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Sat. Jan. 13, 2024 8p.m.

Noseda conducting the National Symphony Orchestra in front of an audience

Concert Hall

  • Runtime

    75 minutes with no intermission

  • View Details

Program

Gianandrea Noseda, conductor
National Symphony Orchestra

Richard Wagner 
(1813–1883)
(compiled by Lorin Maazel)
The Ring without Words

Patrons are requested to silence cell phones and other electronic devices during performances.

The taking of photographs and the use of recording equipment are not allowed in this venue.
Program order and artists are subject to change.

Sponsors

Endowed Support for this week's concerts:

The Ellsworth C. and Katharyn W. Alvord Keyboard Soloist Fund

Flowers in loving memory of Bessie Huidekoper Fay

Terms and Conditions

All events and artists subject to change without prior notice.

Meet the Artists

Meet the National Symphony Orchestra

Gianandrea Noseda, Music Director, The Roger Sant and Congresswoman Doris Matsui Chair

Steven Reineke, Principal Pops Conductor

Ben Folds, Artistic Advisor

The National Symphony Orchestra uses a system of revolving strings. In each string section, untitled members are listed in order of length of service.

* Regularly Engaged Extra Musician
** Temporary Position
*** Leave of Absence

Program Note

© 2024 Thomas May

Richard Wagner: The Ring without Words

Long before George Lucas, J.R.R. Tolkien, or George R.R. Martin, Richard Wagner recognized the limitless potential to be tapped from mythology. His most ambitious treatment of mythic sources took shape as Der Ring des Nibelungen (“The Ring of the Nibelung”), his four-opera cycle dramatizing the struggle between love and power. The malleability of this material attracted Wagner above all. The Ring, as he wrote his friend and fellow composer Franz Liszt, “is the poem of my life and of all that I am and feel.”

The Ring originated in a period of unrest late in the 1840s, when Wagner, then employed as a music director at the prestigious Dresden Court Opera, became actively involved in political uprisings sweeping across Europe. The revolutions failed, and in May 1849 Wagner escaped an arrest warrant (and possible death sentence) by fleeing into exile in Switzerland for the next dozen years.

Wagner channeled this frustrated political-social fervor into visions of an artistic revolution. In the Ring’s early stages, he planned to write a single grand opera centered around principal characters from the medieval Nibelungenlied, including the Teutonic hero Siegfried and his bride Brünnhilde. The composer, who also wrote his own librettos, concocted a hybrid myth blending this material with characters and plot elements he found in other German and Scandinavian sources as well as contemporary scholarship and speculation.

Wagner’s Siegfried became a superhero whose sacrificial death ushers in the promise of utopia by cleansing the old order that the gods have corrupted—an allegory for the radical reset of society envisioned by the revolutionaries with whom Wagner associated.

To ensure that the grand denouement of this opera would have maximal impact, Wagner realized that he needed to give the audience more detailed information about the characters and events leading up to it. Merely recapping what had led to the situation in which Siegfried is betrayed was not enough: it would have to be dramatized. This realization, simply put, resulted in the expansion from one to four operas, which Wagner intended to be performed over the course of a week, with plenty of time to reflect on the experience.

The original opera, which he had called Siegfried’s Death, became Götterdämmerung (Twilight of the Gods), the longest of the four and the culmination of the cycle. Three “prequel” operas were added to provide the detailed backstory leading up to it, going back to the beginning of time itself: Das Rheingold, the shortest and most exposition-heavy part of the cycle; Die Walküre, which introduces Siegfried’s parents and their doomed love story but focuses on the young Brünnhilde; and Siegfried, an account of the hero’s youthful exploits and first encounter with Brünnhilde.

Wagner completed the verse librettos for all four operas by 1853. But the musical composition took until late 1874, when he scored the final chord of Götterdämmerung. There were many interruptions along the way—including one that lasted about a dozen years (during which he composed Tristan und Isolde and Die Meistersinger).

In 1987, the legendary American conductor Lorin Maazel (1930–2014) was commissioned by the Berlin Philharmonic to distill this behemoth into a purely orchestral work that could fit on one CD (then a recently introduced medium for musical consumption).

The Ring without Words: An Orchestral Adventure is the result of this formidable challenge to create a “symphonic synthesis” of the cycle (which, uncut, lasts roughly 15 to 16 hours in a complete performance, depending on the interpretation and not counting intermissions). This performance by the National Symphony Orchestra additionally serves as a kind of “sneak peek” for Music Director Gianandrea Noseda’s upcoming complete Ring in May at Opernhaus Zürich, where he has led separate presentations of all four operas, culminating in Götterdämmerung last fall.

