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Boris Godunov, opera (Rimsky-Korsakov edition)
Composed by Modest Mussorgsky
Performed by USSR Radio & TV Symphony Orchestra Soloists
with Vladimir Silayev, Andrei Sokolov, Janis Sporgis, Galfira Koroleva, Yuri Mazurok, Alexander Voroshilo, Irina Arkhipova, Vladimir Matorin, Nikolai Nizinenko, Elena Shkolnikova, Artur Eisen, Nina Grigorieva, Anatoly Mishutin, Vladislav Pyavko, Yuri Yelnikov, Alexander Vedernikov, Ludmila Simonova, Vladimir Filippov
Conducted by Vladimir Fedoseyev
Moussorgsky: Boris Godounov,Modest Mussorgsky,Vladimir Fedoseyev,USSR Radio & TV Symphony Orchestra Soloists,Alexander Vedernikov,Alexander Voroshilo,Anatoly Mishutin,Andrei Sokolov,Artur Eisen,Elena Shkolnikova,Galfira Koroleva,Irina Arkhipova,Janis Sporgis,Ludmila Simonova,Nikolai Nizinenko,Nina Grigorieva,Vladimir Filippov,Vladimir Matorin,Vladimir Silayev,Vladislav Piavko,Vladislav Pyavko,Yuri Elnikov,Yuri Masurok,Yuri Mazurok,Yuri Yelnikov,Polygram Records,Classical,Classical Music,Opera,Opera / Operetta / Oratorio,Russian Romantic Opera
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Modest Moussorgsky: Boris Godounov (1869 Version & 1872 Version) - Valery Gergiev / Kirov Opera & Orchestra
Andrei Karabanov , Grigory Karasev , Yuri Laptev , Olga Borodina , Vladimir Galusin , and Kirov Opera & Orchestra Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000DI3M Release Date: 1999-01-12 |
Tracks:
- Boris Godounov: Part 1, Scene 1: Courtyard In The Novodevichy Monastery - Orchestral Introduction - Well What Are You Waiting For?
- Boris Godounov: Part 1, Scene 1 - For Whom Dost Thou Forsake Us?
- Boris Godounov: Part 1, Scene 1 - People Of The Orthodox Faith
- Boris Godounov: Part 1, Scene 1 - Glory To Thee, Our Lord
- Boris Godounov: Part 1, Scene 2 Square In Moscow Kremlin (Coronation Scene) - Long Live Tsar Boris Feodorovich
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 2 - My Soul Is Sad
- Boris Godounov: Part 1, Scene 2 - Glory! Glory! Glory!
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 1: Cell In The Chudov Monastery - Just One More Final Tale
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 1 - Lord, Our Heavenly Father - That Same Dream Again
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 1 - You Have Gone On Writing
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 1 - Holy Father, For A Long Time
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 1 - Boris! Boris!
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 2: An Inn At The Lithuanian Frontier - Can I Bring You Anything, Reverant Fathers?
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 2 - It All Happened In The Town Of Kazan
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 2 Why Don't You Join In The Singing?
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 2 - There He Goes - What Sort Of People Are You?
- Boris Godounov: Part 2, Scene 2 - I Can Read
Tracks:
- Boris Godounov: Part 3: Scene 1: The Tsar's Apartments In The Moscow Kremlin 'Terem' - My Dear Husband
- Boris Godounov: Part 3: - That's Enough Now, My Precious Tsarevich
- Boris Godounov: Part 3: I Have Achieved Supreme Power
- Boris Godounov: Part 3: Yesterday Evening, Pushkin's Servant. . .
- Boris Godounov: Part 3: No! Wait, Wait, Shuisky
- Boris Godounov: Part 3: It Is Not Execution That I Fear
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 1 - A Square In Front Of The Cathedral Of St. Basil - What? Is Mass Over?
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 1: Trrr, Trrr, Tin Hat - The Moon Is On It's Travels
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 1 - What Is He Weeping About?
