Dipping my toes into the murky waters of the Wagner-fest at the Proms this year for the first time, I found myself confronted with the monumental second installment of the Ring cycle, Die Walküre. Of the four “music dramas” in the cycle, being given as a whole for the first time at the Proms, Die Walküre is probably the work that stands most comfortably on its own, and the most easily approachable. It balances Wagner’s earlier, more traditionally “operatic” style with his later, more intense and harmonically complex manner. There are very few longueurs, and it is bookended by two of the strangest and most rapturous love duets in the whole of opera – firstly that between twin brother and sister and then at the end between father and daughter.
And what a ride it proved to be! At the reins was the legend that is Daniel Barenboim – boy-wonder pianist, once husband to an even bigger legend (Jacqueline du Pré), and more recently a nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize. Behind all this upfront celebrity, however, sits one of the most extraordinary musical minds of his, or any other, generation. Partnered by his well-schooled orchestra, the excellent Staatskapelle Berlin, this was a performance which put the orchestral part on an equal footing to the singing at all times.
From the scurrying strings that open the Act I prelude onwards, there was an electricity about the music-making that quickly led one into the red-blooded Wagnerian world. This single-scene act should ideally have a sweep from the first to last, that feels as natural as the action on the stage is unnatural. Barenboim adopted mainly swift tempi to help create the necessary urgency. Both Simon O’Neill (Siegmund) and Anja Kampe (Sieglinde) found a wide range of colours and the necessary power in their voices to carry off this extended tease. The lack of staging in this act seemed to matter little, as the acting between the two singers carried its own innate theatricality – testament to their previous experience of singing the roles together in a recent stage performance. Eric Halfvarson, whose big-voiced, brutish, two-dimensional portrayal of the spurned husband Hunding, seemed just right for a mere pawn in the monumental drama that leads to end of the world.
In Act II we find ourselves in the midst of the drama, with several of its major protagonists. The scene introduces the character Brünnhilde, plotting to save the lives of the offending twins with her father Wotan, who also happen to be their father. Nina Stemme as Brünnhilde threw herself into the opening Valkyrie greeting with strength and steadiness of tone, qualities that she maintained throughout her performance – lacking only that heroic edge of danger to be found in a Birgit Nilsson or Gwyneth Jones. At this stage of her journey, this is a level-headed and capricious Brunnhilde. Hopefully, by the end of Götterdämmerung, when she is burning on the pyre that destroys the world, she will be a little less self-contained.