Sold Date:
November 29, 2019
Start Date:
October 11, 2019
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Vinyl: Sealed! This is the Original 1983 RARE London 1ST PRESSING! Sir Georg Solti & The Vienna Philharmonic perform highlights from Wagner's Masterpiece!! Recorded in 1982. This is a Digital Analog Recording !!! Cover: Sealed! (see photos) Hype Sticker.
Goldmine Standards.
See Biography Below!
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Description by Theresa Muir
Of the four episodes of Der Ring des Nibelungen, Die Walküre is most often performed separately, and arguably may be 's best-loved work. The source of this affection is certainly 's sensitive depictions of Siegmund and Sieglinde's love, and the father-daughter relationship of Wotan and Brünnhilde. The work was first criticized for Siegmund and Sieglinde's incestuous love, but made them appealing, rendered their story with tenderness, and bestowed on them some of his most glorious music. In Die Walküre, achieved equality of music and words with flexible ease. Act One, in particular, is a masterpiece of rhapsodic melody joined to a tight plan of steadily rising tension released in successive climaxes as the two are drawn to each other and reveal their pasts.
Act Two, Scene Two has one of the work's epic narrations ("Als junger Liebe Lust mir verblich"), as Wotan confesses his dilemma to his daughter Brünnhilde. These narrations in 's dramas provide an opportunity to stop and reflect on events and to see them from the perspective of other characters. The device also allows to bring Leitmotifs strongly into play to represent the relationships of different characters, objects and ideas through their transformation, and thus he furnishes some of the most powerful psychological moments in the drama. As Wotan recalls the theft of the gold, the building of Valhalla, and the ring, each of their leitmotifs are heard; the motifs of the curse and the sword join the texture, and their accumulation drives the narration to its climax as Wotan confesses to his horrified daughter that he only desires one thing -- "das Ende, das Ende."
Act Three opens with the well known "Ride of the Valkyries," in which Wotan's daughters, the Valkyries, assemble on their mountaintop after scouting a battlefield for dead warriors. Listeners acquainted with only the concert version may be surprised to hear the eight voices of the Valkyries over the orchestral texure, and one can understand the tremendous impact originally made in the theater by this curtain-raiser. In 's Bayreuth theater, with the orchestra under the stage, the voices are much more prominent.
The opera concludes with Wotan's impressive and moving farewell to Brünnhilde, as he leaves her to sleep, surrounded by a ring of fire. Much of this episode's material is new and unique, including the powerful melody with which Wotan exclaims his farewell; but it is punctuated by important motives such as Loge's fire, and introduces ones that will be important later in the drama, such as the sleep motive (closely related to Erda's characteristic music) and that of the downfall of the gods. The orchestral texture here is rich and full, with brass supporting Wotan's song, and a sweeping countermelody in unison cellos. Wotan's allusion to one "who does not fear the point of my spear," is set to the Wälsung motive, and strongly echoed in the brass, while rippling harps accompany a lilting lullaby-like motive in the upper woodwinds.