Richard Jones has a lot to answer for. His cartoon-kitsch Ring for The Royal Opera back in 1994-5 scarred me so deeply that I've been reluctant to return to a staged cycle ever since. The mental picture of Rhinemaidens in fat suits and Brünnhilde in skeleton-print body-stocking still makes me shudder, not to mention Mime wearing a pinny as the dragon, Fafner. Opera North's cycle offers a form of personal Wagner therapy: all four music dramas in concert performances, but with Peter Mumford's carefully choreographed video and lighting effects. It was time to dip a tentative toe back into the Rhine.
In many ways, Das Rheingold is an easy start. It's punchy, it's witty, it's got anvils! Also, it doesn't last five hours. Wagner didn't even count it as one of the 'days' in his cycle, but the 'preliminary evening'. This action-packed tale of gods, dwarves and giants sets up the more human drama of the three evenings to follow. Wonderfully conducted by Richard Farnes, the performance had me gripped from the first grumbling E flat at the bottom of the Rhine to the glorious blaze of brass as the gods process along the rainbow bridge into Valhalla.
Opera North's cycle of concert performances was initially born out of austerity. For a regional touring company to stage a full scale Ring is not only financially overwhelming, but physically challenging too. Many of the company's usual venues simply couldn't accommodate Wagner's vast orchestration. Instead, the orchestra is placed centre stage, allowing the music to speak directly to the audience free from the shackles of directorial concepts. Their cycle has unfolded over the past four years, one opera each season, each meeting with such critical acclaim that this summer Opera North is presenting the full cycle not once, but six times. Even many major houses would only run to three full cycles at a time.
At Bayreuth, Wagner ensured you don't see the orchestra at all, burying them in its pit. Here, squeezed onto the Royal Festival Hall's platform, we could see nearly every inch of the orchestral tapestry. Six harps, huddled together, wove their filigree patterns, timps thwacked out the giants' outsized footsteps and a dozen percussionists tapped and hammered the Nibelung anvils. There were a few querulous horns in the Rhine's murk, but they truly snarled later as Alberich duffs up his brother, Mime. The best surprise came when Donner's hammer blow was spectacularly rendered via a 'Mahler 6' hammer onto a wooden box from which dust – talcum powder? – mushroomed.