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 2: Assembly-Hall In The Moscow Kremlin (Death Of Boris) - Boyars Of Noble Rank
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 2 - What? Let Us Vote, Boyars
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 2 - It's A Pity That Prince Shuisky Isn't Here
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 2: Get Away . . . Get Away!
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 2 - A Humble Monk
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 2 - Once In A Deep Sleep
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 2 - Leave Us! All Of You, Go!
- Boris Godounov: Part 4, Scene 2 - O Lord! Look Down
Tracks:
- Boris Godounov: Prologue, Scene 1: A Courtyard In The Novodevichy Monastery - Well, What Are You Waiting For?
- Boris Godounov: Prologue, Scene 1: For Whom Dost Thou Forsake Us?
- Boris Godounov: Prologue, Scene 1: People Of The Orthodox Faith
- Boris Godounov: Prologue, Scene 1: Glory To Thee, Our Lord
- Boris Godounov: Prologue, Scene 2: A Square In The Moscow Kremlin (Coronation Scene) - Long Live Tsar Boris Feodorovich
- Boris Godounov: Prologue, Scene 2 : My Soul Is Sad
- Boris Godounov: Prologue, Scene 2 : Glory! Glory! Glory!
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 1: A Cell In The Chudov Monastery - Just One More Final Tale
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 1 : Lord, Our Heavenly Father - That Same Dream Again
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 1: You Have Gone On Writing
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 1: Holy Father, For A Long Time
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 1: It Is The Bell For Matins
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 2: An Inn On The Lithuanian Frontier - I Caught A Grey Drake
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 2: It All Happened In The Town Of Kazan
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 2: Why Don't You Join In The Singing?
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 2: There He Goes - What Sort Of People Are You?
- Boris Godounov: Act 1, Scene 2: I Can Read
Tracks:
- Boris Godounov: Act 2: The Tsar's Apartments In The Moscow Kremlin (Terem) - Where Are You, My Dear Husband?
- Boris Godounov: Act 2: Ah! That's Enough Now
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : So The Gnat Was Chopping Some Firewood
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : Ah, Nurse, Nanny
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : Ah! - What? Has A Wild Beast. . .
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : I Have Achieved Supreme Power
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : How Heavily Weighs The Right Hand Of The Fearful Judge
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : Ah, Shoo!
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : Our Little Parrot Was Sitting
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : My Son, My Own Dear Child!
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : Ah, The Most Illustrious Orator
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : Take Measures Immediately
- Boris Godounov: Act 2 : At The Cathedral In Uglich
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 1: Marina Mnishek's Dressing Room At The Castle Of Sandomir - On The Azure Vistula
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 1: Enough!
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 1 : Ruzya, I Do Not Need You Today - How Tediously. . .
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 1 : Ah! It's You, My Father!
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 1 : Captivate The Pretender With Your Beauty!
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 1 : Your Eyes Have Started To Sparkle With A Hellish Flame
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2: The Garden Of The Mnishek Castle At Sandomir - At Midnight. . . In The Garden. . . Near The Fountain
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : Tsarevich!
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : A Humble, Sinful Pilgrim
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : Tsarevich, Conceal Yourself!
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : That Crafty Jesuit
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : The WIfe Of That Toothless Debauchee
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : It Is She! Marina!
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : But It Is Not For Amorous Conversations
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : You Alone, Marina I Worship
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : Leaders From All Corners Of Russia
- Boris Godounov: Act 3, Scene 2 : O, Tsarevich, I Beg You, Do Nor Curse Me
Tracks:
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 1: Assembly-Hall In The Moscow Kremlin (Death of Boris) - Boyars Of Noble Rank
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 1 : What? Let Us Vote, Boyars
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 1 : It's A Pity That Prince Shuisky Isn't Here
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 1 : Get Away. . . Get Away!
