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Alexander Borodin (1834-1887) Prince Igor Alexander Borodin, the composer of Prince Igor, one of the greatest of all Russian operas, once said that for him...
Alexander Borodin (1834-1887)
Prince Igor
Alexander Borodin, the composer of Prince Igor, one of
the greatest of all Russian operas, once said that for him
'music was a pastime, a relaxation from more serious
occupations'. These 'serious occupations' were the
disciplines of science and medicine, with which he
achieved international fame. Born illegitimately to an
aristocratic father in St Petersburg in 1833, by the start
of adolescence he could play the piano, flute and cello
and speak several languages. Although highly adept at
music, his passion was for experimental chemistry. In
1850 he entered the Medico-Surgical Academy at
St Petersburg. On graduation he spent a year as a house
surgeon in a military hospital, followed by three years
of further study in western Europe. Here he met the
brilliant young pianist Ekaterina Protopova, whom he
married in 1863, after succeeding to the professorship at
the Academy in 1862. He spent the rest of his life
lecturing and supervising student work, not only in
St Petersburg, but throughout Europe.
Borodin was self-taught in composition, having
started as early as when he was nine, until he began to
take lessons from Balakirev in 1862. Through Balakirev
he met the composers Cui, Mussorgsky and Rimsky-
Korsakov, and together they became known as 'The
Five' or 'The Mighty Handful'. As a group they were
opposed to academic approaches to music; by contrast
they viewed themselves as Russian patriots, standing
for spontaneity and 'truth in music'. With his successful
medical career, composition was little more than a
hobby for Borodin. His opera Prince Igor, despite
occupying him for eighteen years, remained unfinished
at his death in 1887. It was completed and orchestrated
by Glazunov (who drafted the Overture based on
recollections of hearing Borodin play it on the piano)
and Rimsky-Korsakov, and was first performed in
St Petersburg on 4th November 1890.
Set in the twelfth century, Prince Igor is a vast
nationalist epic, and describes the clash of cultures
between the Russians, symbolised by Prince Igor, and
the Tartar Polovtski tribe, led by Khan Konchak. The
plot is relatively straight-forward. Following the
Overture, in the Prologue Prince Igor sets off to wage
war against the Polovtski. In Act One his wife,
Yaroslavna, forces his brother and rival, Prince
Galitsky, to curb his supporters. Word comes that Igor
and his son Vladimir have been defeated and captured.
Act Two is set in the Polovtsian camp. Vladmir has
fallen in love with Konchak's daughter, Konchakovna.
Konchak offers to grant Igor his freedom if he ceases
hostilities. Igor refuses. In the Third Act (omitted in this
recording as was the custom of the time) Igor escapes,
but without his son. Konchak refuses to pursue Igor. He
retains Vladimir as a hostage and marries him to
Konchakovna. Act Four brings the opera to a close: Igor
returns safely to Russia, is greeted with rejoicing, and
vows to raise fresh troops with which to meet the
Polovtski threat.
This historic recording was made in Moscow
during 1951 and features the legendary Bolshoy Opera,
the pre-eminent opera company of the Soviet era, at its
peak. Leading the performance is the conductor
Alexander Melik-Pashayev. He joined the Bolshoy in
1931, after studying with Nikolai Tcherepnin and
Alexander Gauk and leading the Tbilisi Opera. He
replaced Nikolai Golovanov as the company's chief
conductor in 1953, and did much to extend its repertoire
with both new works and operas from the western
canon. As with his predecessors Samosud and
Golovanov, his reign came to an unexpected end in
1962, when he was summarily replaced by Evgeny
Svetlanov. He died two years later.
The leading rôles are taken by the cream of the
Bolshoy's singers at this time. Yaroslavna, Prince
Igor's wife, is sung by the soprano Evgeniya
Smolenskaya (1919-1989). After making her debut in
1945 at Stalingrad she joined the Bolshoy in 1947,
singing many dramatic soprano rôles with distinction
until her retirement in 1972. The other major female
rôle, Konchakovna, is taken by Vera Borisenko, born
in 1918. After gaining initial experience in the Red
Army Entertainment Corps and the Kiev Opera she
joined the Bolshoy in 1946 and stayed there for the rest
of her career. She took first prize in the 1947 Prague
International Singing Competition, and this part was her
first major success in Moscow. The tenor Sergey
Lemeshev (1902-1977), who sings Vladimir, Igor's
son, was one of the biggest Soviet music stars of the
period. He studied initially at the St Petersburg Military
Academy and later at the Moscow Conservatory, also
studying acting with Stanislavsky. During the 1920s he
sang in the provinces before joining the Bolshoy in
1931, where he remained until 1961 as one of the
house's triumvirate of great tenors, the others being
Nelepp and Koslovzky. An enormously popular figure,
he recorded extensively and appeared in several films.
