an impressive cast: Wotan – Thomas Stewart; Fricka – Brigitte Fassbaender; Loge – Peter Schreier; Freia – Jeannine Altmeyer; Erda – Martha Mӧdl/sung Birgit Finnila; Alberich – Zoltan Kelemen; Mime – Gerhard Stolze; Fasolt – Gerd Nienstedt/sung Karl Ridderbusch; Fafner – Louis Hendrikx; Donner – Vladimir de Kanel/sung Leif Roar; Froh – Hermin Esser

Some of the scenes were memorable, others maybe not. The opening scene showing the River Rhine in a fog-blue mist was, for me, one of the most atmospheric openings of Das Rheingold I have seen. Rhinemaidens seemingly swimming (on trapezes) became distracting, and the descent into Nibelheim was unconvincing. Later in the drama, Erda appeared in a pall of gloomy smoke superimposed over a big still photograph of Wotan. Some might have thought they were looking at a Doctor Who television setting!

Nevertheless, the dramatic impact of having the gods basically static on stage was sensational. Wagner’s operas are intimate. This production used slow, natural body language/movement. The interplay between the performers became very important, and close-ups brought out vital details – scenery became less important here. Viewers felt they were on stage with the actors, moving amongst them. This is a sensation one may not experience from a seat in a large opera house. Some of our members commented that this Karajan production reminded them of the Metropolitan Opera’s Otto Schenk’s 1986 Der Ring des Nibelungen. There was a close relationship – the co-director and set designer of Karajan’s production was Günther Schneider-Siemssen, and he was the set designer of Otto Schenk’s production at the Metropolitan.

A standout performance was Peter Schreier’s interpretation of Loge – clad in tight fitting red leather, bald headed, he moved around the set like a lurid night club impresario, directing the failing gods to their Valhalla.

Herbert von Karajan conducted with real subtlety and with the full range of dynamics required by the score. One Amazon reviewer of this DVD commented: “Karajan conducts a dramatic very swift reading of the score. He also brings out the detail so effectively. Under Karajan’s baton Das Rheingold is not a loud wall of sound but a very detailed and complex score. I so much prefer a studio performance to a live performance as the singers do not have to shout over the orchestra. Also, you can appreciate the whispering when Alberich or the giants are plotting mischief.”

Altogether, a very enjoyable meeting.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Deutsche Grammophon DVD

 

 

COSIMA WAGNER’S DIARIES – WITH MUSIC, BY MARGARET BAKER-GENOVESI WITH PETER BASSETT; PRECEDED BY CHRISTMAS LUNCHEON.
December 19, 2020

Prior to the meeting, members enjoyed a Christmas lunch at Deery’s Restaurant at the Story Bridge Hotel.

We then adjourned to the meeting room at the Multicultural Centre.

Margaret and Peter presented a most elegant and innovative introduction to Cosima Wagner’s diaries. It was a joy to watch on screen Peter’s illustrated highlights of some of Richard Wagner’s personal musical experiences and then listen to Margaret reading excerpts from Cosima’s diaries that were allied to each of those chosen experiences.   Margaret and Peter presented the illustrations and diary excerpts in a soft, theatrical setting – Margaret was seated as in a corner of an elegant room under a lamp and Peter had arranged several recordings of Wagner’s scores that were mentioned in the diaries.

Cosima Wagner (born 24 December 1837 – died 1 April 1930) began her diaries on 1 January 1869, a few weeks after leaving her husband to live with Richard Wagner. Until Wagner’s death in 1883 they were rarely parted, and the diaries provide a continuous and intimate picture of the composer’s life and work during those fourteen years.

The diaries were intended by Cosima as a record for her children. The final entry was written on 12 February 1883, the day before Richard Wagner died in Venice; by which time she had hand-written 21 volumes, comprising nearly one million words. They impress us with their touching and revealing recording of Cosima’s devotion to Richard Wagner, and his devotion to her.

It was a delightful and intimate afternoon for the 47 members and guests who attended.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Stephanie Hinrichs and Damjana Simončič 

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THREE GREAT WAGNERIAN SOPRANOS
Presenter: Professor Colin Mackerras
November 21, 2020

Professor Mackerras spoke about the “Golden Age” of Wagnerian Dramatic Sopranos and illustrated his theme with detailed sketches of three of the most famous Wagnerian sopranos, namely, Frida Leider (1888 – 1975, born in Berlin, Germany), Kirsten Flagstad (1895 – 1962, born in Hamar, Norway) and Birgit Nilsson (1918 – 2005, born in Vastra Karup, Sweden).

Colin elaborated on the definition of a “Wagnerian Dramatic Soprano”. According to one source, “… this is a type of operatic soprano with a powerful, rich, emotive voice that can sing over, or cut through a full Wagnerian orchestra. Such sopranos have thicker vocal cords in their singing voices and a sustained, fuller sound than lighter sopranos.” (Wikipedia Encyclopaedia). These three dramatic sopranos discussed by Colin were also gifted with great agility in their singing voices. 

The main qualities of Frida Leider illustrated by Colin were her ability to sweep effortlessly to high notes, her beautiful tone of voice, and an art of phrasing and dramatic expression. Listening to audio examples of this soprano, we could hear beautiful modulation and radiant sound; a strong, heroic sound with a touch of silk.

With Kirsten Flagstad, Colin drew attention to her vocal technique, consistency of line and tone, and great control and wonderful musicality. Her voice was enormous but did not sound enormous because it was never pushed; it had a cool, silvery quality.

For Birgit Nilsson, Colin illustrated her total control (it was fearless), unswerving accuracy and incredible technique. The power of her voice was phenomenal – even throughout the range. She was a focused, hard-working singer. Birgit Nilsson also had a wonderful personality, warmth, and wit. The audio examples displayed her sound as being, perhaps, not as beautiful and charming as that of Leider and Flagstad – perhaps rather metallic – but still great. “Sunlight reflected off a copper surface” (music critic John Ardoin).

This was an enthusiastic meeting led by Colin, and his personal reflections on these three great Wagnerian sopranos were enjoyable and thought-provoking. 40 members plus 2 guests registered for this meeting during these tricky Covid-influenced times.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Stephanie Hinrichs and Damjana Simončič 

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Franz Liszt: Devoted Wagnerian, Composer and Virtuoso
Presenter: Dr Graham Bruce
October 17, 2020

Graham gave members a great opening for his discussion. It was a recording of Liszt’s transcription of Beethoven’s Symphony Number Five – Allegro con brio. The pianist was the Russian Konstantin Scherbakov. Liszt transcribed all of Beethoven’s Symphonies – perhaps, like other members, I will now be going in search of these recordings, particularly looking for the transcription of the Ninth Symphony.

Franz Liszt was born 22 October 1811 in a village in the Kingdom of Hungary. Liszt’s father was a competent piano player and began teaching his son the piano at the age of seven. Within a year, the young Liszt was an elementary composer and was also appearing in concerts. A group of sponsors arranged to finance his musical education in Vienna, and there he received piano lessons from Carl Czerny – who in his youth had been a pupil of Beethoven. Liszt at this time also received lessons in composition from Antonio Salieri. As Graham discussed, the sponsorship and cultivation by his teachers instilled in Liszt a generous and philanthropic purpose towards his own future students and artistic friends.

After his father’s death in 1827, Franz Liszt moved to Paris to live with his mother. During this time, he earned a living mainly by teaching. Graham did not dwell on the bohemian and romantic lifestyle that the young man discovered whilst in Paris. This lifestyle ceased when, in April 1832 (aged 21), he heard Niccolo Paganini. Liszt became determined to become as great a virtuoso on the piano as Paganini was on the violin. The other great legacy of Liszt was his piano transcriptions of the orchestral works of the classical composers and his contemporaries. In 1833 Liszt began a relationship with the Countess Marie d’Agoult. After a time, she left her husband and eloped to join Liszt in Geneva. From this relationship three children were born including Cosima, later Wagner’s wife. For a decade, Liszt’s life was that of a touring virtuoso all over Europe. He received great adulation and fame – one writer at the time coined this fame as “Lisztomania”. With the constant touring the relationship with Marie d’Agoult became strained, and around 1844 they separated.

