Friday, July 03, 2020

Studying up on the Ring

Well, seeing I am on my way to 15 odd hours of Wagnerian opera in a few months time, I should probably start getting a better idea of what its about and how it's been interpreted over the years, and why it seems particularly appealing (according to this very interesting article) to politicians (and not just Nazi ones.)   I didn't know GBS was a fan, for example:
...the first point to make is that Wagner’s music has inspired political interpretation since it was first performed. The 35-year-old anarchist who befriended Bakunin and took part in the Dresden Uprising of 1849 was 63 when the Ring cycle was first performed. By then, Marx felt able to mock the former firebrand as a “musician of state”, a court composer remote from the social realities of the age; deaf to the first whispers of modernity. Yet the notion that the Ring is essentially a critique of capitalism has always had its adherents – most obviously George Bernard Shaw, whose The Perfect Wagnerite (1898) declares the Ring to be a dramatised allegory of “shareholders, tall hats, white-lead factories and industrial and political questions looked at from the socialistic and humanitarian points of view”. In this scheme of equivalence, Alberich is the wicked capitalist and Nibelheim his industrial Hades. Siegfried shimmers into being as an avatar of Bakunin, the great rebel whose struggle for freedom ends in defeat.
Well, given it went on to become a Nazi favourite, it's a wonder they haven't been duels in the street over conflicting interpretations.  (Actually, I suspect there may have been.)

On the perhaps more mundane matter of staging, the production I am (hopefully) going to see is said to be a "digital" production:  
Towering, moving digital panels create an immersive virtual world. Astonishing costumes and props imagine an unknown future.  
Given that the QPAC performance space is not the largest on the planet, perhaps that will work well, but I would be curious to see a more traditional production, too.  This article goes into detail about the history of its staging, with this amusing bit:
From 1896 on (when Bayreuth finally mounted its second Ring ), critics took issue with the fixed, semaphoric style of acting Cosima imposed there, which many thought more forced and unnatural than what her late husband's actors had done twenty years before. In 1889 Shaw wrote, "Bayreuth has chosen the law of death. Its boast is that it alone knows what was done last time, therefore it alone has the pure and complete tradition, or, as I prefer to put it, that it alone is in a position to strangle Wagner's lyric dramas note by note, bar by bar, nuance by nuance ." In 1896, he judged the Bayreuth style of acting to be an amateurish display of tableau-vivant attitudes, the striking of stupid poses by singers who were often little more than "animated beer casks." (From earliest days, Ring tourists mocked the girth of "youthful" Siegfrieds and "enchanting" Brünnhildes. Romain Rolland, at Bayreuth in 1896, described "the vast padded bulk" of a Sieglinde: "From bust to backside she is as wide as a city wall.")


10 comments:

  1. Great stuff. Wish I could go too. Although I'd want the full expensive stage production. Big tits with barely adequate metal bras. Stage horses and faux dead bodies. Actual acting. The bloke who plays the gold thief an actual chosen one and without rhinoplasty. The whole works. Just take it as far as it can go as a multi-artistic extravaganza.

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  2. "Towering, moving digital panels create an immersive virtual world. Astonishing costumes and props imagine an unknown future."

    Yeah great. Thats the spirit. One problem I think is that Wagner, and I'm too ignorant to know how to explain this technically .... Unlike popular music he seldom seems to 'take you home'. I consider Jim Steinman's songwriting attitude to be a bit like Wagner transmuted to rock and roll. But its repetitive enough and fashioned in such a way as to make it intelligible and pretty powerful to some teenagers. I listened to it way too much to like it now. But it certainly made an impression on me when I was a kid.

    But it may be a bit difficult to listen to Wagner for 16 hours when the musical selections seldom have that verse chorus verse chorus sense to them. With Handels Water Music you have to listen to a shit-tonne of incredibly boring noodling before you get to the well-known payoff. But Wagner you seldom have that intention to encapsulate enough repetition to ever fully have that big payoff. But then again all that could change if you have that story, visual, musical integration. Maybe having everything come together will make the music more visceral and pleasing.

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  3. Here is what I might have been trying to grasp at. This business of being UNRESOLVED. Supposed to be a revolutionary innovation but it may be the sort of thing that gives me the drizzling shits. Not trying to pretend I know what I'm talking about even a little bit. Just trying to frame things for the big event.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWLp7lBomW8

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  4. Here is more on what makes it kind of hard to listen to. At least without the full integrated package. Rather than listening to full-fledged sections I think its these short lectures that will train your brain to be able to cope with it.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ah5EyUP-GyM

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  5. Just remember it aint over til the fat lady sings!!

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  6. Pretty sure I’ve mentioned Shaw’s ‘Perfect Wagnerite’ to you before. It’s a very very funny book.

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  7. Sounds intriguing. What is the point of the story Tim? I suspect that Wagner would have hit town like 100 cult movie and book franchises rolled into one. Since apart from little stage plays and big cathedrals, these people before the media age probably wouldn't have had anything like it to experience.

    But she Wagner is high-brow. Big shot composer like Bach, Mozart and Beethoven. A philosopher. Probably almost everyone would have been a Wagnerite when there was a bit of a fever-pitch of enthusiasm for him. I don't know myself. Never been to a performance and can't quite get in step with most of the music. But in earlier ages our forefathers were probably relatively sensory-deprived. So I don't know whether there is something to ridicule about this. I think being a big fan was at one time pretty natural.

    Opera might be ho-hum for us now. But in olden days thats the multi-media experience. Thats like Avengers Endgame for the grownups.

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  8. I hope you guys know that George Bernard Shaw is this horrific fascist. Don't quite know how he gets a pass or is respectable in any way. Apart from being this good playwright.

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  9. Oh I see. GBS is going in for a 5 hour critique. Not just a putdown of Wagner fans.

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  10. Sounds intriguing. What is the point of the story Tim?

    It’s criticism - an early critical analysis of Wagner. Shaw was in his early years a jobbing music critic in and about London and must have seen some of the early productions of the ‘Ring’ cycle.

    Shaw does often seem quite fun but yes, he went loopy in the end. I believe he claimed the trifecta, supporting Stalin, Hitler AND Mussolini.

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