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 1 : A Humble Monk
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 1 : Once In A Deep Sleep
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 1 : Leave Us! All Of You, Go!
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 1 : O Lord! Look Down
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 2: A Forest Glade Near Kromy (Revolution Scene) - Over Here! Sit Him Down On The Stump!
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 2 : Trrr, Trrr, Tin Hat! - The Moon Is On Its Travels
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 2 : The Sun And The Moon Have Faded
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 2 : Hurrah! Daring Boldness Has Broken Free
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 2 : Domine, Salvum Fac Regem
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 2 : Glory To You, Tsarevich!
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 2 : We, Dmitry Ivanovich
- Boris Godounov: Act 4, Scene 2 : Flow, Flow Bitter Tears!
Amazon.com essential recording
Besides being one of the best modern recordings of this masterpiece about a Macbeth-like czar who murders his way to the top, this five-disc set (sold for the cost of three) presents the opera both in its original 1869 version and in its 1872 revision, side by side. The former is clearly not finished: it needs more scenes (key characters have little stage time), and the ones that do exist don't always make their full dramatic impact. However, there's much brilliance even in nascent form, particularly with the composer's discreet breaks with traditional, functional harmony a full 30 years before Debussy. Even passages that sound inept do so eloquently, thanks to Valery Gergiev's seemingly telepathic rapport with Moussorgsky's psychologically penetrating dramaturgy. Key roles are often double cast, which gives vocal and interpretive variety and shows off just how rich the Kirov Opera is in bass voices. I prefer the earlier Boris (the lighter-voiced, more nuanced Nikolai Putilin) to the beefier Vladimir Vaneev in the later version. The later Grigory, Vladimir Galusin, shouts a bit but in a text-attentive way; besides, his character (the pretend czar) is likely to go for bombast. Borodina's Marina is relentlessly imperious and not sufficiently seductive--the one minor problem in this fine, studio-recorded set that signals a great sonic improvement over Kirov's more fatiguing outings in the Mariinsky Theatre. --David Patrick StearnsCustomer Reviews:
Boris...Boris?.......2006-12-23
Martin
Had my copy.......2006-01-13
But for casting, I prefer the Sony/Abbado. Especially the Boris.
Hey I don't expect this review to be helpful, get them both and decide for youself.
Oh btw the 1869(2 cds) version is not necessary to hear. Have no idea why Gergiev would record it, as the 1872(3 cds) is the definitive complete version.
Also forget all this chat over the Rimsky editing, vs the REAL ORIGINAL and stuff. Makes no difference. What we are all after in this spectatular opera is the casting, chorus, conducting. Who cares which complete version it is, as long as it's done in a superior fashion.
Outstanding performance(s) by Gergiev and his forces.......2003-11-02
Gergiev's "Boris"(es) present an astonishing combination of fire, sweep, drama and musicality in a way I have never heard before. From first note to last in both versions, one is struck by the amount of musical and orchestral detail he is able to bring out, making each scene not only "live" in a dramatic sense, but also pulling the loose threads and uneven scenes together in a way that gives this massive, rambling opera shape and focus. I am simply spellbound by this man's abilities, though I am sure that he must use Toscanini-like rages and epithets to achieve his "miraculous" results!
The Moscow reviewer below is correct: the earlier version of the Pimen-Dmitri scene does not use the original music or words when Grigory (the false Dmitri) awakes. But what does such a niggling detail matter in the face of such an powerful, musical reading?
As for the various performers: neither Nikolai Putilin nor Vladimir Vaneev will efface memories of Boris Christoff's rich, tight-focused voice, but strictly as vocal actors they compete with Christoff and then some. Putilin has the higher voice, more of a baritone really, so that his lowest passages present some problems, and he has the archtypical Slavic "wobble" which means that some of his notes sound a bit shaky; yet he has more voice and a better "ring" on the top than Fedoseyev, the pale-voiced Boris of the early-'80s Philips set. His counterpart in the 1982 version, Vladimir Vaneev, has an altogether darker timbre, more like a Russian Gottlob Frick, and is more of a bass, which means that he comes to some grief in the high-lying passages of the Coronation Scene, but otherwise he is splendid, vocally and histrionically.
