Once-in-a-lifetime Wagner opera in concert with the NZSO
NZSO Media Release for immediate release
Once-in-a-lifetime Wagner opera in
concert with the NZSO
Never before has the momentous Wagner opera The Valkyrie (Die Walküre) been performed in concert with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra.
An international stellar cast of singers and full symphony orchestra, featuring more than 100 musicians, will join forces this July to bring you the ground-breaking music of Richard Wagner’s epic music drama – The Valkyrie (Die Walküre).
Full of love, abandonment, infidelity, and incest, The Valkyrie is the second of four operas that form the cycle The Ring of the Nibelung (Der Ring des Nibelungen). It features some of Wagner’s most memorable music, including the popular excerpt Ride of the Valkyries. In fact, you may have already heard this masterpiece used in films such as Apocalypse Now (when the Air Cavalry regiment plays it through loudspeakers during a helicopter attack) or even on a New Zealand television advertising campaign featuring a toilet and a duck!?
Despite its frequent use in popular culture, Wagner developed this epic tale of gods and men from Norse mythology. So, we invited none other than the crème de la crème of New Zealand and international singers to represent these dramatic characters in this once-in-a-lifetime opera in concert with your national orchestra.
Helden baritone John Wegner is no stranger to the role of Wotan, King of the gods, with an impressive six seasons at Bayreuth Festival – the spiritual home of Wagner’s music. He finds his match in the dramatic prowess of Margaret Medlyn’s Fricka. Internationally-renowned Wagnerian tenor Simon O’Neill returns home to sing the demanding role of Siegmund – one he has already performed at the Royal Opera House and La Scala - and the exquisite soprano Edith Haller is Sieglinde, who was first heard in this role at the 2010 Bayreuth Festival. Dramatic soprano superstar, and prestigious Richard Tucker award recipient, Christine Goerke will be an indomitable force singing the role of Brünnhilde, and in the role of Hunding is another shining star – the charismatic New Zealander Jonathan Lemalu, whose rich, resonant bass makes him an audience favourite.
Supported by an astounding hoard of eight “Valkiwis” (Valkyries who are all Kiwis), and backed by a super-sized New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, including three harps, four French Horns, four Wagner Tubas, a contrabass trombone, bass trumpet, steerhorn, and even a thunder machine, this extraordinary musical event, conducted by critically acclaimed Music Director Pietari Inkinen, will be cherished and remembered for years to come.
Wagner’s epic tale of gods and men will grab you by the horns and not let you go. Well, not for five hours and 40 minutes that is (including two intervals). So book your meals with us, bring a cushion, escape from the cold, and prepare for an unforgettable musical memory with the NZSO.
You simply can’t miss this rare opportunity to hear the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra in The Valkyrie, in memory of Lloyd Morrison, with support from the Wagner Society of New Zealand and the Wagner New Zealand Foundation.
Renowned New Zealand bass-baritone Roger Wilson will give a free 30-minute talk in all three centres, 45-minutes prior to each performance. For more details about each NZSO pre-concert talk, visit www.nzso.co.nz/talks
ENDS
NZSO The Valkyrie (Die
Walküre)
In memory of Lloyd
Morrison
An opera in three acts
sung in German with English surtitles
Stellar International
Cast
With support from the Wagner
Society of New Zealand and the Wagner New Zealand
Foundation
PIETARI INKINEN Conductor
SIMON O’NEILL
Siegmund
EDITH HALLER
Sieglinde
CHRISTINE GOERKE
Brünnhilde
JOHN WEGNER
Wotan
JONATHAN LEMALU
Hunding
MARGARET MEDLYN
Fricka
The
“Valkiwis” (Valkyries):
Morag Atchison,
Amanda Atlas, Sarah Castle, Kristin Darragh, Wendy Doyle,
Lisa Harper-Brown, Anna Pierard, Kate
Spence.
WELLINGTON /
Michael Fowler Centre / Sunday 22 July / 3
pm
TICKETEK / 0800 842 538 / TICKETEK.CO.NZ
CHRISTCHURCH / CBS Canterbury Arena /
Wednesday 25 July / 5 pm
TICKETEK / 0800 842 538 /
TICKETEK.CO.NZ
AUCKLAND / Town Hall
/ Saturday 28 July / 4 pm
THE EDGE / 0800 289 842 /
BUYTICKETS.CO.NZ
Duration: 5 hours 40 minutes including two intervals.
Fast Facts
• When the NZSO received the complete set of
scores for Wagner’s The Valkyrie, they weighed 32
kgs altogether.
