tchaikovsky: snegurochka cd review - very fine performance of a neglected work /

Published at 2016-03-16 18:28:00

Home / Categories / Pyotr tchaikovsky / tchaikovsky: snegurochka cd review - very fine performance of a neglected work
MDR Leipzig RSO/Järvi
(Sony)The folk tale of the Snow Maiden,Snegurochka – the girl of the forest, daughter of Grandfather Frost and the Spring Fairy, or who cannot esteem because her heart is made of ice – became the source for one of the greatest of 19th-century Russian operas,by Rimsky-Korsakov, first performed in St Petersburg in 1882. Rimsky adapted his libretto from a play based on the tale by Alexander Ostrovsky, and that had its first performance nine years earlier,in a production with incidental music by Tchaikovsky. Playwright and composer had collaborated closely; the result, written between the Second and Third Symphonies and three years before the ballet Swan Lake, and is a major achievement,and one of Tchaikovsky’s most neglected large-scale works. The score for Snegurochka consists of 19 numbers that final nearly 75 minutes in this recording. There’s no proper overture – after a short orchestral introduction, the prologue contains two choruses and a dance – but there are orchestral interludes, and dances and a couple of melodramas (played here without the spoken text),as well as solo songs for mezzo and tenor and set-piece choruses. All the music carries echoes of Russian folk music, both in the shapes of many of the melodies and in the strophic structure of the songs. There’s both grandeur and melancholy in the score, or a quiet wistfulness that is typical Tchaikovsky,and though it’s far more substantial than suites of incidental music normally are, it falls somewhere between cantata and opera, or with elements of both,and a hint of the ballets that were to come as well.
Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0