The second period of Liszt’s life was his meeting the Polish Princess Carolyne zu Sayn Wittgenstein. In 1848, with the Princess, he settled in Weimar and ceased his career as a travelling virtuoso. Liszt then concentrated on conducting, composing, writing, and giving piano lessons (including to Hans von Bülow who married Liszt’s daughter Cosima in 1857). During this time, he met and championed the works of Richard Wagner. In Weimar Liszt produced and conducted Wagner’s operas Tannhäuser and Lohengrin and took them on tour to some European cities. Amongst the musical excerpts Graham presented were Liszt’s transcriptions of music from Tannhäuser and Lohengrin – they were wonderful to hear.

The last period in Liszt’s life began with sadness. His 20-year-old son Daniel died in 1859, and his 26-year-old daughter Blandine died in 1862. The planned marriage to Princess Carolyne was quashed with the intervention of her husband and the Tsar of Russia. Liszt retreated to a solitary living in a monastery outside Rome. He took minor orders in 1865. After this ordination he was often called Abbé Liszt. He did participate in the musical life of Rome and during these years composed, amongst his other works, Christus-Oratorio and Cantico del Sol di Francesco d’Assisi. Liszt made regular journeys between Rome, Weimar and Budapest and in these places gave master classes in piano playing.

In the summer of 1886 Liszt was visiting Cosima in Bayreuth. She had asked him there because she needed his support for the Bayreuth Festival that year. Liszt arrived suffering from pneumonia, and his final days were spent in a rented room opposite the Villa Wahnfried. He was attended by incompetent doctors and treated coldly by Cosima. Liszt died on 31 July 1886 and was buried in the cemetery at Bayreuth.

Thank you, Graham, for such an interesting and informative presentation. The photographs and musical excerpts Graham used will no doubt excite members’ quests to follow up the recordings of Liszt’s transcriptions.

Thank you too, to Peter Bassett our President, and Rosemary Cater-Smith our Secretary, for helping us observe the Covid-19 protocols. There were 31 members in attendance.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Stephanie Hinrichs and Damjana Simončič 

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Wagner and Offenbach
Presenter: Peter Bassett
September 19, 2020

The young Richard Wagner had been obsessed with making his name in Paris. He and his first wife Minna arrived there in 1839 – via London – having fled Riga on the run from creditors. Paris at the time was the European centre of culture and music, particularly opera, and Wagner saw his star rising there.

The most successful and influential opera composer then in Paris was Giacomo Meyerbeer (born Jakob Liebmann Beer in Berlin, 1791). Initially Meyerbeer was supportive of the impoverished Wagner, lending him money, arranging for him to write articles and translations. Meyerbeer used his influence to arrange the premier of Wagner’s Rienzi in Dresden. Eventually they fell out; Wagner abandoned any French persona and probably was envious of the success and influence that Meyerbeer held in opera circles. Determined to promote his concept of the Gesamtkunstwerk (‘total work of art’) Wagner travelled to Dresden in 1842.

A future ‘operetta’ composer attending the Paris Conservatoire in 1833 was Jacques Offenbach (born Jakob Levy Offenbach in Cologne, 1819). Offenbach found academic study unfulfilling and left the Conservatoire after a year and made a living as an itinerant cellist. Offenbach revelled in adopting the French persona – thus the germination of the dislike and rivalry that grew between the two composers, not only in their concepts of opera but also Wagner’s postulating against ‘Jewishness in Music’.

Both composers were powerful influences on critical opera genre. Particularly during the 1860‘s, Offenbach was enjoying great success with the Paris performances of his frequent new operettas – tagged by Wagner as satires, buffoonery and frivolous (and they were the kinder pejoratives). Amidst this rivalry, Wagner hoped to conquer the Parisian scene with a production of Tannhäuser in 1861. Audience disturbances – variously blamed on the influences of Meyerbeer (who was in Berlin at the time), Offenbach (who was worried about the rising acclaim being given to Wagner) and the Jockey Club (who were having their dining schedule disrupted) – caused Wagner to withdraw the opera. This marked the end of Wagner’s early goal of establishing himself in Paris.

From the late 1860s Offenbach’s compositions leaned more to romantic comic opera than to opera bouffe. He did compose a serious romantic opera Die Rheinnixen first performed in 1864 in Vienna. Offenbach’s popularity waned after the time of the 1870 Franco-Prussian war. He was associated with the old regime – the Second French Empire of Napoleon III – his music fell out of favour and France was swept by anti-German sentiments.

Peter, our Society President and presenter, gave us some fabulous (and surprising) music and pictorial illustrations. It was an intriguing and very interesting afternoon. Thirty-four members joined us, and it was a delight to see so many fellow Wagnerians in these challenging times for gatherings and events.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Stephanie Hinrichs and Damjana Simončič 

 



Der Ring des Nibelungen
– Workshop 2 (Siegfried and Götterdämmerung)
Presenter: Peter Bassett
August 22, 2020

Our second Ring Workshop attracted a great attendance of thirty-four members plus three guests at the Queensland Multicultural Centre rooms. The current COVID-19 protocols and QMC regulations were scrupulously observed. Our president and workshop presenter, Dr Peter Bassett, mentioned that the Queensland Society was the only Wagner Society in Australia currently meeting ‘live’.

For these workshops, Peter had provided wonderful notes – thoroughly researched and composed in a style that is exciting to read. They will be a great source of information to keep alongside one’s recordings and DVDs of Wagner’s Ring Cycle. To illustrate points in his discussion, Peter played excerpts from Sir Georg Solti’s Decca recording of Der Ring Des Nibelungen made between 1958 and 1964.

Peter discussed with members how the Siegfried music in Acts 1 and 2 is so evocative of the feelings and emotions being experienced by the main character, who is in every sense a child of nature. The music, particularly the orchestral music, resounds with the echoes of the forest. Then, in Act 3, one hears a quite different type of composer. A twelve-year interlude occurred when Wagner stopped the Siegfried composition at the end of Act 2 and later resumed composing the Ring at the beginning of Act 3, after Tristan und Isolde and Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg.

The prelude to Act 3, and all that follows, displays Wagner’s very mature compositional abilities. He seamlessly interweaves many themes, often using just hints of the leitmotifs one has heard earlier. As Peter explained and illustrated, the music speaks to our subconscious. We can sense that things are going wrong.

It is in Act 3 that the Wanderer recognises the inevitable, and the need to carry it out. This powerful recognition of inevitability is reflected in the immolation scene in Götterdämmerung – Brünnhilde awakens to the only goal that matters – renunciation of the world of desire and delusion, and the annihilation of the will – graphically symbolised by her self-immolation.

The ending of the Ring is purely orchestral music; there is no singing. We recognise in what is pouring forth from the orchestra that Brünnhilde has set in motion events which, ultimately, will make possible a better world.

Members asked many questions and made comments during Peter’s discussion. We have been very engaged and interested in these workshops.

Thank you, Peter! I think all members would endorse that is has been a privilege to be able to discuss with you your meaningful and reflective observations on Wagner’s Ring Cycle.

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Damjana Simončič and Graham Bruce

   

 

 

Der Ring des Nibelungen – Workshop 1 (Das Rheingold and Die Walküre)
Presenter: Peter Bassett
July 18, 2020

It was wonderful for our members to be able to resume gatherings after five months without a Wagner meeting. Thank you to our committee who arranged for us to observe the strict Covid-19 protocols.   

Our President Dr Peter Bassett gave us a fascinating, enjoyable and informative Ring Workshop. Peter opened his presentation with great humour, commenting on the Covid-19 predicament and then showing us an actual Golden Apple – if Freia’s apples could restore the gods in the drama, perhaps they might also work in our present crisis!

The influences of the composers Bellini and Beethoven on Wagner’s music were illustrated. Peter played audio excerpts of several parts of Das Rheingold and Die Walküre which really highlighted and gave clarity to the observations he was sharing with us.

One main subject of Peter’s discussion was illustrating that a principal point of all the Wagner’s musical dramas is that life is all about love and compassion. The Ring is a love story, and when love and compassion are rejected by the players, things go very wrong. In the first act of Die Walküre love and compassion manifest themselves – Spring conquers the world and breaches Winter’s defences. 

The thematic development of Wotan was also discussed – if only he had really listened to Erda initially! Wagner creates Wotan’s character to be like us. Wotan realises that he should have done what Erda told him to do. As the drama develops, this character is not losing out but accepting reality – making things happen that need to happen. Wotan becomes a vehicle for change.

As for Brünnhilde, Peter illustrated how she is another aspect of Wotan’s character. She completes what really, in his heart, he wanted to do. She is more Wotan than he is.

Thank you, Peter! Your discussion gave members a focus on the creation of Wagner’s Ring drama and its inner workings. I’m looking forward to Ring Workshop 2 (Siegfried and Götterdämmerung).

