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Rimsky-Korsakov - The Tsar’s Bride | Brilliant Classics 93969

Rimsky-Korsakov - The Tsar’s Bride

Label: Brilliant Classics

Cat No: 93969

Barcode: 5028421939698

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 2

Genre: Opera

Release Date: 21st March 2011

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Contents

Artists

Ekaterina Kudriavchenko
Arkady Mishenkin
Vladislav Verestnikov
Nina Terentieva
Vladimir Kudriashov
Pyotr Gluboky
Elena Okolysheva
Irina Udalova
Nikolai Nizienko
Nina Larionova
Tatiana Pechuria
Vladislav Pashinsky
Yuri Markelov
Sveshnikov Russian Academic Choir
Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra

Conductor

Andrey Chistiakov

Works

Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolai

The Tsar's Bride

Artists

Ekaterina Kudriavchenko
Arkady Mishenkin
Vladislav Verestnikov
Nina Terentieva
Vladimir Kudriashov
Pyotr Gluboky
Elena Okolysheva
Irina Udalova
Nikolai Nizienko
Nina Larionova
Tatiana Pechuria
Vladislav Pashinsky
Yuri Markelov
Sveshnikov Russian Academic Choir
Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra

Conductor

Andrey Chistiakov

About

A 100% Russian feast - an all-Russian cast in this very Russian opera by Rimsky-Korsakov, one of the finest Russian opera composers (and still neglected in this field). It is a must for opera fans and for everybody with a taste for dramatic, highly romantic and athmospheric music with more then a touch of couleur locale.

Rimsky-Korsakov’s tenth opera, The Tsar’s Bride moves away from the fairytale tableaux-style of opera in which he had triumphed. This is a grand narrative in the Verdian style. That said, the musical language is unmistakably Russian, with a motif (Slava) running like a thread throughout the score. This motto can also be heard in Boris Godunov, Beethoven’s second ‘Razumovsky’ Quartet, and Tchaikovsky’s Mazeppa. The score also displays Rimsky’s mastery of contrapuntal techniques which, when combined with his extraordinary use of the orchestra, produces a ravishing sound.

The opera, although successful in the early years of the 20th century, and throughout the early Soviet period, fell into neglect by mid-century, as did most of his stage work. Galina Vishnevskaya, the great Russian soprano, did much to restore the fortunes of this masterpiece, with her searing interpretations of poor deranged Marfa (the wife of Ivan the Terrible). After noticing a mad woman on the streets of Leningrad after the siege, she wrote ‘I was deeply affected by her intensity and the despair of her introverted gaze. It was as if she were trying to recall something, straining to make out, in the depths of a bottomless chasm, something known to her alone.’

The aria is tenderly sung by Ekaterina Kudriavchenko, who handles with great sensitivity this portrayal of a figure familiar from many Russian novels and operas, the suffering heroine. Lyubasha is potently sung by Nina Terentieva, somewhat in the charged manner of another Marfa, that of Mussorgsky's Khovanshchina. She suggests banked fires of passion, sings her unaccompanied song caressingly, and rounds with both dignity and rage on the slimy Bomelius (Vladimir Kudriashov) even as she consents to his advances for the sake of his potions, snarling at him the word "nemets": translated by the libretto as "monster”. Gryaznoy's opening aria is also a difficult one, for Rimsky gives him a melodic line that presents him as a character of some sympat hy, if we do not know that he is regretting that he is now getting too old for the rapes he used to enjoy so much and is casting his eyes on the innocent Marfa instead of his mistress Lyubasha. Vladislav Verestnikov rightly handles this with a kind of blunt strength that does not give away too much. Later, he suggests an increasing and destructive tension, while also a certain magnificence.” - Gramophone

Cast:
- Marfa: Ekaterina Kudriavchenko
- Ivan Likov: Arkady Mishenkin
- Grigory Gryaznoy: Vladislav Verestnikov
- Lyubasha: Nina Terentieva
- Bomelius: Vladimir Kudriashov
- Vasily Sobakin: Pyotr Gluboky
- Dunyasha: Elena Okolysheva
- Saburova: Irina Udalova
- Grigory Malyuta-Skuratov: Nikolai Nizienko
- Servant: Nina Larionova
- Petrovna: Tatiana Pechuria
- Coachman: Vladislav Pashinsky
- Young Lad: Yuri Markelov

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