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Der Ring des Nibelungen

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Performers in costumes from Wagner's opera Siegfried at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich.

Der Ring des Nibelungen

Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung), WWV 86, is a set of four grand operas written and composed by Richard Wagner. These operas tell an exciting story based on old German and Norse tales. Wagner called this collection of operas a "Bühnenfestspiel" or "stage festival play." It is usually called the Ring cycle, Wagner's Ring, or simply The Ring.

Wagner spent twenty-six years writing the words and music for these operas, from 1848 to 1874. The four operas in order are: Das Rheingold (The Rhinegold), Die Walküre (The Valkyrie), Siegfried, and Götterdämmerung (Twilight of the Gods). While each opera can be enjoyed on its own, Wagner wanted them to be performed together in one special event. The very first time all four operas were performed together was at the Bayreuth Festival in 1876. This series of operas is considered one of the greatest achievements in the world of opera.

Title

Wagner's title is best translated into English as The Ring of the Nibelung. The Nibelung in the title refers to a dwarf named Alberich, and the ring is the one he makes from the Rhinegold. So the title means "Alberich's Ring".

Content

The cycle is very large and takes four nights to perform at the opera, with a total time of about 15 hours. The first piece, Das Rheingold, is the shortest and lasts around two and a half hours with no break. The last piece, Götterdämmerung, is the longest and can take up to five hours, not counting breaks. The story follows gods, heroes, and mythical creatures who are fighting over a magic ring that gives great power. The music is rich and complex, with Wagner writing for a very large orchestra. He even built a special theatre, the Bayreuth Festspielhaus, to perform this work, where the orchestra and singers blend together beautifully.

List of characters

List of characters by appearance

GodsMortalsValkyriesRhinemaidens, Giants & NibelungsOther characters
Wotan: Fricka's husband, king of the gods and god of knowledge (bass-baritone)
Fricka: Wotan's wife, queen of the gods and goddess of marriage (mezzo-soprano)
Freia: Fricka's sister and goddess of love and youth (soprano)
Froh: Fricka's brother and god of fertility (tenor)
Donner: Fricka's brother and god of weather (baritone)
Erda: The Norns and Valkyries' mother and goddess of earth, wisdom and prophecy (contralto)
The Norns: Erda's daughters and the goddesses of fate (contralto, mezzo-soprano, soprano)
Loge: demigod of cunning and fire (tenor)
Siegmund: Wotan's mortal son, Sieglinde's twin brother and Siegfried's father (tenor)
Sieglinde: Wotan's mortal daughter, Siegmund's twin sister and Siegfried's mother (soprano)
Siegfried: Siegmund and Sieglinde's son and Brünnhilde's lover (heldentenor)
Neidings
Hunding: Sieglinde's husband and king of the Neidings (bass)
Gunther: Gibich and Grimhilda's son, Gutrune's brother and king of the Gibichungs (baritone)
Gutrune: Gibich and Grimhilda's daughter and Gunther's sister (soprano)
Hagen: Alberich and Grimhilda's son and Gunther and Gutrune's maternal half-brother (bass)
A male choir of Gibichung vassals and a small female choir of Gibichung women
Brünnhilde: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Siegfried's lover (soprano)
Gerhilde: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Brünnhilde's sister (soprano)
Ortlinde: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Brünnhilde's sister (soprano)
Waltraute: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Brünnhilde's sister (mezzo-soprano)
Schwertleite: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Brünnhilde's sister (contralto)
Helmwige: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Brünnhilde's sister (soprano)
Siegrune: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Brünnhilde's sister (mezzo-soprano)
Grimgerde: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Brünnhilde's sister (contralto)
Rossweisse: Wotan and Erda's immortal daughter and Brünnhilde's sister (mezzo-soprano)
Rhinemaidens
Woglinde: Wellgunde and Flosshilde's sister and guardian of Rhine gold (soprano)
Wellgunde: Woglinde and Flosshilde's sister and guardian of Rhine gold (soprano)
Flosshilde: Woglinde and Wellgunde's sister and guardian of Rhine gold (mezzo-soprano)
Giants
Fasolt: Fafner's brother and king of the giants (bass-baritone/high bass)
Fafner: Fasolt's brother and later turned into a dragon (bass)
Nibelungs
Alberich: Mime's brother and Hagen's father (bass-baritone)
Mime: Alberich's brother and Siegfried's foster father (tenor)
The Voice of a Woodbird: a parlant bird and Siegfried's ally (soprano)
CharacterDas RheingoldDie WalküreSiegfriedGötterdämmerung
WotanYesYesYesNo
FrickaYesYesNoNo
LogeYesNoNoNo
FreiaYesNoNoNo
DonnerYesNoNoNo
FrohYesNoNoNo
ErdaYesNoYesNo
WoglindeYesNoNoYes
WellgundeYesNoNoYes
FlosshildeYesNoNoYes
FasoltYesNoNoNo
FafnerYesNoYesNo
AlberichYesNoYesYes
MimeYesNoYesNo
SiegmundNoYesNoNo
SieglindeNoYesNoNo
HundingNoYesNoNo
BrünnhildeNoYesYesYes
GerhildeNoYesNoNo
OrtlindeNoYesNoNo
WaltrauteNoYesNoYes
SchwertleiteNoYesNoNo
HelmwigeNoYesNoNo
SiegruneNoYesNoNo
GrimgerdeNoYesNoNo
RossweisseNoYesNoNo
SiegfriedNoNoYesYes
The WoodbirdNoNoYesNo
The NornsNoNoNoYes
GuntherNoNoNoYes
GutruneNoNoNoYes
HagenNoNoNoYes
VassalsNoNoNoYes
WomenNoNoNoYes