Observations by Paul Caesar
Photography by Stephanie Hinrichs

 

Wagnerian Heldentenors
Presenter: Professor Colin Mackerras AO
February 22nd, 2020

In his presentation on the Wagnerian Heldentenor (‘heroic tenor’), Professor Colin Mackerras brought to bear his knowledge and interest as a long- time Wagner enthusiast.

Initially, Colin examined the nature of the Heldentenor, a voice characterised by richness, strength and staying power, being the equivalent of the tenore dramatico. The Heldentenor repertoire is almost exclusively the preserve of the Wagnerian opera. In the widest sense, the main tenor roles in all Wagner’s operas, excluding very early works, could be regarded as Heldentenor. But the roles of Siegfried and Tristan are the prime instances, with other roles such as Parsifal and Walter von Stolzing clearly within the category. Colin concluded the introductory part of his talk with a brief look at the early history of the Heldentenor, focussing on the singer who created the role of Tristan, Ludwig Schnorr von Carolsfeld, who was much admired by Wagner.

The main part of the presentation considered three major Heldentenors, these being Max Lorenz (1901-75), Lauritz Melchior (1890-1973) and Wolfgang Windgassen (1914-74).

Less known in the Anglophone world than he should be, Lorenz was the prominent Heldentenor in German and Austrian opera houses during the 1920s, 30s and 40s. A very expressive singer with a ringing voice, he enjoyed the favour of Hitler despite being a homosexual and his wife being Jewish.

Two musical excerpts demonstrated the beauty and expressiveness of Lorenz’s voice: Lohengrin – ‘Mein lieber Schwan!’, and Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg – Walther’s ‘Prize Song’.

Generally regarded as the quintessential Heldentenor, the Danish – American Melchior enjoyed a worldwide career over three decades. He was particularly associated with the Met, having sung 519 performances of Wagner there between 1926 and 1950. His singing is characterised by a seemingly effortless and steady delivery of much power. For Colin, he is the greatest of all recorded Heldentenors.

From Melchior’s many recordings, Colin chose the following excerpts illustrating the versatility of the voice: Die Walküre Act I – ‘Siegmund heiss’ ich’; Tristan und Isolde Act III – The death of Tristan, and Siegfried Act II – the ‘Forest Murmurs’.

Windgassen is well known as the pre-eminent Heldentenor of the 1950s and 60s, having sung 159 times on the Bayreuth stage between 1951 and 1966. His voice, while not as powerful as Melchior’s, had a beauty which was employed with artistry and refinement. His recordings in the late mono and stereo eras include Siegfried in the iconic Decca Ring conducted by Georg Solti.

Windgassen’s artistry was illustrated by two musical excerpts: Götterdämmerung – Siegfried’s Death, and Parsifal Act III – ‘Nur eine Waffe taugt’.

Colin’s presentation was much appreciated for its informative content and the enthusiasm of his delivery. Members of the society look forward to some fine contemporary Heldentenor singing in the upcoming 2020 Brisbane productions of Tristan und Isolde and the Ring.

Thirty two people were in attendance, including three new members and three guests. Many thanks to members who contributed towards the afternoon tea, and to the members of our ‘Nibelung Bureau’ catering group who coordinated and managed it.

Review: Geoff and Annette Fisher
Photos: Stephanie Hinrichs

                

 

Screening of part of Götterdämmerung from the Valencia Ring.
Presenter: Dr. Peter Bassett
January 18th 2020

President Peter Bassett ushered in the ‘Year of the Ring’ in Brisbane by presenting a screening of Götterdämmerung’s Prologue and Act One (up to ‘Hagen’s watch’) from the production created for the Palau de les Arts Reine Sofia, Valencia. The DVD recording dates from 2008.

This production, staged by the innovative company La Fura dels Baus under the direction of Carlus Padrissa, relies on stunning video projections on giant screens to largely replace traditional sets. As Peter observed, it provides a foretaste of what might be expected with the November 2020 Brisbane Ring.

The Prologue to the opera finds the three Norns passing their golden rope of world knowledge from one to the other against largely monochrome projections which invoke the gloom of the scene and complement the exchange of dialogue. The Norns appear cocooned and sometimes suspended in mid-air, surrounded by ropes and cords.

Then follows a striking video of the fire surrounding Brünnhilde’s rock. Brünnhilde and Siegfried rapturously proclaim their love for one another in a scene visually compromised by Brünnhilde’s unflattering costume. Siegfried then sets out on his adventures. The orchestral interlude known as Siegfried’s Journey to the Rhine accompanies the hero as he sails down the river in a stylised metal boat, the river being shown as polluted by plastic bottles and other detritus. It seems that the degraded state of the Rhine suggests the nature of the ‘civilisation’ our naïve hero is soon to encounter. The pitching of the boat on the water is surprisingly effective in following the movement of the music.

When Siegfried arrives at the hall of the Gibichungs at the start of Act One, he enters a world of vicious materialism and rapacious greed. Gunther and Hagen appear as suited stockbrokers backed by screens projecting an ever changing jumble of numbers, monetary symbols and stock exchange quotations. Bizarrely, these Gibichungs have shaved, painted heads tattooed with symbols of the Euro and the Yen and various oriental patterns. Whether their appearance is menacing or risible is a matter of opinion. Reminiscent of the Chéreau Ring, Siegfried is relieved of his primitive garb and provided with the smart grey suit of a stockbroker. His transformation anticipates his imminent betrayal of Brünnhilde brought on by the potion of forgetfulness given to him by Gutrune, who is power-dressed in red and black. Siegfried and Gunther head off in the little metal boat to abduct Brünnhilde, while Hagen broods on events.

This report has concentrated on the visual aspects of the production which are of much current interest for subscribers to the forthcoming Brisbane Ring.  But it must be noted that under the reliable conducting of Zubin Mehta the Orquestra de la Comunitat Valenciana plays the score with beauty and commitment. The singing heard in the excerpt screened is overall of a high standard but lacks the last degree of memorability.

Over thirty members were in attendance and viewed the screening closely; there followed  lively discussion at afternoon tea. Many thanks for the afternoon tea organised by members of the ‘Nibelung bureau’.

Review: Geoff and Annette Fisher
Photos: Stephanie Hinrichs

  

 

Christmas Lunch, Hillstone St Lucia Golf Club

Members, their families and friends enjoyed Christmas Lunch at the Hillstone St Lucia Golf Club on Saturday 14th December. This was the second occasion on which we had chosen ‘Hillstone’ for our Christmas festivities and, once again, it proved a delightful setting with delicious food and very friendly and obliging staff. A good time was had by all. Warmest thanks to our Secretary, Sheena Burnell, for arranging this most enjoyable celebration.

A very Happy Christmas to everyone, and good wishes for the exciting year ahead!

Peter Bassett
President

Photos by Stephanie Hinrichs and Damjana Simončič

         

 

 

20th Annual General Meeting and screening of Lohengrin.

  
  

Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs


Observations on the 2019 Bayreuth Festival 
Panel: Colin Mackerras, Judy Xavier, Sheena Burnell, Peter Bassett 
October 26th 2019

Four of our members who attended the 2019 Bayreuth Festival shared their observations on the following productions:

Colin Mackerras (Tannhäuser, conducted by Christian Thielemann and directed by Tobias Kratzer)

Judy Xavier (Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, conducted by Philippe Jordan and directed by Barrie Kosky)

Sheena Burnell (Parsifal, conducted by Semyon Bychkov and directed by Eric Laufenberg)

Peter Bassett (Tristan und Isolde, conducted by Christian Thielemann and directed by Katharina Wagner)

Audience members contributed their reactions to the video clips of each production and to the presenters’ observations.

Wolfgang Wagner, who was Festival Director together with his brother Wieland from 1951 until 1966 and from then as sole Director until 2008, encouraged a wide range of production styles. The result was that the Bayreuth Festival achieved unprecedented success and prestige among the world’s opera festivals. His daughter and successor Katharina Wagner (b. 1978), on the other hand, appears to be inflexibly wedded to the concept of Regietheater (Director’s Theatre) – a largely post World War II German phenomenon motivated, in part, by a perceived need to sever connections with the past.

