Wagner - Das Rheingold; Die Walküre

Bayreuth Festival Orchestra / Daniel Barenboim

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Das Rheingold 
John Tomlinson bass Wotan; Linda Finnie mez Fricka; Graham Clark ten Loge; Helmut Pampuch ten Mime; Günter von Kannen bar Alberich; Eva Johansson sop Freia; Kurt Schreibmayer ten Froh; Bodo Brinkmann bar Donner; Birgitta Svendén mez Erda; Matthias Hölle bass Fasolt; Philip Kang bass Fafner; Hilde Leidland sop Woglinde; Annette Küttenbaum mez Wellgunde; Jane Turner mez Flosshilde; Bayreuth Festival Orchestra / Daniel Barenboim 

Teldec 4509 91185-2 (149’ · DDD · S/T/t) 
Recorded live 1991 

Die Walküre 
Poul Elming ten Siegmund; Nadine Secunde sop Sieglinde; Anne Evans sop Brünnhilde; John Tomlinson bass Wotan; Linda Finnie mez Fricka, Siegrune; Matthias Hölle bass Hunding; Eva Johansson sop Gerhilde; Eva-Maria Bundschuh sop Helmwige; Ruth Floeren sop Ortlinde; Shirley Close mez Waltraute; Hebe Dijkstra mez Rossweisse; Birgitta Svendén mez Grimgerde; Hitomi Katagiri mez Schwertleite; Bayreuth Festival Orchestra / Daniel Barenboim 
Teldec 4509 91186-2 (3h 53’ · DDD · S/T/t) 
Recorded live 1992 

These are enthralling performances. Tomlinson’s volatile Wotan is the most potent reading here. He manages to sing every word with insistent meaning and forceful declamation while maintaining a firm legato. His German is so idiomatic that he might have been speaking the language his whole life and he brings breadth and distinction of phrase to his solos at the close of both operas. Anne Evans has a single, important advantage over other recent Brünnhildes in that her voice is wholly free from wobble and she never makes an ugly sound. Hers is a light, girlish, honest portrayal, sung with unfailing musicality if not with the ultimate insights. Linda Finnie is an articulate, sharp-edged Fricka, and Graham Clark a sparky, incisive Loge. Nadine Secunde’s impassioned Sieglinde is matched by the vital, exciting Siegmund of Poul Elming, and Matthias Hölle as both Hunding and Fasolt is another of those black basses of which Germany seems to have an inexhaustible supply.

The whole is magnificently conducted by Barenboim, a more expansive Wagnerian than Böhm. By 1991 he had the full measure of its many facets, bringing immense authority and power to building its huge climaxes, yet finding all the lightness of touch for the mercurial and/or diaphanous aspects of the score. He has the inestimable advantage of a Bayreuth orchestra at the peak of its form, surpassing – and this says much – even the Metropolitan orchestra for Levine. Similar qualities inform his interpretation of Die Walküre. Barenboim has now learnt how to match the epic stature of Wagner’s mature works, how to pace them with an overview of the whole, and there’s an incandescent, metaphysical feeling of a Furtwänglerian kind in is treatment of such passages as Wotan’s anger and the Valkyrie ride. The orchestra is superb. It’s backed by a recording of startling presence and depth, amply capturing the Bayreuth acoustic.