Taneyev: Nocturne

This page lists our only recording of Nocturne, by Sergei Taneyev (1856-1915) on CD.

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The Art of Oda Slobodskaya

Catalogue No:

4803524

Discs:

2

Release date:

8th Aug 2011

Barcode:

0028948035243

Medium:

CD
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The Art of Oda Slobodskaya

The Decca & Rymington van Wyck recordings


Balakirev:

Hebrew Melody (Yevreyskaya Melodiya) 1859 (Lermontov/Byron)

Blanter:

In the Forest by the Front Line

Katyusha

Borodin:

From my tears sprang flowers

Morskaya tsaryevna (The Princess Of the Sea)

Cui:

The Fountain Statue at Tsarskoye Selo, Op. 57 No. 17

Grechaninov:

Lullaby, Op. 108

The Dreary Steppe

Like an angel

My country

Kabalevsky:

Nursery Rhymes (7)

Prokofiev:

Dunyushka, Op. 104

Rachmaninov:

Lilacs, Op. 21 No. 5

How fair this spot, Op. 21 No. 7

To my children, Op.26, No. 7

Small island, Op. 14 No. 2

The Soldier’s Wife, Op. 8, No. 4

Rimsky Korsakov:

Three Folksongs

arr. Ippolitov-Ivanov

Shostakovich:

Six Spanish Songs Op. 100

Stravinsky:

Stories for Children (3)

Taneyev:

Nocturne

Dreams

My Heart is Beating

In the Silence of the Night

Tchaikovsky:

Was I not a blade of grass?, Op. 47 No. 7

Zabït tak skoro (So soon forgotten)

If only I had known, Op.47, No.1

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

Puskay pogibnu ya 'Tatiana's Letter Scene' (from Eugene Onegin)

London Symphony Orchestra, Anatole Fistoulari

Child’s Song

Tcherepnin:

I would have kissed you


Oda Slobodskaya (soprano) & Ivor Newton (piano)

CD - 2 discs

$14.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Born in 1888, the Russian soprano Oda Slobodskaya won a scholarship for secondary education but, having completed her schooling, to her displeasure, found herself working with her parents in a second hand clothes shop. Despite having no formal musical training, she travelled, at the age of eighteen, from her hometown of Vilno (then part of the Russian Empire) some 300 miles to St. Petersburg, to audition. She was successful. During the Russian revolution she was ordered to join other singers on obligatory tours to factories and farms to entertain the workers. At the invitation of Diaghilev she starred in the premiere of Stravinsky’s opera Mavra. The impresario Rabinoff organised for her to tour America as star soloist with The Ukranian Chorus and while there she made a successful solo debut at Carnegie Hall in New York. But, as a displaced Russian living abroad when appreciation of the Russian repertoire was minimal, Slobodskaya had difficulty finding a good manager. It was at this point that her career took a most unexpected turn. She was persuaded that as a stop-gap measure to earn some much-needed cash she might utilise her talents in the Variety Theatre rather than the opera house, and so under the assumed name of Odali Careno she made her variety debut in Baltimore in 1928. Dressed in a stunning eau-de-nile gown, she was a sensation, singing a mixture of familiar opera arias, ballads and popular songs.

Slobodskaya’s recordings are few and far between. A handful of Medtner songs with the composer at the piano were recorded early in the 20th century for HMV. In 1938 she recorded eight sides of Russian songs for a limited edition set of four 78s issued by the Rimington van Wyck record shop in Leicester Square. Slobodskaya had been heard on the radio by Mr. Frederick T. Smith, owner of RvW, and he was so overwhelmed by her voice that he paid for the records to be recorded by Decca. They were issued in May 1942 in a limited edition of 2000 in an attractive brown and gold album. Decca recorded her again in 1945 and 1946, and then in 1961.

The recordings are of cult status, much sought after by collectors of great vocal treasures, and this is their first issue on Decca CD. Andrew Dalton has compiled the collection and provided the liner notes, and the booklet is illustrated with all the album jackets as well as illustrations from program booklets, making this a real collector’s item.

This release marks the launch of an Eloquence series of notable recitals of songs and opera arias by some of the great voices of Decca and Deutsche Grammophon.

playTanayev: Nocturne

playTchaikovsky: Was I not a blade of grass?

playTanayev: Dreams

playTanayev: My Heart is Beating

playTanayev: In the Silence of the Night

playTcherepnin: I would have kissed you

playRachmaninov: Lilacs

playRachmaninov: How pleasant it is here!

playCui: The Statue at Tsarskoye Sel

playTchaikovsky: To Forget So Soon Tchaikovsky

playTchaikovsky: If only I had known

playTchaikovsky: The golden cornfields

playThree Folksongs: Reminiscences

playThree Folksongs: I'm sitting on a stone

playThree Folksongs: The merry wife

playGretchaninov: Lullaby

playGretchaninov: The Dreary Steppe

playGretchaninov: Like an angel

playGretchaninov: My country

playBorodin: From my tears sprang flowers

playBorodin: The Sea Princess

playBalakirev: Hebrew Melody

playTchaikovsky: Evgney Onegin: Tatyana’s Letter Scene

playTchaikovsky: Child Song

playRachmaninov: To the children

playRachmaninov: The Little Island

playRachmaninov: The Soldier’s Wife

playProkofiev: Dunyushka, Op. 104

playBlanter: In the forest of the frontline

playBlanter: Katyusha

playStravinsky: Three Tales for Children: I

playStravinsky: Three Tales for Children: II

playStravinsky: Three Tales for Children: III

playKabalevsky: Seven Nursery Rhymes: I

playKabalevsky: Seven Nursery Rhymes: II

playKabalevsky: Seven Nursery Rhymes: III

playKabalevsky: Seven Nursery Rhymes: IV

playKabalevsky: Seven Nursery Rhymes: V

playKabalevsky: Seven Nursery Rhymes: VI

playKabalevsky: Seven Nursery Rhymes: VII

playShostakovich: Six Spanish Songs, Op. 100: I

playShostakovich: Six Spanish Songs, Op. 100: II

playShostakovich: Six Spanish Songs, Op. 100: III

playShostakovich: Six Spanish Songs, Op. 100: IV

playShostakovich: Six Spanish Songs, Op. 100: V

playShostakovich: Six Spanish Songs, Op. 100: VI

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

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