Regietheater allows a director freedom to change the creator’s original intentions in relation to, say, geographical location, chronological situation, casting and plot. Changes are often made to drive home blatant political points or draw modern parallels. Richard Wagner was clear that he did not want to make political and social parallels obvious. ‘I believe’ he wrote, ‘it was a true instinct that led me to guard against an excessive eagerness to make things too plain, for I have learned to feel that to make one’s intentions too obvious risks impairing a proper understanding of the work in question; in drama – as in any work of art – it is a question of making an impression not by parading one’s opinions but by setting forth what is instinctive.’ [Letter to August Rӧckel, 25/26 January 1854.]

The imposition of a narrow dramaturgical approach, as we observe it today, has had only one parallel in the history of the Festival – the period of Cosima Wagner’s (self-assumed) directorship following her husband’s death. Cosima rigidly applied what she believed to be the one and only approach to staging Richard Wagner’s works, and she would tolerate no other. Ultimately, this myopia proved stifling and it led to a decline in the Festival’s standing until it was rescued by Wieland and Wolfgang Wagner after 1951.

It is to be hoped that today’s Festival management will become more flexible in its approach to future productions and give effect to all the dimensions of Richard Wagner’s works, as the composer intended.

Review: Peter Bassett
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

       

 

Parsifal Act 2 
Speaker: Dr Graham Bruce 
September 21st 2019

Parsifal Act 2 in the memorable production conducted by Daniel Barenboim and directed by Harry Kupfer at the Berlin Staatsoper Unter den Linden, drew a good turnout of members and guests to our meeting on 21 September. Dr Graham Bruce introduced the screening and noted that although the performance had been recorded in 1992, it wasn’t until 2012 that the recording was issued on DVD.

Waltraud Meier was at her very finest as Kundy, the extraordinary character of many parts (and lives) who dominates this act. Danish tenor Poul Elming was the ‘innocent fool’ Parsifal (subsequently to be seen in Australia as our first Parsifal on stage in Adelaide in 2001), with Günter von Kannen as Klingsor. The Flower Maidens sang ‘off stage’ and were represented by frequently changing images on numerous television screens – a curious directorial idea that some liked and others found puzzling.

Generally though, it was agreed that the production as a whole was stunning, the orchestral playing superb and, especially, the principal singers most convincing. The time went all too quickly, and it is hoped that there will be an opportunity in future to see the other acts.

Sincere thanks to Susan Treloar, Aija Wilson and Jenny Krassnig for managing the afternoon tea, and to all who brought contributions for it, and to Kerry Ward for attending at the door.

Review: Peter Bassett
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

   

 

WSQ 20th Anniversary Celebration and Die Feen presentation 
Speaker: Dr Graham Bruce
August 17th 2019

A very special meeting on Saturday 17th August 2019 – a celebration of the 20th anniversary of the founding of the Wagner Society in Queensland. The Society was founded on 17th August 1999, and three of the original founding members attended: Kathy Clifford, Jennette Johnstone and Hal Davis. Each was presented with a commemorative gift by our President. Reminiscences of the Society’s birth by all three of these founding members can be read on the ‘News’ page of this website.

An additional cause for celebration was the award to Kathy Clifford of Life Membership of the Society.

Afternoon tea was suitably celebratory, with sparkling wine and an anniversary cake. Warmest thanks to Sheena Burnell for providing the splendid cake and to Susan Treloar who co-ordinated afternoon tea. 

Prior to the celebration, members listened to a presentation by Dr Graham Bruce on Wagner’s early opera ‘Die Feen’. This was Wagner’s first completed opera, composed when he was just 20 years old. At the time of its composition, Wagner was chorus master at the Wurzburg Theatre. The opera was never staged during Wagner’s lifetime, and it was first performed in 1888 in Munich, five years after his death, with the active involvement of a young Richard Strauss.

Graham’s presentation was very revealing and interesting. We heard some beautiful arias and choruses from a 1984 live recording of a Munich concert performance of ‘Die Feen’ conducted by Wolfgang Sawallisch, followed by a ‘trailer’ for a more recent stage production in Leipzig. These showed the maturity and sophistication of the young Wagner. Opera companies are inclined to take the view that the opera is difficult to stage (fairy tale storyline and too frequent scene changes), hence it is rarely performed.

The score reveals some strong influences on the young Wagner, notably the music of Carl Maria von Weber and Ludwig van Beethoven’s opera ‘Fidelio’. Interestingly, as explained by Graham, ‘Die Feen’ exercised an early influence on Richard Strauss.

Thank you, Graham for giving members a great introduction to this fascinating and quite beautiful opera by a very young Richard Wagner.

On a lighter note, members are no doubt preparing for and excited about the forthcoming ‘Brisbane Ring’. Well here is something to consider for your wardrobe for the opening night of ‘Die Walküre’ … as recently seen in a store window in Via del Corso, Rome.


Review: Paul Caesar
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs 

     

         

 

Die Walküre Act I
July 13th 2019

The meeting began with the launch of our fund-raising campaign, co-ordinated by our Secretary Dr Sheena Burnell, for the Society’s contribution to the staging of Opera Australia’s Brisbane Ring and Opera Queensland’s Tristan und Isolde in 2020.

The Society’s sponsorship commitments are $15,000 as an “Artisan Patron” of Opera Australia’s 2020 Wagner Syndicate (the highest option would have been $30,000, which at least one other Australian Wagner Society has pledged) and $10,000 for Tristan und Isolde. These sponsorships have already given our members access to advance ticket sales for the Ring and they will open the way for similar benefits in respect of Tristan und Isolde (expected go on sale in August) and for invitations to exclusive events associated with both productions.

Fund-raising activities are being launched to meet our sponsorship targets, building on funds already to hand. The committee is asking for generous donations from members, and a ‘Rheingold Box’ will be available at all future meetings to enable members to make smaller donations. All donations, of whatever size, will be greatly appreciated and will help us to meet one of the Society’s main objectives: ‘To promote the public awareness of the works of Richard Wagner’. Tax deductible receipts are available for donations if requested. Details of fund-raising events will be announced to members via emails and on the ‘Wagner in Brisbane’ page of our website: www.wagnerqld.com.au.

Members enthusiastically supported the committee’s proposed fund-raising campaign.

We then watched Die Walküre Act I and part of Act II, a La Scala production, introduced by our Vice-President Dr Graham Bruce. It was a wonderful production with singers “as good as it gets”. Interestingly, some of the singers in the recording we watched will be performing in Brisbane next year. The La Scala production featured:

Conductor                Daniel Barenboim
Sieglinde                   Waltraud Meier
Siegmund                  Simon O’Neill – who will sing Tristan in Brisbane
Hunding                    John Tomlinson
Wotan                       Vitalij Kowaljow – who will sing Wotan in Brisbane
Brünnhilde                Nina Stemme
Fricka                         Ekaterina Gubanova

It is expected that more of this exciting production will be shown next year.

Warmest thanks to Susan Treloar, Aija Wilson and Peter Jansen who co-ordinated afternoon tea, and to Kerry Ward who was on duty at the door.

Review: Paul Caesar
Photographs:  Stephanie Hinrichs

      

 

Rienzi, The Last of the Tribunes of 1842
June 22nd 2019

Richard Wagner’s first great operatic success: Rienzi, The Last of the Tribunes of 1842. Viewing excerpts from some recent productions:

Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

    

 

 

Richard Wagner’s Birthday Celebration and screening of Weber’s Der Freischütz
May 25th 2019

We celebrated the 206th anniversary of the birth of Wilhelm Richard Wagner (born Leipzig, 22nd May 1813) at the Queensland Multicultural Centre with a screening of a 1968 classic production by the Hamburg State Opera of Der Freischütz by Carl Maria von Weber. This was a superbly sung and traditionally staged production, created especially for television by Rolf Liebermann. The conductor was Leopold Ludwig and the Hamburg Philharmonic State Orchestra was in splendid form. Interestingly, thirty-seven years later, Australian conductor Simone Young would become the chief executive of the Hamburg State Opera and chief conductor of the Hamburg Philharmonic. The singing in the screened performance was especially fine – standouts being Ernst Kozub as Max, Gottlob Frick as Caspar, Arlene Saunders as Agathe, Edith Mathis as Ännchen, Tom Krause as Prince Ottokar and Hans Sotin as the Hermit. In a work that attaches much importance to the chorus, the hunters, local people and bridesmaids were also superb.

Der Freischütz (1821) was a most appropriate work with which to mark Wagner’s birthday because of his deep attachment to it from the age of nine. Weber was a regular visitor to the Wagner household in Leipzig and (according to Mein Leben) he expressed an interest in the small boy’s future. Der Freischütz influenced several of Wagner’s early works, notably Die Feen and Der fliegende Holländer, and echoes of it can be heard in the second Act of Siegfried when the ominous atmosphere of the forest by night recalls the spooky scene in the Wolf’s Glen. Wagner remained devoted to the memory of Weber and arranged for his remains to be returned to Leipzig from London in 1844. He composed funeral music and a chorus to be performed at the graveside where he also delivered an oration.