Staff

Staff for the National Symphony Orchestra

*Kennedy Center staff who support the NSO

Administration

Executive Director Jean Davidson

Executive Assistant Sabryn McDonald

Executive Team

Vice President, Artistic Planning Nigel Boon

Director of Orchestra Personnel Karyn Garvin

Vice President of Marketing Derek A. Johnson*

Vice President, Financial Planning & Analysis Shuda Li*

Director of Finance & Administration Louise Niepoetter

Chief Development Officer Eric Stillman

Director of Music Education Warren G. Williams, III*

Artistic

Assistant Manager, Artistic Planning & Administration  Emma Biggert

Senior Producing Director Justin Ellis

Artistic Assistant Administrator Lucia Lostumbo

Artistic Assistant Nampoina Randrianarivelo

Community Engagement

Manager of Community Engagement Xavier Joseph

Development

Major Gift Officer, NSO Rebin Ali

Senior Manager, Foundation & Government Giving Selena Anguiano*

Special Events Manager Barin Boudreaux*

Assistant Manager, NSO Board & Leadership Campaigns Kate Baker

Manager, Foundation & Government Giving Lauren Breen*

Director of Operations & Stewardship, NSO Jean Campo

Director, Development Systems & Strategies Jenny Flemingloss*

Assistant Manager, Foundation & Government Giving Emiko Fukuda*

Manager, Corporate Relations Nicole Galagan*

Director, Planned Giving Matthew Gardner*

Assistant, NSO Development Helena Hadlock

Assitant Manager, NSO Individual Giving Reema Kattan

Assistant, Stewardship Jordan Lapsley*

Director, Foundation & Government Giving Maryvonne Neptune*

Senior Manager, Corporate Relations Crystal Padley*

Vice President, Corporate Engagment Ellen Palmer*

Assistant Manager, NSO Individual Giving Laney Pleasanton

Manager, NSO Individual Giving Maria Servodidio

Director, Prospect Development, Intelligence, & Analytics Kellyn Smith*

Manager, Stewardship Nora St. Arnold*

Assistant Manager, Foundation & Government Giving Lauren Walker*

Education

Manager of Music Education, Programming and Productions Emily Heckel*

Manager, Career and Development Programs Stephanie Baker*

Human Resources

Director, Total Rewards Tony Amato*

Talent Acquisition Manager Chanel Kemp*

Senior Manager, HRIS & Benefits Aushja (Shay) Mitchell*

HRIS Coordinator Lisa Motti*

Benefits Coordinator Ericka Parham*

Senior Business Partner John Sanford*

Director, HR Operations Mafona Shea*

Marketing & Advertising

Marketing Manager, NSO, Fortas, and New Music Lindsay Sheridan*

Assistant Marketing Manager, NSO, Fortas, and New MusicAbby Berman*

Senior Director, Creative and Brand StrategyScott Bushnell*

Manager, Advertising DesignFreeman Robinson*

Senior Copywriter & Assistant Manager, Advertising CommunicationsLily Maroni

Assistant Manager, Social MediaKyle Russo

Advertising Production & Special Projects Assistant ManagerElizabeth Stoltz*

Director, Sales & Ticketing ServiceDerek Younger*

Orchestra Operations & Concert Production

Assistant Manager, Orchestra Operations Brooke Bartolome

Media & OPAS Support Coordinator Joseph Benitez

Assistant Stage Manager N. Christian Bottorff

Senior Manager, Production & Operations Krysta Cihi

Production Manager Daryl Donley

Production Coordinator Abby Johnson

Stage Manager David Langrell

Public Relations

Senior Press Representative David Hsieh*

Public Relations Coordinator, Classical Kate Wyman*

Staff for the Concert Hall

  • Theater Manager
    *Allen V. McCallum Jr.
  • Box Office Treasurer
    Deborah Glover
  • Head Usher
    Cathy Crocker
  • Stage Crew
    Zach Boutilier, Michael Buchman, Paul Johannes,
    April King, John Ottaviano, and Arielle Qorb

atpamatpam

*Represented by ATPAM, the Association of Theatrical Press Agents and Managers.

Steinway Piano Gallery is the exclusive area representative of Steinway & Sons and Boston pianos, the official pianos of the Kennedy Center.

iatse 868

The box office at the Kennedy Center is represented by I.A.T.S.E, Local #868.

iatse 22   iatse 772   iatse 798

The technicians at the Kennedy Center are represented by Local #22, Local #772,  and Local #798 I.A.T.S.E., AFL-CIO-CLC, the professional union of theatrical technicians.

DC federation of musicians DC federation of musicians

National Symphony Orchestra musicians are represented by the Metropolitan Washington, D.C. Federation of Musicians, AFM Local 161-710.

 

Program

Gianandrea Noseda, conductor
National Symphony Orchestra

Richard Wagner 
(1813–1883)
(compiled by Lorin Maazel)
The Ring without Words

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