• Star tenor Simon O’Neill appeared
on the 1998 NZ one-dollar performing arts postage
stamp.
• This is NZSO Music Director Pietari
Inkinen’s debut performance of Wagner’s The
Valkyrie with the NZSO.
• It was Richard Wagner’s
199th birthday on Tuesday 22 May, 2012.
• This is the
first time, since performing Parsifal in 2006, that
the NZSO has performed an opera by Wagner. Parsifal,
conducted by Anthony Negus and featuring Sir Donald
McIntyre, Margaret Medlyn, Simon O'Neill, Paul Whelan,
Martin Snell, and Grant Dickson, was staged as part of the
New Zealand International Festival of the Arts. Before that
the NZSO performed a concert version of Das Rhinegold
in 1997 with NZSO Conductor Laureate Dr Franz-Paul Decker,
also part of the New Zealand International Festival of the
Arts.
• Outside of an international tour, this is the
single largest undertaking for the NZSO.
• The
Valkyrie includes a number of unusual instruments
including a steerhorn and thunder machine, which are both
played off-stage. The steerhorn is described as a long
medieval bugle horn. It has a conical bore, no bell flare,
and a straight tube.
• It also includes four Wagner
Tubas, an instrument originally invented by Richard Wagner
for his operatic cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen. The
Wagner Tuba combines elements of both the tuba and French
Horn and is sometimes referred to as the Bayreuth tuba.
Wagner was inspired to create the instrument after visiting
Adolphe Sax, the inventor of the saxophone, in Paris in
1853. Composers Richard Strauss, Igor Stravinsky, Béla
Bartók, and Bruckner, amongst others, have written for the
instrument.
• In Norse mythology, a Valkyrie is
responsible for deciding who dies during battle. Valkyrie
originates from the Old Norse ‘valkyrja’ - a "chooser of
the slain" and is one of a host of female
figures.
• Wagner took his tale from the Norse
mythology told in a collection of old Norse poems Poetic
Edda and in the legendary saga - the Volsunga
Saga.
• The Valkyrie premiered in Wagner's Bayreuth
Festival as part of the complete cycle on 14 August 1876.
Earlier it premiered at the National Theatre Munich, 26
June, 1870 at the insistence of King Ludwig II of
Bavaria.
Biographies
Simon O’Neill
Siegmund
Lauded as the Wagnerian tenor of his
generation, New Zealander Simon O’Neill is a principal
artist with the Metropolitan Opera, the Royal Opera House,
Covent Garden and the Bayreuth Festival. His 2010 recording
with the NZSO of Wagnerian arias, Father and Son,
attracted glowing international praise and earned a rare
double five-star review from the prestigious BBC Music
Magazine.
Edith Haller
Sieglinde
The Italian soprano reprises
the role of Sieglinde with the NZSO after recent debuts at
the Bayreuth Festival and the Vienna State Opera, were she
was described as “simply sensational... erotic, seductive
and passionate” in performance (Der Opernfreund).
Acclaimed for her sparkling vocal qualities and expressive
power, one critic declared her “the new discovery par
excellence as Sieglinde” at Bayreuth. She has appeared in
major opera houses, including Royal Opera House Covent
Garden, Teatro Real Madrid and the state opera houses of
Munich and Hamburg.
Christine
Goerke Brünnhilde
Soprano Christine
Goerke has appeared in the major opera houses of the world
including the Metropolitan Opera, La Scala, the Paris Opera
House and the Royal Opera House Covent Garden. She is a
Grammy Award winner of whom a New York Times’ critic wrote
that “her powerful voice, technique, and honest passion
are always good to hear. The pleasure she takes in the act
of singing is communicable”.
John Wegner
Wotan
John Wegner has forged an
impressive international career and performs regularly in
leading opera houses, including La Scala, Royal Opera House
and Bayreuth. His interpretation of Wotan was once declared
“intolerably moving”, balancing the athleticism and
power demanded by the role with a peerless expressive
ability.
Jonathan Lemalu
Hunding
New Zealand-born Samoan
bass-baritone Jonathan Lemalu is deservedly an audience
favourite for his stage presence, star quality and
velvet-rich voice, once described by The Times as
“a singer who hooks an audience even before opening his
mouth”.
Margaret Medlyn
Fricka
Acclaimed New Zealand soprano
Margaret Medlyn has sung for a host of leading international
opera companies including English National Opera, Covent
Garden, Vienna State Opera and all the opera companies in
Australia. She is lauded not only for her compelling
musicality but also her nuanced acting ability and dramatic
stage charisma.