Warmest thanks to Susan Treloar and Carol Bassett for managing the celebratory afternoon tea and drinks, Theo and Lyn Baer who always bring and then take home for washing-up the many china mugs, Sheena Burnell who supplied the sparkling wine, and the many members who contributed delicious food. Thanks too to Kerry Ward for managing the arrivals desk with her usual flair and warmth. It was a delight to welcome Aija Wilson to the ranks of our ‘Nibelung’ helpers. Additional helpers are always in demand, so if you can lend a hand, please let Susan Treloar know on susan.treloar@bigpond.com.

Review: Peter Bassett
Photographs: Graham Bruce and Carol Bassett 

 

Study Day: ‘The Evolution of Wagner’s Hans Sachs’
13 April 2019
Speakers: Dr. Peter Bassett and Professor Stephen Emmerson

There was a real Hans Sachs. Born 1494 in Nuremberg, he received a good education and, at the age of fifteen took up an apprenticeship as a shoemaker. For a time as a young man he was a journeyman travelling with companions and working his craft in many important towns in the German States. Whilst on these travels he also devoted himself to the cultivation of the fine arts. In 1516 Hans Sachs settled in Nuremberg and stayed there for the rest of his life. He was a Meistersinger, wrote plays, poetry and songs – over 6000 pieces of various kinds are attributed to this Hans Sachs. He married twice, had no surviving offspring and died in 1576.

Our Society President Dr Peter Bassett gave the morning session and discussed how Richard Wagner’s concept of an opera on Hans Sachs evolved from his initial draft of 1845 to the finished Munich staging in 1868. Wagner was familiar with the life and works of the real Hans Sachs and several early 19th century dramatic works about him – a play by Deinhardstein and operas by Lortzing and Gyrowetz – and a late 18th century poem by Goethe which did much to reawaken interest in Sachs after decades of neglect. Peter developed the theme of what Wagner’s character Hans Sachs is really saying in the opera. Wagner’s Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg is an opera about German art not politics, originally conceived as a satirical play renouncing the idea that rules are more important than inspiration and talent. Sachs is the Schopenhauerian hero who gives us a lesson on the importance of true art and exposes the old pedantry of the town’s “burghers”.

Members enjoyed a wonderful light lunch. A big thank you to our secretary Sheena Burnell for organizing this.

Society member Professor Stephen Emmerson gave the afternoon session focusing on Wagner’s musical depiction of the wise and compassionate cobbler-poet. Stephen noted that words are very important in this opera; they express the tensions and conflicts of the drama. He then demonstrated how Wagner expresses the character of Sachs – his soul, his point of view, his sadness and his resolution – through the orchestration. It is from the music, not necessarily always from the words, that we learn what is in the mind of Hans Sachs.  

It was a revealing day and no doubt many members will be playing their recordings of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg soon.

Review by Paul Caesar
Photographs by Hal Davis

   

 

Wagner Society Queensland Members at Bayreuth and Covent Garden 
16 March 2019
Panel: Chair Dr Graham Bruce with Robert Sanderson, Jim Spence, Geoff Fisher and Paul Caesar.

A very interesting meeting. Many thanks to the ingenuity of Dr Graham Bruce for facilitating the two discussions.

The first discussion followed a screening of the end sequence of Tristan und Isolde from the 2018 Bayreuther Festspiele.  The director – Katharina Wagner – had Kӧnig Marke forcefully leading Isolde off stage and away from the dead Tristan. Isolde has just sung the Liebestod and this director’s alteration to the composer’s specific directions and intent of his text was strange and controversial. Our member Robert Sanderson had attended this production and provided a fascinating commentary on aspects of it. He had been shocked to see the director’s handling of the final scene. An interesting comment from one member (whilst not agreeing with Katharina Wagner’s alteration) was to see some logical licence in that Kӧnig Marke, to ensure the success of his strategy aimed at securing peace between Ireland and Cornwall, leads Isolde away to enforce their marriage. 

We enjoyed an afternoon tea break arranged by members of our ‘Nibelung Bureau’, Susan Treloar and Patricia Jackson.

A panel discussion (Jim Spence, Geoff Fisher and Paul Caesar) followed on the London Ring. Some of the observations made by panel members were:

  • The lead singers and orchestral playing (Sir Antonio Pappano conductor) were very good;
  • There were gasps in the audience at the magnificence, power and colour of Stuart Skelton’s voice as Siegmund; Nina Stemme – Brünnhilde – was a joy and privilege to hear;
  • The production by Keith Warner suffered a little with too much visual symbolism, and at times it was over-stylized;
  • Connecting details in the production satisfactorily tied the four operas together – the ring image displayed in several forms; the red rope of the Norns shown somewhere in all acts; meaningful allusions to the sky, sometimes beautiful and other times threatening; 
  • Overall agreement that it was a first-rate performance and production.

Review by Paul Caesar
Photographs by Stephanie Hinrichs

 

Barrie Kosky’s production of DIE MEISTERSINGER at Bayreuth
16 February 2019
Panel:  Professor Colin Mackerras, with Margaret Baker-Genovesi, Peter Basset and Martin Kriewaldt

Over thirty Society members attended this lively, interesting meeting. DVD excerpts of Kosky’s production, which premiered at Bayreuth in 2017, were shown followed by a panel discussion. The panel was chaired by Professor Colin Mackerras, with Margaret Baker-Genovesi, Peter Basset and Martin Kriewaldt.

A review of the afternoon’s discussion may be best given by mentioning some of the observations made by panel members and other attendees:

  • This production was heavily politicised to the point of distorting both text and music;
  • It was interesting to open the opera with a stage set in the drawing room of Villa Wahnfried with the characters of Wagner, Cosima, Liszt and others of the household. They then morphed into Hans Sachs, Eva, Beckmesser etc;
  • What mattered to most was Wagner’s music, and enjoyment of this was distorted and distracted by Kosky’s direction and interpretation.
  • The antisemitic references, thought to be overplayed by Kosky, have no basis in the text, and doubts were expressed about the justification of attributing aspects of twentieth century history to Wagner.
  • Taking the proposition that Wagner wrote the text and composed the music of Die Meistersinger as a commentary on the treasures of German culture and artistic achievements – a defence of German art and history as opposed to the then aristocratic and foreign norms – what validity was there in Kosky’s production?
  • Kosky’s placement of children with grotesque facemasks at the end of act two was roundly criticised and thought to be abhorrent.

Kosky may see his theatrical significance as being the “enfant terrible” of opera interpretation; the panel and Society attendees perhaps wished that he may one day adopt a more mature approach.

Many thanks to Carol Bassett and Jenny Krassnig for providing afternoon tea.

Review by Paul Caesar
Photographs by Stephanie Hinrichs

         

 

Wagner’s Theatres 
January 19th 2019
Speaker: Dr Peter Bassett


 
This was a wonderful afternoon with over forty members in attendance, all of whom enjoyed a learned commentary on Wagner’s ideas of theatre design – and also enjoyed very humorous illustrations of the “winged-helmet” characters that became inextricably linked to Wagner’s operas, to the point that they often bore no relation to the plot or characters at all.

 

Dr Bassett discussed in detail how Wagner wanted his dramas to be performed in a theatre of the community – egalitarian and with the seating inspired by the amphitheatres of ancient Greece and Rome – as opposed to the traditional theatres of kings and queens with their “horseshoe” shape more suited to a social occasion than serious musical appreciation.

Wagner’s philosophical and aesthetic approach to theatre design culminated in the building of the Bayreuth Festspielhaus. The size and scale of this building was due in large part to the idolization of Wagner by King Ludwig II combined with the financial extravagance of that king, making this remarkable construction possible. In addition the innovative designs of Gottfried Semper also had influence on Wagner’s theatre ideas, reaching its apotheosis in the unique lines of the building which stands today.

The talk was very much appreciated by all who attended and after Peter’s very amusing illustration of the head-dresses worn in early Wagner productions, many Members were heard pondering aloud if perhaps it will become  “de rigueur” to arrive winged-helmeted at future society meetings!

