Galina Vishnevskaya sings Russian Songs

Australian Eloquence: 4802096

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Galina Vishnevskaya sings Russian Songs

Catalogue No:

4802096

Discs:

1

Release date:

10th Oct 2011

Barcode:

0028948020966

Medium:

CD
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Galina Vishnevskaya sings Russian Songs


Mussorgsky:

Songs and Dances of Death

Prokofiev:

Five Poems of Anna Akhmatova, Op. 27

Tchaikovsky:

None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6

Ni slova, o drug moy (Not a word, O my friend), Op. 6 No. 2

Do not believe, my friend Op. 6 No. 1

Otchevo? (Why?), Op. 6 No. 5

Why did I dream of you?, Op. 28 No. 3

Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3

Na nivi zhyoltiye (On the golden cornfields), Op. 57 No.2

O ditya, pod okoshkom tvoim (Serenade), Op. 63 No. 6

Merknet slaby svet svechi, Op. 73 No. 2


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As one of the leading interpreters of Russian music, and Benjamin Britten’s soprano of choice for some of his works, including the mighty War Requiem, it may come as a surprise to some that Galina Vishnevskaya began her professional career in 1944, singing, of all things, Viennese operettas (in Russian translation!) in the chorus of a travelling company. When the company’s leading soubrette broke her leg, Vishnevskaya graduated to lead roles, but her destiny lay elsewhere. As a girl, she had been fascinated with Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin, and it was in the role of Tatiana that she made her operatic debut, in 1953, at the Bolshoi Theatre. Other roles followed, including Leonore in Fidelio (1954), Cherubino (!) in Le nozze di Figaro (1957), Madama Butterfly (1957) and Aida (1958). It was in the latter role that she made her Metropolitan Opera debut in 1962, and she added Liù (from Puccini’s Turandot) for her La Scala debut in 1964. Western critics were agog over this force of nature who had come, if not from out of nowhere, then at least from behind the Iron Curtain. They spoke of her in the same breath as Maria Callas, Renata Tebaldi, Birgit Nilsson and other giants of the era.

In 1955, she married Russian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, and together, they braved the Cold War tensions that continued to chill life in the Soviet Union. Rostropovich was, of course, a highly gifted pianist as well and accompanied his wife in recital on the stage and in the recording studio.

In 1961, under the supervision of Mercury Living Presence’s executive producer Wilma Cozart-Fine, they recorded material for soprano and piano key to Vishnevskaya’s life and career. Mussorgsky’s Songs and Dances of Death she called ‘one of the most important projects of [her] career’ and wrote that the performances of this song-cycle made her feel, ‘for the first time, [her] ethnic identity as a Russian singer’.

In addition to three Tchaikovsky songs recorded at these sessions, a further six were added to her discography seven years later, for Decca, these receiving their first release on CD.

playSongs AND Dances OF Death 1. Koybel'naja (Lullaby)

playSongs AND Dances OF Death 2. Serenada (Serenade)

playSongs AND Dances OF Death 3. Trepak

playSongs AND Dances OF Death 4. Polkovodec (The Field Marshall)

playNet, Tolko Tot, Kto Znal Op. 6 No. 6 (None But The Lonely Heart)

playNi Slova, O Drug Moi Op. 6 No. 2 (Not A Word, Beloved)

playNe Ver Moi Drug Op. 6 No. 1 (Do Not Believe It, My Friend)

playFive Poems OF Anna Akhmatova 1. Solnce Kpmnatuu Napolnilo (Sunlight Filled The Room)

playFive Poems OF Anna Akhmatova 2. Nastojashchuyu Nezhnost' (True Tenderness)

playFive Poems OF Anna Akhmatova 3. Pamjat' O Solnce (Memories Of Sunlight)

playFive Poems OF Anna Akhmatova 4. Zdrastvuy! (Greetings!)

playFive Poems OF Anna Akhmatova 5. Seroglazy Korol' (The Grey-Eyed King)

playOtchevo? Op. 6 No. 5 (Why?)

playZachem Ty Mne Prisnilasya Op. 28 No. 3 (Why Do I Dream Of You?)

playSred Shumnovo Bala Op. 38 No. 3 (Amid The Noise Of The Ball)

playNa Nivy Zhyoltye Op. 57 No. 2 (On The Golden Fields)

playSerenada Op. 63 No. 6 (Serenade)

playNoch' Op. 73 No. 2 (Night)

Gramophone Magazine

(Mussorgsky, Prokofiev, Tchaikovsky: 1961 recordings)

“Intensity is the keynote of these performances. Mme. Vishnevskaya has a rich dramatic voice of characteristically Slavonic timbre, highly charged emotionally … she is invaluably aided by accompaniments of infinite sensibility by her husband”

Gramophone Magazine

(Tchaikovsky: 1968 recordings)

“The engineers deserve special praise for the spacious recording they have given to the singer’s large voice in this first-rate recording. … I have only room to praise with equal warmth the beautifully sung and played group of Tchaikovsky’s lovely songs – still so neglected. Here Vishnevskaya has most grateful vocal lines and pours forth her voice gloriously”

Click on any of the works listed above for alternative recordings.

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