The title rôle of Prince Igor is taken by the baritone,
Andrey Ivanov (1900-1970). Following study at the
Kiev Conservatory, he served as a member of the Kiev
Opera from 1934 to 1950, when he became a member of
the Bolshoy company, retiring in 1956. (He is not to be
confused with Alexey Ivanov, 1904-1982, another
Bolshoy baritone of note with a similar repertoire.) The
two basses in this recording are jusitifiably legendary.
Alexander Pirogov (1899-1964), who takes the part of
Igor's rival Prince Galitsky, studied in Moscow and
joined the Bolshoy in 1924, where he was both
preceded and succeeded by other brothers. A singer of
great character he recorded the title rôle in Boris
Godunov with Golovanov conducting in 1948 and
participated in the 1953 Bolshoy première and
recording of Shaporin's The Decembrists, also
conducted by Melik-Pashayev. Igor's adversary Khan
Konchak is sung by Mark Reizen (1895-1992). A
soldier in the First World War, he made his operatic
debut in 1921, before joining the Opera in Leningrad.
He visited the West in 1930 when he recorded for EMI
in London. He was a member of the Bolshoy company
from 1930 until his retirement in 1955, after which he
continued to appear as a guest, singing on stage there on
his ninetieth birthday, and still exhibiting his formidable
stage presence.
David Patmore
Prince Igor (Knyaz Igor) (more info)
Performed by:
Ukraine National Radio Symphony Orchestra
Ukraine State Radio Symphony Orchestra
Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra
Ukraine National Symphony Orchestra
Philharmonia
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Nils Grevillius Orchestra
RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra
Philharmonia Orchestra
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Berlin State Opera Orchestra
Studio orchestra
Stuttgart State Orchestra
Russian Philharmonia
Russia Philharmonia
Composed by:
Alexander Porfir'yevich Borodin
Issay Alexandrovich Dobrowen
Conducted by:
Theodore Kuchar
Gustave Cloez
Rosario Bourdon
Frieder Weissmann
Bruno Reibold
Nils Grevillius
Mykola Hobdych
Vladimir Sirenko
Geoffrey Simon
Adrian Leaper
Alexander Melik-Pashayev
Lothar Zagrosek
Alexander Vedernikov
Constantine Orbelian
Walter Weller
David Parry
Valery Gilmanov, bass
Feodor Chaliapin, bass
Vladimir Grishko, tenor
Dmitri Hvorostovsky, baritone
Yuri Nechaev,
Daniil Shtoda,
Boris Christoff, bass
Ewa Podles, contralto
Jussi Bjorling, tenor
Diana Montague, mezzo-soprano
Evgeniya Smolenskaya, soprano
Sergey Lemeshev, tenor
Alexander Pirogov, bass
Mark Reizen, bass
Veronica Borisenko, mezzo-soprano
Alexey Serov, tenor
Ivan Skobtsov, tenor
Feodor Godovkin, tenor
Elena Korneueva, mezzo-soprano
Nina Koshetz, soprano
Nadezhda Obukhova, mezzo-soprano
Charles Friant, tenor
George Baklanoff, baritone
Andrey Ivanov, baritone
Antonina Ivanova, soprano
John Tomlinson, bass
Angelina Shvachka, mezzo-soprano
Dmytro Popov, tenor
Mykola Koval, baritone
Taras Shtonda, bass-baritone
-
Overture - 11:01
-
Prologue: Solntsu krasnomu slava! (Glory to the beautiful sun!) (Chorus) - 3:53
-
Prologue: Idyom na bran's vragom Rusi (Let? march into battle against the enemy of Rus) (Igor, Chorus) - 2:35
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Prologue: Chto eto znachit? (What does it mean?) (Galitsky) - 5:15
-
Prologue: Pust' pridut knyagini i boyaryni (Let the princesses and boyars?wives come) (Igor) - 5:46
-
Prologue: Pora idti nam v put (It is time to go) (Igor) - 2:52
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Act I Scene 1: Slava, slava Volodimiru (Glory, glory to Vladimir) (Chorus) - 2:08
-