Story

Illustration of Brünnhilde by Odilon Redon, 1885

The story is about a magical ring that gives great power. A dwarf named Alberich steals gold from water spirits called Rhine maidens and makes the ring. A god named Wotan takes the ring but must give it to two giants who built a home for the gods. Wotan wants the ring back, and this drives much of the story. His grandson, [Siegfried](/wiki/Siegfried_(opera), a human hero, takes the ring by defeating one of the giants. Later, Siegfried is tricked and killed. Siegfried’s lover, Brünnhilde, returns the ring to the Rhine maidens, and the gods’ home is destroyed by fire.

Wagner created this story by combining ideas from old German and Scandinavian myths and tales. People have found many meanings in the story, like ideas about society or the human mind.

Concept

Richard Wagner wanted to create something new with his music. Before his work The Ring of the Nibelung, his style was based on German opera, but he was not happy with it. In an essay called "A Communication to My Friends" from 1851, he talked about how art should feel very real and powerful.

Wagner felt that his audience did not always understand his ideas. After a performance of Tannhäuser in 1845, many people left the theatre confused and unhappy. Because of this, Wagner decided to stop writing traditional operas. Instead, he planned to create a new kind of drama. He announced that he would write a myth in three dramas, with a long piece before them called a Prelude. He wanted to perform these four pieces over three days and one extra evening at a special festival. His goal was to share his ideas with people who really wanted to understand them.

Wagner also wanted his new work to be different from regular operas. He thought operas should not have separate songs called arias or a regular chorus. He wanted the music to grow naturally and use special tunes called motifs to help tell the story. Even so, as he worked on the pieces, he sometimes added more traditional opera parts, like love duets.

Music

Richard Wagner used special musical themes called leitmotifs in his work Der Ring des Nibelungen. These themes represent different characters, objects, or emotions in the story. They help guide the listener's feelings, much like a Greek chorus helped audiences understand the story in ancient Greek plays.

Wagner used a very large orchestra for his music. He even created new instruments, like the Wagner tuba, to get the exact sounds he wanted. The orchestra includes many different types of instruments, such as woodwinds, brass, percussion, and strings, all working together to express the wide range of emotions and events in the story. The music often flows between different tones without sticking to one key for long periods, which helps create the grand and complex structures of the work.

Composition

In 1848, Richard Wagner started working on a story called The Nibelung Myth as Sketch for a Drama. This story was similar to his famous set of plays called Der Ring des Nibelungen. That same year, he also began writing a play called Siegfrieds Tod ("Siegfried's Death"), about the death of a hero named Siegfried.

By 1852, Wagner decided to create four plays to be shown over four nights: Das Rheingold, Die Walküre, Der Junge Siegfried, and Siegfrieds Tod. He finished writing all four plays that year.

