Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%

Siegfried

Superb Wagner from the Sydney Symphony Orchestra
Sydney Symphony Orchestra
by
ABR Arts 14 November 2025

Siegfried

Superb Wagner from the Sydney Symphony Orchestra
Sydney Symphony Orchestra
by
ABR Arts 14 November 2025
Miina-Liisa Värelä as Brunnhilde (photograph by Daniel Boud)
Miina-Liisa Värelä as Brunnhilde (photograph by Daniel Boud)

Opera being the most comprehensive of art forms – combining text, music, sets, costumes, acting, dance – concert versions necessarily lack clout and definitiveness. Nothing can compare with a fully rounded staged production. Certain operas, though, are peculiarly suited to the concert hall, and Richard Wagner’s Siegfried – third in his tetralogy Der Ring des Nibelungen – is surely one of them, with its undeniable longueurs: the interminable potion, the faintly embarrassing Tarnhelm, and our hero’s dreamlike progress to the rock on which he will liberate his sleeping aunt. Such is the beauty of Wagner’s score that one can luxuriate in it, undistracted by fussy stagecraft, so often confected (at vast expense) to hide the dearth of action and the periodic insults to one’s intelligence.

It is in Siegfried that the ponderosities of Wagner’s text (never should the word ‘libretto’ pollute a Wagner review) are most stark. Imagine how much greater (and this is saying something) Siegfried would have been had Wagner collaborated with a librettist of the refinement of Hugo von Hofmannsthal, or the singular wit and concision of Lorenzo Da Ponte. But it’s impossible to think of the master of Bayreuth ever submitting to the interventions of a mere mortal. If Verdi was lordly with his librettists, Wagner would have been positively insufferable.

Comments (3)

  • I also went, but to the Sunday performance. The performance had gone up quite a few notches. The singers seemed to let it all out; it was outstanding.
    In Tuscany, where I lived for many years, the state classical station would broadcast Bayreuth live. Growing up in Melbourne in the 1960s, my mainstay for classical music was the ABC. This was when John Charger was introducing us to Mahler and Bruckner, so difficult out of a tinny radio. I feel that the younger generation and the taxpayers are being sorely treated.
    Posted by Ermes De Zan
    03 December 2025
  • Peter Rose’s ‘Siegfried: Superb Wagner from the Sydney Symphony Orchestra’ was an engaging review of a superb concert. However, in Rose’s discussion of Wagner’s text, some or any detail, explanation, or justification would have been edifying and authenticating. Presumably, the commentary concerned the original German text – obviously inaccessible to most Australian readers – rather than the plot. Illogical operatic plots are almost inevitable. What seems totally unquestionable is the brilliance and prowess of maestro Simone Young. We salute her.
    Posted by Lesley Kind
    21 November 2025
  • Brilliant review from one lucky enough to be there.
    I can only echo Peter's comment - where was the ABC?
    Musical events of this magnitude are not everyday occurrences in Australia Astounding that there will be no record from the public broadcaster.
    Leigh Garvan
    Posted by Leigh Garvan
    17 November 2025

Leave a comment

If you are an ABR subscriber, you will need to sign in to post a comment.

If you have forgotten your sign in details, or if you receive an error message when trying to submit your comment, please email your comment (and the name of the article to which it relates) to ABR Comments. We will review your comment and, subject to approval, we will post it under your name.

Please note that all comments must be approved by ABR and comply with our Terms & Conditions.