 


Review: Paul Caesar
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

 

Christmas Lunch 2018

On Saturday 15 December, thirty of our members and welcome guests enjoyed each other’s company at the Hillstone St Lucia Golf Club for our annual Christmas Lunch. A good time was had by all as we dined in the friendly atmosphere of the Golf Club’s ‘100 Acre Bar’ and relished the delicious food and drinks and excellent service. Sincere thanks to Sheena Burnell for her organisation and attention to detail which ensured a delightful day out.

Photographs: Damjana Simončič and Adrian Alle

             

 


Astrid Varnay – Wagnerian Soprano

24 November 2018
Speaker: Margaret Baker-Genovesi

Last month, in the presentation by Professor Stephen Emmerson, members received a “kiss” from Kundry. At the November meeting, members were fortunate to receive a kiss from the Wagnerian soprano Astrid Varnay. For many society members, Astrid Varnay’s name was familiar but her wonderful achievements were perhaps not well known. 

Margaret Baker-Genovesi revealed the life of Astrid Varnay to the large group of members who attended. She was a remarkable singer, born 25 April 1918 – in the same year as her great contemporary and another Wagnerian superstar, Birgit Nilsson.

Astrid Varnay came to immediate and sensational fame when, at short notice on 6 December 1941, she replaced Lotte Lehmann in the role of Sieglinde at the Metropolitan Opera – she was just 23 years of age. Then, six days later, she replaced the ailing Helen Traubel as Brünnhilde in the same opera.  

Astrid Varnay was born into an artistic family. Both her parents were Hungarian and professional singers, but she was born in Sweden where her parents were living during part of World War I. She received vocal lessons from her mother and then in New York from Hermann Weigert whom she later married. Vocally, she was a powerful dramatic soprano; European audiences considered her a goddess in her performance of Wagnerian and Verdian roles. She also had a formidable mezzo-soprano capability which she especially displayed in her favourite role as Ortrud. 

Margaret Baker-Genovesi presented several excerpts from recordings of Astrid Varnay. These began with a live broadcast of her 6 December 1941 performance of Die Walküre, Act 1, Scene 3, with Varnay as Sieglinde and Lauritz Melchior as Siegmund, and with Erich Leinsdorf conducting.

We also heard a wonderful performance of Varnay singing Verdi: as Lady Macbeth in Act II of Macbeth: “La luce langue”, with the Austrian Tonkünstler Orchestra conducted, interestingly, by her husband Hermann Weigert. 

As Astrid Varnay matured, she gave up her heavy dramatic soprano roles and began singing character mezzo roles; Klytämnestra, Herodias, Kostelnicka and others.

Astrid Varnay died in Munich, where she had lived for many years, on 4th September 2006.

Margaret referenced Astrid Varnay’s autobiography: “55 Years in Five Acts: My Life in Opera”. Boston, Northeastern University Press, 2000.

Another interesting autobiography is: ”La Nilsson: My Life in Opera”. Northeastern University Press, translated from Swedish, 2007.

Discussion followed on the nuanced power and beautiful singing of Astrid Varnay. Thank you, Margaret! It was a wonderful presentation and revealed a great Wagnerian singer to our members. Thank you too to Stephanie Hinrichs for her technical preparation and support in this splendid collaboration.

Thank you also to the ‘Nibelungs’ who provided afternoon tea.

Review: Paul Caesar
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

           

 

Parsifal: Kundry’s Kiss – Four Interpretations
27 October 2018
Speaker: Professor Stephen Emmerson

A wonderful afternoon and presentation by Professor Stephen Emmerson. Nearly forty members attended – was everyone longing for a kiss from Kundry?

Four particular interpretations were discussed by Stephen:

First: Otto Schenk’s 1992 direction at Metropolitan Opera, James Levine conducting with Waltraud Meier as Kundry and Siegfried Jerusalem as Parsifal. This production and in particular the ‘kiss scene’ were faithful to Wagner’s instructions. Waltraud Meier a real seductress, showing ravishingly beautiful looks and dramatic multi-layered singing. Parsifal receiving the kiss experiences the suffering of both Kundry and Amfortas. He, the noble fool, experiences compassion and this is life-changing for him.

Second: A Nikolaus Lehnhoff 2004 direction. It is rather confusing: Kundry tries to seduce Parsifal; he violently rejects her, upon which Kundry emerges ‘free’ from her stylized chrysalis-like costume.

Third: Hans-Jurgen Syberberg’s 1982 film. This moved beyond realism and towards symbolism. A lip-sync acting, radical and controversial film. Stephen Emmerson was very enthusiastic about this production and many members agreed with him and were quite excited with the concept. Syderberg regarded Kundry as the centre of the opera – mother, seductress and penitent. It was an intense piece of performance.

Fourth: Francois Girard, director at Metropolitan Opera 2013, with Katarina Dalayman as Kundry and Jonas Kaufmann as Parsifal. Kundry is not to the forefront in this production. It is the effect of the kiss on Parsifal that is made paramount – it opens up the wound of Amfortas in Parsifal, literally – and that brings compassion to the noble fool. Just terrific singing by Kaufmann; he overshadows Dalayman.

It really was a stimulating club meeting and engaged members at the question time following Stephen’s presentation.

And let us not forget the afternoon tea provided by our members, during which the talk was mainly discussing Syderberg’s symbolism.


Review: Paul Caesar
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs
 


 
 

 

FRIEDRICH SCHORR, Wagnerian baritone (1888-1953)
15 September 2018
Speaker: Colin Mackerras

Colin Mackerras, who as well as being an eminent sinologist is also a passionate lover of Wagner, presented – lovingly indeed – the singer who in his opinion was the greatest ever bass-baritone of the Wagnerian repertoire: the Hungarian (later U.S. citizen) Friedrich Schorr.

Schorr was born in 1888, and his career thus centred largely on the 20’s and 30’s of the last century, both in Europe and in America – principally at the Met. Indeed, Schorr was the Wotan in a historic performance of Die Walküre broadcast live on the eve of the attack on Pearl Harbour, and the interpretation we heard of Wotan’s farewell was a perfect example of the singer’s approach to Wagner, with his smooth legato line (the opposite of what many years later would be defined as “park and bark”, which mistakenly became the hallmark of so many otherwise fine singers who sang this repertoire).

But I digress: Colin’s first excerpt was the only one that did not feature Wagner: it was the dramatic vengeance aria of the villain Pizarro in Beethoven’s Fidelio, sung by the then 34-year-old; there followed the great, moving monologue of the Dutchman, “Die Frist is um”. Then we heard the scene from Siegfried in which Wotan as Wanderer solves Mime’s riddles; this showed a very different aspect of Schorr’s style, and I also found the previously unknown to me Heinrich Tessmer as Mime very impressive.

But the height of Schorr’s art, according to Colin, was his interpretation of the role of Hans Sachs in Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, and the two great monologues of this role, followed by the presentation (the baptism, as it were) of the Prize Song, and the marvellous quintet, were undoubtedly the most sublime moments of the afternoon.

Colin’s presentation was followed by an animated discussion, motivated by Schorr’s Jewish heritage and subsequent banishment from Bayreuth. Several of our members offered personal observations based on their recent journeys (I would almost say “pilgrimages”) to Bayreuth, and the afternoon ended far too soon for this member.

Thank you, Colin, for presenting a singer who was perhaps eclipsed by the fame of later singers, but whom we heard in wonderful moments thanks to your research and enthusiasm.

Review: Margaret Baker-Genovesi 
 

 

Wagner’s Choral Music and Opera Choruses
25 August 2018
Speaker: Graham Bruce

Our Vice President Graham Bruce presented a most interesting aspect of Wagner’s music, which concentrated on excerpts from his choral compositions both for concert and for opera.

Graham began with an early work, dating from 1833, Das Liebesmahl der Apostel, with an a cappella male chorus from Dresden, followed by the entry of the orchestra, which vividly depicted the descent of the Holy Ghost on the day of Pentecost. The work presented some, for me, unexpected harmonic modulations.

Graham reminded us that Wagner revered Carl Maria von Weber, and we heard a most beautiful aria from Weber’s Euryanthe, sung sublimely by Jessye Norman.

When Weber’s remains were transported from London, where he died, to be interred in Dresden, Wagner composed Trauermusik (funeral music, long and moving), on motifs from Euryanthe, to accompany the burial rites. After this, once again we heard a male chorus, this time from the Vienna Chamber Chorus, with Wagner’s An Webers Grab (At Weber’s Grave).

