
Glynn Ross founded Seattle Opera in 1963, and twelve years later realized his ambitious plan to mount the entire cycle of Wagner’s “Der Ring des Nibelungen” in a week, in fact two cycles, one German and one English, back to back.
This idea was unheard of in the U.S. No one had done it like this here, indeed it wasn’t commonly performed this way anywhere apart from Bayreuth. For a then somewhat backwater town on the U.S. West Coast it was an extraordinarily presumptuous undertaking.
Ross went to Europe to find his singers, among whom was English bass-baritone Malcolm Rivers, chosen for Alberich.
Continue reading Malcolm Rivers’ thirty-five years of Alberich