Wagner started writing the music for Das Rheingold in 1853. He worked on the music until 1857, finishing up to the end of act 2 of Siegfried. Then he stopped for twelve years to write other plays. When he returned to Siegfried in 1869, he finished the last play, which he renamed Götterdämmerung.

Performances

Further information: List of Bayreuth Festival productions of Der Ring des Nibelungen

First productions

Amalie Materna, the first Bayreuth Brünnhilde, with Cocotte, the horse donated by King Ludwig to play her horse Grane

King Ludwig suggested special previews of Das Rheingold and Die Walküre at the National Theatre in Munich before the rest of the Ring. Das Rheingold was first performed on 22 September 1869, and Die Walküre on 26 June 1870. Wagner delayed announcing Siegfried to avoid it being performed too early.

Wagner wanted a special opera house designed by him for the Ring. In 1871, he chose Bayreuth. By 1876, after moving there and gathering funds, the Bayreuth Festspielhaus opened with the first complete performance of the Ring from 13 to 17 August.

In 1882, London’s impresario Alfred Schulz-Curtius organized the first Ring staging in the United Kingdom, led by Anton Seidl and Angelo Neumann.

The first Italian production of the Ring happened in Venice in 1883, at La Fenice, just two months after Wagner’s death.

The first Australian Ring was presented in English by the British travelling Quinlan Opera Company, together with J. C. Williamson's, in Melbourne and Sydney in 1913.

The Rhinemaidens in the first Bayreuth production in 1876

Modern productions

The Ring needs a lot of effort from any opera company. Most houses produce new Ring cycles over several years. The Bayreuth Festival is special because it usually creates a new cycle within a single year.

Early Ring productions stayed close to Wagner’s original style. After World War II, Wagner’s grandsons Wieland and Wolfgang Wagner introduced a more human-focused style in simpler settings.

A famous modern production was the 1976 show, the Jahrhundertring, directed by Patrice Chéreau and conducted by Pierre Boulez. Set during the Industrial Revolution, it used modern settings and costumes.

Gwyneth Jones performing at the 1976 Bayreuth production of Der Ring des Nibelungen, conducted by Pierre Boulez and directed by Patrice Chéreau

Seattle Opera has created three different Ring productions. The “Green” Ring (2000–2013) focused on nature, inspired by the Pacific Northwest.

In 2003, the first modern Russian production was led by Valery Gergiev at the Mariinsky Opera, Saint Petersburg, with designs by George Tsypin, linking to Ossetian mythology.

The Royal Danish Opera performed the Ring in 2006 with a view where Brünnhilde survives.

In 2006, the Canadian Opera Company opened its new home with the Ring. Three different directors led each opera.

San Francisco Opera and Washington National Opera started a co-production in 2006, led by Francesca Zambello, using imagery from American history.

Modern costuming shown in closing bows following Siegfried in 2013 at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich

Los Angeles Opera presented its first Ring in 2010, directed by Achim Freyer, with abstract staging.

The Metropolitan Opera began a new Ring in 2010, directed by Robert Lepage. A large rotating structure created many effects, but it had some problems over the years.

Opera Australia performed the Ring in Melbourne in 2013 and again in 2016.

It is possible to perform The Ring with fewer resources. In 1990, the Birmingham Opera Company presented a version for solo singers and a small orchestra.

In a different style, Der Ring in Minden performed the cycle on a small stage in Minden, Germany, starting in 2015 and completing the full cycle in 2019.

Recordings of the Ring cycle

This section talks about different recordings of the Ring cycle. There are many versions for people to enjoy.

Other treatments of the Ring cycle

Many artists have made fun and creative versions of Wagner's Ring cycle. Famous conductor Leopold Stokowski and others made shorter versions of the music. Comedian Anna Russell recorded a funny version in 1953.

Playwright Charles Ludlam made a funny spoof called Der Ring Gott Farblonjet in 1977. It was shown again in New York in 1990. In 1991, Seattle Opera made a comedy called Das Barbecü, set on a ranch in Texas.

A German TV movie called Dark Kingdom: The Dragon King from 2004 used some of the same stories. A graphic novel version was published in 2002. There was also a video game series titled Ring that put the story in a science fiction world.

Images

Performers celebrating the end of Wagner's opera Götterdämmerung at the Bavarian State Opera.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Der Ring des Nibelungen, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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