Before we broke for afternoon tea, Graham invited us to observe with a critical eye what was to follow ¬– three choruses from Wagner’s operas – from the point of view of the director’s and the conductor’s perspectives. This drew our attention to the placing of the chorus in relation to the solo singers, and the instructions clearly given to the chorus members as to how to react and participate in the on-going drama. We heard and watched excerpts from Götterdämmerung, Parsifal, and Der fliegende Holländer – respectively a filmed excerpt from the Chéreau Ring, a live performance from Bayreuth with the direction of Wolfgang Wagner, conducted by Giuseppe Sinopoli and, lastly, a very interesting version specifically devised for the cinema, with the mariners’ chorus and celebration (we even saw the ghost crew in a very frightening, close-up moment, something that would hardly have been possible on a live stage).

For me the highlight was the Act I, Scene 2, of Parsifal, with a magnificent and despairing Falk Struckmann as Amfortas, and a bemused Parsifal, motionless, trying in vain to understand what was happening. Graham underlined Wolfgang Wagner’s approach to a symmetrical setting, which was reinforced by the procession of the Knights of the Grail in this scene. It was a splendid afternoon, with much new information to reflect upon.

Review: Margaret Baker-Genovesi 
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

       

 


Magic Fire 

28 July 2018

Magic Fire (1955)
Screening of the film on the life of Richard Wagner

This film, directed by William Dieterle, dates from 1955, and is based on the life and works of Richard Wagner. It mostly follows what we know of Wagner’s life, with a few episodes invented for the sake of greater dramatic effect – for instance, Wagner’s spending some time in a debtor’s prison – but on the whole it sticks to history.

Among the more authentic episodes featured was the Paris première of Tannhäuser, known to have been a disaster, the probable reason for which was his placement of the obligatory (for Paris) ballet in the first act, too early for the members of the wealthy and influential members of the Jockey Club to turn up to the theatre. This rowdy scene was staged with great dramatic effect, as was Wagner’s distress on cancelling all performances after the third night saw a similar debacle.

Wagner was played convincingly by Alan Badel, perhaps too handsome, and certainly much taller; Carlos Thompson had all the charisma we expect of Liszt. The women in Wagner’s life (Yvonne de Carlo as perhaps a too attractive Minna, Rita Gam as Cosima and Valentina Cortese as Mathilde Wesendonck) were all three impressive – I particularly liked the Italian actress, whose scenes with Wagner were of great effect. (As was the scene where Wagner’s arch-rival Giacomo Meyerbeer held court in his bed over breakfast.)

Throughout the excerpts from Wagner’s operas (traditionally and splendidly staged by Rudolf Hartmann, later General Manager of the Munich Opera) I found myself wondering who the singers were. The production had evidently aimed at excellence in this respect, since my investigation revealed that among the singers were Hans Hopf, Otto Edelmann, Leonie Rysanek, and – for me very moving – my very last singing teacher, Annelies Kupper, all famous stars of post-war Bayreuth. And it was interesting to see Erich Wolfgang Korngold (who was responsible for the musical accuracy) briefly in the role of the conductor Hans Richter.

I have no doubt that this film in its day will have contributed to reaching an audience that otherwise would never have heard, or perhaps even heard of, Wagner, thus rendering a great service to the dissemination of his works. And still in our day, with our further knowledge of subsequent events, it proved to be a really entertaining afternoon, and we are all very glad that Peter Bassett offered it for our enjoyment.

Review: Margaret Baker-Genovesi 
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

  
  
  

 

Lohengrin Acts 1 and 2
23 June 2018
DVD recorded at Dresden’s Semperoper.

This was a great afternoon’s entertainment for members to see a recent performance of Lohengrin from Dresden.

The Conductor was Christian Thielemann; we saw why he is considered the foremost Wagnerian conductor today. The prelude was taken at a deliberate tempo – rather slow. The volume of the orchestra never competed with the singers. He created the sense that the voices literally rode above the instrumental music, clear and free. The singers did not have to force their voices, allowing them to sing softly when required. 

Lohengrin was sung by Piotr Beczala, making a role debut. We heard his bright, firm tones and he sang with warmth and confidence. This was a really good muscular and lilting performance.

Elsa was sung by Anna Netrebko, also making a role debut. Her lush, coloured voice was at home in the Wagner universe.   She played a mature Elsa, with a trajectory from helplessness to devout conviction and then to despair. It was a wonderful acting interpretation, something that is the essence of Netrebko. She sang with openness and unleashed waves of beautiful sounds and lingered – luxuriously – over her notes. This was a different style from some other Wagnerian sopranos in their Elsa roles that one may have seen, where a more virginal, clear sound is heard. 

Netrebko’s and Beczala’s appearances in their debut roles were widely anticipated events at the time of this production. They had already charmed the world with their onstage chemistry igniting Puccini and Tchaikovsky – seen by many members no doubt at Metropolitan Opera simulcasts.

Telramund was sung by Tomasz Konieczny.   Believe it or not, this was also a role debut. Full praise again to Christian Thielemann for bringing these debut dynamics to such success. Konieczny let loose with robust and exciting singing.

Ortrud was sung by Evelyn Herlitzius who was outstanding and perhaps the highlight of the recorded performance. She has striking stage presence; everything she did on stage was full of tension and drama and her singing was the perfect foil for both Konieczny and Netrebko. Herlitzius voice is not the most beautiful but it has character and is a powerful one that cut through the orchestra and forcefully expressed the character’s evil.

Heinrich was sung by Georg Zeppenfeld. His voice has great dignity and power.

The King’s Herald was sung by Derek Welton. He has a forceful, beautiful voice; he is a young Australian baritone who is making a big name for himself in German opera houses.

The production was a revival of Christine Mielitz’s 1983 traditional production.

Members experienced an unforgettable musical performance. The DVD was released in July 2017 on Deutsche Grammophon and is easily available on internet classical music sites.

Review: Paul Caesar
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

        

 

Wagner and Liszt: The Anxiety of Influence
16 May 2018
Speaker: Ammiel Bushakevitz

The visiting international pianist and Wagner specialist Ammiel Bushakevitz was the Society’s guest on 16th May, and offered us an insight into the musical and personal relationship over long years between Wagner and Liszt, in a presentation entitled ‘Wagner and Liszt: The Anxiety of Influence’.
As we know, Liszt eventually became father-in-law to Wagner, but less than two years in age separated them; over the years, and well before Wagner’s marriage to Liszt’s daughter Cosima, Liszt was an enthusiastic and powerful sponsor of Wagner’s music.

Ammiel indeed gave us many examples of Liszt’s amazing generosity to fellow musicians, and not only to Wagner, throughout his life. He even revealed that Wagner once appealed, successfully, to Liszt to finance a holiday in Italy at Lago Maggiore, because he was ‘tired’.

Ammiel referred in some detail to what was to be known, in the 19th century, as Lisztomania, citing also Ken Russell’s film of 1975 (which I remember as interesting but grotesque) about the hysteria that surrounded the great pianist, including extraordinary manifestations such as the wearing, on a necklace, of Liszt’s discarded cigar. But he also spoke about Liszt’s decisive contribution to the evolution of the modern grand piano – very different at the end of his career from what he had found at the beginning.

A consummate pianist, Ammiel played us several examples of the links between Wagner and Liszt, one of which I found particularly touching: Liszt’s composition At the grave of Richard Wagner, which owed its inspiration, which he illustrated, to a theme from the opening of Parsifal.

As pianist rather than lecturer, he presented two major works by Liszt, both brilliantly performed – The Fountains of the Villa d’Este, and his transcription of Isolde’s Liebestod.

Our Vice-President Graham Bruce, who had introduced Ammiel and commented on his illustrious career, thanked him in our name, after which we all adjourned to celebrate (albeit a few days ahead of time) Wagner’s 205th birthday – our thanks go to Sheena and her team for the catering! And thanks also to Jennette for the excellent printed program that was distributed at this event.

It was good to see that so many of our members were present, and we thank Professor Scott Harrison for the hospitality of the boardroom of the Conservatorium.

Our good wishes will follow Ammiel Bushakevitz as he continues his Performing/Lecturing tour in the Southern Hemisphere.

Review: Margaret Baker-Genovesi 
Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs
                


Wagner at the Venusberg
28 April 2018
Speaker: Peter Bassett

Our President Peter Bassett gave a stimulating and interesting presentation on the background influences experienced by Richard Wagner and how he assembled his thoughts to compose Tannhäuser.