Act I Scene 1: Recitative and Song of Galitsky: Nateshilsya li, knyaz'? (Had a good time, Prince?) (Prince's Courtiers, Galitsky) - 4:02
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Act I Scene 1: Recitative: Knyazyu Galitskomu slava! (Long live Prince Galitsky!) (Prince's Courtiers) - 1:23
-
Act I Scene 1: Oy, likhon'ko! Oy, goryushko! (Oh, there's trouble! And such misfortune, Prince!) (Chorus of Maidens) - 2:25
-
Act I Scene 1: Stoy, rebyata! (Wait, lads!) (Skula) - 1:00
-
Act I Scene 1: Chto u knyazya da Volodimira (At the palace of Prince Vladimir) (Skula) - 2:57
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Act I Scene 1: Da, vot komu by knyazhit' na Putivlye! (Yes, this is who should rule in Putivl!) (Chorus) - 2:10
-
Act I Scene 2: Arioso: Ne malo vremeni proshlo (Much time has passed) (Yaroslavna) - 7:07
-
Act I Scene 2: Tam devushki prishli k tebe, knyaginya (Some maidens have come to see you, Princess) (Yaroslavna, Chorus of Maidens) - 4:30
-
Act I Scene 2: Ay! Knyaz! Batyushki! (Oh, heavens! The Prince!) (Yaroslavna, Galitsky) - 7:31
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Act I Scene 2: Dobro pozhalovat', boyarye (Welcome, boyars) (Yaroslavna) - 7:13
-
Act I Scene 2: Zvon! Nabat! (Bells! The Alarm!) (Boyars) - 1:51
Prince Igor (Knyaz Igor) (more info)
Performed by:
Ukraine National Radio Symphony Orchestra
Ukraine State Radio Symphony Orchestra
Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra
Ukraine National Symphony Orchestra
Philharmonia
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Nils Grevillius Orchestra
RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra
Philharmonia Orchestra
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Berlin State Opera Orchestra
Studio orchestra
Stuttgart State Orchestra
Russian Philharmonia
Russia Philharmonia
Composed by:
Alexander Porfir'yevich Borodin
Issay Alexandrovich Dobrowen
Conducted by:
Theodore Kuchar
Gustave Cloez
Rosario Bourdon
Frieder Weissmann
Bruno Reibold
Nils Grevillius
Mykola Hobdych
Vladimir Sirenko
Geoffrey Simon
Adrian Leaper
Alexander Melik-Pashayev
Lothar Zagrosek
Alexander Vedernikov
Constantine Orbelian
Walter Weller
David Parry
Valery Gilmanov, bass
Feodor Chaliapin, bass
Vladimir Grishko, tenor
Dmitri Hvorostovsky, baritone
Yuri Nechaev,
Daniil Shtoda,
Boris Christoff, bass
Ewa Podles, contralto
Jussi Bjorling, tenor
Diana Montague, mezzo-soprano
Evgeniya Smolenskaya, soprano
Sergey Lemeshev, tenor
Alexander Pirogov, bass
Mark Reizen, bass
Veronica Borisenko, mezzo-soprano
Alexey Serov, tenor
Ivan Skobtsov, tenor
Feodor Godovkin, tenor
Elena Korneueva, mezzo-soprano
Nina Koshetz, soprano
Nadezhda Obukhova, mezzo-soprano
Charles Friant, tenor
George Baklanoff, baritone
Andrey Ivanov, baritone
Antonina Ivanova, soprano
John Tomlinson, bass
Angelina Shvachka, mezzo-soprano
Dmytro Popov, tenor
Mykola Koval, baritone
Taras Shtonda, bass-baritone
-
Act II: Na bezvod'ye, dnyom na solntse (Without water, midday in the Sun) (Chorus of the Polovtsian Maidens) - 5:36
-
Act II: Dance of the Polovtsian Maidens - 2:20
-
Act II: Cavatina: Merknet svet dnevnoy (Daylight fades) (Konchakovna) - 5:44
-
Act II: Solntse za goroy ukhodit na pokoy (Beyond the mountain, the Sun goes to rest) (Polovtsian Guards) - 1:08
-
Act II: Cavatina: Medlenno den ugasal (Slowly the day has faded) (Vladimir) - 5:35
-
Act II: Aria: Ty li, Vladimir moy, ty li? (Is that you, my Vladimir, is that you?) (Kochakovna, Vladimir) - 5:22
-
Act II: Aria: Ni sna ne otdykha (No sleep, no rest) (Igor) - 6:58
-
Act II: Pozvol mne, knyazhe, slovo molvit' (Allow me, Prince, to say a word) (Igor, Ovlur) - 3:55