The Pimen in both sets, Nikolai Ohotnikov, is absolutely splendid: a rich, warm, well-focused low bass, reminiscent at times of the legendary Lev Sibiriakov (now, there's a name that only die-hard collectors will know!). He, too, sings with tremendous feeling, and is in fact much better than Christoff's Pimen on either set (the 1952 Dobrowen version or the stereo Cluytens version)...for all his vocal gold, Christoff could not project the warmth or humanity of Pimen because he had none in his character. (Don't take my word for it, though: talk to anyone who performed with him, or read Nicolai Gedda's account in his autobiography.)
The 1869 Grigory, Viktor Lutsuk, has a bright, ringing voice and good interpretive skills, but he suffers even worse from Slavic wobble than Putilin. The 1872 Grigory, Vladimir Galusin, is of course one of the great singing-actors of our time, caught here in his early prime with a brighter-sounding top than we are used to.
The Moscow reviewer really seems to hate Olga Borodina's Marina. She sings gloriously but, as usual, with an all-purpose tone that does not show much characterization. Evgeny Nikitin has far and away the finest voice I have ever heard in the role of Rangoni, the underhanded Jesuit, but both singers were easily topped dramatically by Mariana Lipovsek and Serge Leiferkus on the Abbado recording. In fact, this is the greatest "Polish scene" I have ever heard. But there is one detail near the end that simply astonished me: when Marina, Grigory and Rangoni come together in their trio, their voices blend perfectly. This is something I thought I would never hear in a modern opera performance, and certainly not in "Boris"!
As Varlaam, Fyodor Kuznetsov is superb in both sets: this is the best and most rhythmically accurate "Town of Kazan" aria I've ever heard from anyone. As Chaliapin pointed out, Varlaam is not a buffoon, but a wandering pilgrim, a drunk who drinks to soothe his unnamed longings, and the "Town of Kazan" song is not so much a jolly comedy piece as an outburst of this longing for the unnamed, a way of bursting out. Kuznetsov captures this perfectly.
Konstantin Pluzhnikov is a superb Shuisky both vocally and dramatically. Olga Trifonova is a wiry-voiced Xenia but characterizes well. The small roles are all sung well. Evgeny Akimov as the Simpleton will not efface memories of Ivan Kozlovsky, the finest Simpleton on records (in the old Mark Riezen set), or Andrea Velis, who sang the role so well at the Met Opera revival of 1975, but he too is quite good.
The one thing you should remember when judging this recording is that Gergiev, unlike others who have recorded the opera, only used singers from his Kirov Opera company. Galsin and Borodina have become stars, but only after the fact. This is akin to Serafin's using only the Rome Opera cast for his 1943 "Ballo in Maschera," another recording that is remarkably excellent despite the stylistic shortcomings of Beniamino Gigli.
I cannot recommend this recording highly enough. If you have no other "Boris," this is the place to start; and even if you have Christoff, this is the place to go next!
One of the best from russia.......2002-06-21
I go for the so called (most) original, the last one here and if you just want one you can buy it as a one single opera cheaper but this set with two different versions is still a bargain and well worth its money.
I think this is THE most russian opera you could get and Moussorgsky was a genius. And how about Gergiev et al? They are not so bad either (they are VERY good about this) so do youself or a friend a favour and buy this.
beautiful..........2002-03-01
Only problem is the Cyrillic texts are hard to read because I'm very new with these and should have much appreciated a romanised Russian version Livret as well. But that is my problem only and everyone else should have a most enjoying time of grandeur and splendour.
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Moussorgsky: Boris Godounov
Manufacturer: Polygram Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000E2SP Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
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