Peter showed some great pictorial and musical illustrations of these influences. A 1978 Bayreuther Festspiele production of Tannhäuser – conductor Sir Colin Davis and director Götz Friedrich – formed the major sequence of illustration. The singing in this production is just ravishing – an adjective that Tannhäuser would enjoy.

Spas Wenkoff was in the title role of Tannhäuser  –  wonderful casting with the good looks of a Tannhäuser and a superb heldentenor. Gwyneth Jones performed both Venus (in this role quite lasciviously) and Elisabeth (here as the redeeming angel). Her voice and acting was just wonderful to watch. Bernd Weikl was Wolfram von Eschenbach, a beautiful baritone voice.

Interesting questions were asked of Peter at the end of the discussion, such as ‘Was Wagner being religious or dramatic?’ Opinions on the set designs were expressed.

Afternoon tea followed and much thanks again to members who brought the sandwiches and other items for us to enjoy.

Review: Paul Caesar
Photographs: Hal Davis

 

Study Day: Wagner in Italy – Its influence on Wagner, and his influence on its composers.
24 March 2018
Speakers: Graham Bruce and Peter Bassett.

Our Study Day on Wagner in Italy reflected the fact that although Richard Wagner is usually regarded as the archetypal champion of German music, he had a life-long love affair with Italy and its musical traditions.

When composing his earliest operas, he was inspired again and again by the Italian sense of melody: ‘Song, song and yet again song, you Germans!’ he implored his countrymen. He visited Italy on many occasions, taking refuge from the dark clouds of the north in the sunny climes of Naples, Venice and Sicily and in many places in between. He even considered migrating there.

Graham Bruce examined Wagner’s visits and compositions with Italian connections up until about 1861, and Peter Bassett continued the story until the composer’s death in Venice in February 1883 and his influence on Italian composers who were his contemporaries and followers. 

Over thirty members enjoyed learning about this beautiful and fascinating part of the Wagnerian story.
Sincere thanks to Graham Bruce and Peter Bassett for their well-researched, illustrated presentations. 

Photographs: Stephanie Hinrichs

Die Meistersinger, Act 3 screening
24 February 2018

This meeting featured the 1984 Bayreuth production of Die Meistersingervon Nürnberg directed (including set design) by the composer’s grandson Wolfgang Wagner – from the horse’s mouth, so to speak.

Our President Peter Bassett initially welcomed new members, and then reminded us of all of the various aspects of the Society, with its website showing events, reviews, links to fellow societies, etc.

Peter also illustrated the concept of the Mastersong (which, in fact, Hans Sachs explains in detail to the somewhat bemused Stolzing), and alerted us to the idea that the whole opera is conceived along the lines of the Mastersong, with the first two acts of equal length followed by the third act whose length is equal to the other two combined. This was new to me and I found it extremely interesting.

The DVD viewing began from the third act entrance of Walther von Stolzing (a splendid and convincing Siegfried Jerusalem) in the workshop of the Meister cobbler-poet Hans Sachs (an exemplary Bernd Weikl), and took us through, with no interval, to the end of the opera – a long but memorable performance. Speaking as someone who is heartily sick of today’s Regietheater travesties (witness the appalling Don Carlos from Paris recently), I was delighted to see a set that really looked like a neat, sunlit German workshop, followed by genuine, crowded merry-making on the Festival Meadow.

The attention of our large audience was captured from the first minute. Amusingly, a goblin-like figure in modern dress appeared for a split-second on stage at the end, and proved to be Wolfgang Wagner.

The viewing lasted to about the time we had available for the use of the theatre, so the usual post-performance discussions were curtailed, but over afternoon tea (thanks to the Nibelungs Susan Treloar, Carol Bassett and Peter Jansen) we discussed our various impressions. It seemed to be the general opinion that the men – Weikl, Jerusalem, Prey (Beckmesser) and Clark (David) were excellent, whilst the Eva (Mari Anne Häggander) was mostly found to be of a very different level. A pity, since the whole production should surely have passed into history as the most authentic ever, given the horse’s mouth factor. If I may express my own preference, I found that Bernd Weikl was a peer among all the other magnificent interpreters of Hans Sachs, with not a flaw in his portrayal of this immense role. Sachs’s famous defence of German culture and its poetry and music was declaimed by Weikl from the heart with total conviction – I found it spine-tingling.

We are all looking forward to the next Study Day on 24th March, which will take us to Wagner in Italy. Not to be missed.

Review: Margaret Baker-Genovesi 
Photographs: Hal Davis 

 

 

A Wagnerian Antiques Roadshow Afternoon with contributions from six members of the Society
Saturday, 20 January 2018 

Margaret Baker-Genovesi

Margaret gave us a most interesting story of two concert performances of the Ring Cycle she enjoyed in Rome in 1968 and later in 1988. They were concerts performed in the Auditorio della RAI and broadcast over the Italian radio. Margaret was fortunate to be in the audience for both these performances. 

The orchestra playing for the 1968 concerts was the Rome Orchestra conducted by Wolfgang Sawallisch. Some of the 1968 cast were Nadezda Kniplova – Brünnhilde, Janis Martin – Fricka, Hildegard Hillebrecht – Sieglinde,  Eberhard Katz –Siegmund  and Theo Adam – Wotan. (Interestingly this performance is available on a Myto CD set.)

The 1988 concerts were so popular that some women were dressing in black dresses and men in tails, borrowing violin cases and ‘sneaking in’ through the orchestra players’ entrance.  Wagner makes one take extreme steps! Margaret has great memories of these concerts because they introduced her to the music of Wagner – still aflame today.

Graham Bruce

Graham recalled his great experience of attending the second year’s production of the Chereau ‘Centenary Ring’ in 1977. His intriguing tale – and much luck – of how he obtained tickets was a story by itself.   Graham saw director Chereau’s own considerable acting skills in this year. Rene Kollo (Siegfried) broke his leg and was obliged to sing his part from the wings and sometimes secreted in the folds of the sets. The director – Chereau – acted the role on stage.

The other interesting observation Graham highlighted is how productions at Bayreuth respond and evolve to criticisms made regarding sets and direction. Amongst the singers Graham saw that year were Rene Kollo, Gweneth Jones (Brünnhilde) and Siegfried Jerusalem (Siegmund).

 

Theo Baer

A very personal recollection was given by Theo. He was a young boy living with his family in Bayreuth in the immediate post-war years. Theo told members of the adversity of living and going to school amongst the ruins of the city and his family’s hardships. Theo’s delightful positive character and sense of humour engaged members. Imagine a boy’s Lederhosen (shorts made of leather) that in the bitter cold become stiff and can stand upright on the floor!

Theo remembered the revival of the Festival post-war and how, with some young friends, they would sit roadside near the “green hill” and watch dignitaries arrive. 

Jennette Johnstone

Jennette read an extract from a quite remarkable, lengthy and very emotional obituary from The New York Times, 14 February 1883, entitled DEATH OF RICHARD WAGNER. (Wagner died on 13 February 1883.) The opening sentence was, ‘Without a word of preliminary warning the announcement was telegraphed all over the world last night of the sudden death, in Venice, of Richard Wagner’.

There was also an obituary in the ‘Brisbane Courier’, Friday 16 February 1883. News travelled fast even then and perhaps Brisbane was more sophisticated at the time than one imagines!    See Trove Digitised Newspapers: DEATH OF RICHARD WAGNER.

 

Colin Mackerras

With great conviction and personal feeling Colin explained why he considers the first act of Die Walküre one of the most perfectly constructed of Wagner’s music scores. Wagner is now dealing with real humans – the Gods of Das Rheingold are out of the picture; elemental love was composed; and there is sublime tenderness between the twins that reaches a very human climax. It is very intimate music, including one-on-one conversations; the score has both beauty and delicacy.

Cosima wrote, with similar feelings, “The most emotional, the most tragic of all his works”. Colin showed members his considerably old (and tattered, verifying its frequent use) piano score of Act One. He described his recollections of reading this score with his brothers whilst listening to the opera on vinyl records and on the radio.

Colin sincerely conveyed to members his passion for this particular section of the Ring.

Peter Bassett

Peter displayed an antique book of illustrations of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, full of beautiful woodblock designs and Gothic script.

Peter also played some remarkable antique recordings which included the voices of Johannes Brahms in 1889, Lilli Lehmann and Siegfried Wagner conducting Siegfried Idyll, 1927.

 Members were given a handout explaining these six recordings which also included a Mandolin Cylinder Musical Box of 1880.

 

All in all, the afternoon was just wonderful.
Review – Paul Caesar
Photographs – Stephanie Hinrichs