-
Act II: Aria: Zdorov li, knyaz? (Are you in good health, Prince?) (Konchak) - 7:13
-
Act II: Gey! Plennits privesti syuda! (Hey! Bring the captives girl here!) (Konchak) - 3:09
-
Act II: Polovtsian Dance: Uletay na kryl'yakh vetra (Fly on the wings of wind) (Female Captives) - 2:26
-
Act II: Wild Dance of the Men... General Dance - 1:11
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Act II: Poyte pesni slavy Khanu! Poy! (Sing songs of praise to the Khan! Sing!) (Polovtsians) - 2:06
-
Act II: Boys' dance... Mens' Dance - 5:35
Prince Igor (Knyaz Igor) (more info)
Performed by:
Ukraine National Radio Symphony Orchestra
Ukraine State Radio Symphony Orchestra
Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra
Ukraine National Symphony Orchestra
Philharmonia
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Nils Grevillius Orchestra
RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra
Philharmonia Orchestra
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Berlin State Opera Orchestra
Studio orchestra
Stuttgart State Orchestra
Russian Philharmonia
Russia Philharmonia
Composed by:
Alexander Porfir'yevich Borodin
Issay Alexandrovich Dobrowen
Conducted by:
Theodore Kuchar
Gustave Cloez
Rosario Bourdon
Frieder Weissmann
Bruno Reibold
Nils Grevillius
Mykola Hobdych
Vladimir Sirenko
Geoffrey Simon
Adrian Leaper
Alexander Melik-Pashayev
Lothar Zagrosek
Alexander Vedernikov
Constantine Orbelian
Walter Weller
David Parry
Valery Gilmanov, bass
Feodor Chaliapin, bass
Vladimir Grishko, tenor
Dmitri Hvorostovsky, baritone
Yuri Nechaev,
Daniil Shtoda,
Boris Christoff, bass
Ewa Podles, contralto
Jussi Bjorling, tenor
Diana Montague, mezzo-soprano
Evgeniya Smolenskaya, soprano
Sergey Lemeshev, tenor
Alexander Pirogov, bass
Mark Reizen, bass
Veronica Borisenko, mezzo-soprano
Alexey Serov, tenor
Ivan Skobtsov, tenor
Feodor Godovkin, tenor
Elena Korneueva, mezzo-soprano
Nina Koshetz, soprano
Nadezhda Obukhova, mezzo-soprano
Charles Friant, tenor
George Baklanoff, baritone
Andrey Ivanov, baritone
Antonina Ivanova, soprano
John Tomlinson, bass
Angelina Shvachka, mezzo-soprano
Dmytro Popov, tenor
Mykola Koval, baritone
Taras Shtonda, bass-baritone
-
Act IV: Akh! Plachu ya, gorko plachu ya (Oh, I weep, I bitterly weep) (Yaroslavna) - 9:14
-
Act IV: Akh, ne buyniy veter zavyval (Oh, it was not the violent wind) (Chorus) - 3:37
-
Act IV: Kak unylo vsyo krugom (All around, what a cheerless sight) (Yaroslavna) - 2:35
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Act IV: On - moy sokol yasniy (It is he - my bright-eyed falcon!) (Yaroslavna, Igor) - 4:26
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Act IV: Ty gudi, da (Play, you, play!) (Gudok Players, Yeroshka, Skula) - 4:24
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Act IV; Narod! Syuda! (People, come here!) (Yeroshka) - 3:45
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Act IV: Final Chorus: Znat', Gospod' mol'by uslyshal (It seems the Lord has heard our prayers) (Elders, Boyars) - 2:47
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Prince Igor, Act I: Recitative and Song of Galitsky - 3:39
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Prince Igor, Act I: Yaroslavna's Arioso - 4:48
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Prince Igor, Act II: Konchakovna's Aria - 5:56
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Prince Igor, Act II: Vladimir's Cavatina - 7:26
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Prince Igor, Act II: Prince Igor's Aria - 7:13
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Prince Igor, Act II: Konchak's Aria - 7:20