LA Opera's Götterdämmerung, Photo by: Monika Rittershaus/LA Opera * Notes *
 
The first cycle of LA Opera’s Ring Festival concluded with Götterdämmerung last night. James Conlon kept the orchestra at a controlled pace, and the volume was never overwhelming. The brass was not terribly secure, even sounding chaotic at times. The horn calls were respectable, albeit very careful and slow. The chorus sounded lovely and together, even whilst fluttering their hands and doing choreographed stretches. The Norns were ominous, with Jill Grove sounding slightly strained, Michelle DeYoung sweet, and Melissa Citro a tad shrill. The Rheintöchter were enticing: Stacey Tappan (Woglinde), Lauren McNeese (Wellgunde), and Ronnita Nicole Miller (Floßhilde) did well. Jennifer Wilson sang Gutrune with silvery ease, while Michelle DeYoung was a jarring Waltraute.

Richard Paul Fink was sinister as Alberich, ruthless but in the end helpless. Eric Halfvarson (Hagen) sounded merciless, his full, rich voice was still very beautiful. Alan Held was quite loud as Gunther, he sang without strain. Linda Watson remained dignified as Brünnhilde, her upper register can be harsh, but she conveys the emotional content of her text clearly. John Treleaven had a rough, quiet start, improved, but then had some trouble with the end of Act II. He pulled through for his last scene.

Achim Freyer‘s production was a continual delight, his vision carried through to the very end. Though not focused on the human aspects of the narrative, his ideas are clearly reasoned and fully committed to throughout. I was particularly amused by the enormous red bendy straw shaped into a triangle that was the thread of fate, and by the red balloons that were lowered on wires, then lifted, then popped at the end of Act II. Hagen’s very special garage door opener that blinked and flashed in different colors was also highly entertaining. On a more serious note, the staging for when Siegfried takes on Gunther’s shape was very effective, and more convincing than any of the others I have seen.

* Tattling * 
The orchestra level was more crowded than during Siegfried or Die Walküre, and the talking was not as loud. The usual watch alarms sounded at each hour. Someone was crinkling a plastic bag during the last two acts. The man in Row M Seat 12 booed loudly at James Conlon, and screamed “Go back to school, read the score.” There were also boos for the production team, but these too where mostly drowned out by cheers.

LA Opera’s marketing department sponsored a Tweetup Meetup with Jon Caves, Philip Horváth, Cody Melcher, Katherine M. Talley, and various others. We went to the press reception and got to go back stage to meet Maestro Conlon. We also ran into Achim Freyer, and I managed to speak with him a little, even getting out a few words of German. To my great delight, I found some of my favorite opera fans hanging around back stage as well, including Dr. Tamara Sanikidze, currently an Adler Fellow.

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12 responses to “Götterdämmerung at LA Opera”

  1. y2k Avatar
    y2k

    Saw the awesome photo of you in red next to Maestro Conlon!

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  2. upstairs tenor Avatar
    upstairs tenor

    Is a “jarring” Waltraute a good or bad thing?

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  3. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    It was such fun to meet him!

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  4. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    I would say neither good nor bad, it was just an observation. I was very impressed how by DeYoung’s different characterizations of Fricka, Sieglinde, the 2nd Norn, and Waltraute. For Waltraute, the music just sounds strident and slightly unpleasant to me, at least the last 5 times I’ve heard it.

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  5. doug Avatar
    doug

    OT: Thanks for the wonderful and timely (as you always are) reviews. I couldn’t make it to the LA Ring and I’m grateful for the clarity, insight, and fun of each of your posts.

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  6. Axel Feldheim Avatar

    I’ve always had a problem with the Waltraute scene myself. I don’t even completely understand what is supposed to be happening, apart from delaying the end of the curse. So I suppose that “jarring” might be as good a word as any to describe Waltraute’s monologue. I did not realize that DeYoung was so stalwart in filling so many roles. I would have liked to hear her performance.

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  7. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Thanks so much for reading! I really did adore this Ring, and I’m glad that comes through.

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  8. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    DeYoung is incredible!

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  9. Robbie Avatar
    Robbie

    Opera Tattler, I was wondering if you know if the LA Opera has a Stage Door, for those of us who can’t really get to go backstage. The Pavilion seems like such a huge structure so I was wondering if there is a Stage-door type area outside or something that is used instead?

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  10. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    The door to get backstage seems to be inside the building, on the left side if you are facing the stage, in between the hall itself and the lobby.

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  11. Robbie Avatar
    Robbie

    But that’s not the same as a stage door right? I mean because while I would like to visit the stage door at a convenient time , I don’t think I’d want to piss anyone off and try to get to backstage (I don’t know LA Opera at all, first timer) if they frown on that.

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  12. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    I don’t think you would be allowed backstage without credentials. I need to ask someone else about this, because from my understanding, there is more than one way out of the backstage area (unlike SF Opera, where people basically all exit via the North Stage Door).

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