Zhenitba (opera)

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Operas by Modest Mussorgsky

Salammbô (1866)
The Marriage (1868)
Boris Godunov (1872)
Mlada (1872)
Khovanshchina (1880)
Sorochintsï Fair (1880)

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Zhenitba (Russian: Женитьба, Zhenit'ba, Marriage) is an unfinished opera begun in 1868 by Modest Mussorgsky to his own libretto based on Nikolai Gogol's comedy (1842). The Marriage is a satire of courtship and cowardice, which centres around a young woman, Agafya, who is wooed by four bachelors, each with his own idiosyncrasies.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Composition history

Nikolay Gogol(1809—1852)
Nikolay Gogol
(1809—1852)

The idea to set Gogol's Marriage to music came from the advice and influence of Alexander Dargomyzhsky, who began to compose his own experimental opera, The Stone Guest, to Pushkin's tragedy just two years earlier (in 1866). Dargomyzhsky declared that the text would be set "just as it stands, so that the inner truth of the text should not be distorted", and in a manner that abolished the 'unrealistic' division between aria and recitative in favour of a continuous mode of syllabic but lyrically heightened declamation somewhere between the two.

In 1868, Mussorgsky rapidly set the first eleven scenes of Zhenitba, with his priority being to render into music the natural accents and patterns of the play's naturalistic and deliberately humdrum dialogue. The aim of Mussorgsky was to create individual musical signatures for each character using the natural rhythms of the text. The first act was completed in 1868 in a vocal score. The score is inscribed with the following details:

"The work began on Tuesday, June 11, 1868 in Petrograd (St. Petersburg), and was finished on Tuesday, July 8, 1868 in the village Shilovo, Tula District."

The Marriage was one of Mussorgsky's first musical masterpieces. It was an experiment in Russian opera, using grotesque and satirical musical language.

[edit] Performance history

Notable performances

Role Voice 1868 1906
Podkolyosin baritone Modest Mussorgsky Sigizmund Blumenfeld
Kochkarev tenor Aleksandr Dargomïzhskiy A. P. Sandulenko
Fyokla Ivanovna mezzo-soprano Aleksandra Purgold Sonya Rimskaya-Korsakova
Stepan bass Velyaminov Gury Stravinsky

Note: Aleksandra Purgold (later Molas) is the sister of Nadezhda Purgold (later Rimskaya-Korsakova), Sigizmund Blumenfeld is the brother of conductor Felix Blumenfeld, Sonya Rimskaya-Korsakova is the daughter of Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, and Gury Stravinsky is the brother of composer Igor Stravinsky.

[edit] Publication history

  • 1908, vocal score edition by Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, V. Bessel and Co., St. Petersburg
  • 1933, vocal score, original composer’s version, Muzgiz together with Universal Edition, Moscow, in the second issue of Volume IV of the Complete Works by Mussorgsky

[edit] Versions

Mussorgsky's manuscript, titled:   "An experiment of dramatic music in prose  The Marriage  A completely improbable event in three acts"
Mussorgsky's manuscript, titled:
"An experiment of dramatic music in prose
The Marriage
A completely improbable event in three acts"
  • Gauk: The opera was also orchestrated by the Russian conductor Alexander Gauk and staged in 1917.
  • d'Harcourt: French opera conductor and composer Eugène d'Harcourt created his orchestation in 1930.
  • Duhamel: Duhamel's version is dated as 1954.
WoO Die Heirat (The Marriage), in 2 scenes after a comedy by Nikolai Gogol (65')
Music: First scene by Modest Mussorgsky (1863) (30')
Second scene by Alexander Tcherepnin (1934-1935) (35')
The entire work was orchestrated by Alexander Tcherepnin.
Text in Russian and German. (German translation by Heinrich Burkard)
Orchestration: 2222 / 4221 / percussion / harp / strings

Publisher: Universal Edition

  • Rozhdestvensky

Gennady Rozhdestvensky orchestrated the opera in 1982.

[edit] Roles

Russian English Voice
Подколёсин Podkolyosin, a councillor baritone
Кочкарев Kochkarev, his friend tenor
Фёкла Ивановна Fyokla Ivanovna, a matchmaker mezzo-soprano
Степан Stepan, Podkolyosin's valet bass

[edit] Synopsis

The idle bachelor Podkolyosin attempts to find a wife: “Well, when one considers carefully, one sees that marriage can be very useful.” He currently leads a chaotic life, with his poor servant, Stepan, constantly at his beck and call.

A marriage broker, Fiokla Ivanovna, arrives to give Podkolyosin details of a girl she has chosen for him. However, he is more interested in her dowry: “And what kind of dowry will I receive? Let’s start from the beginning and discuss the dowry…” He also worries that she is not sufficiently highly bred for him: “I don’t suppose she is the daughter of an Officer?... So, is this really the best bargain?”

Fiokla suggests that he can’t afford be fussy with his poor looks and greying hair! Unexpectedly Kochkarev, Podkolyosin’s best friend, turns up and is angry to see the marriage broker. He complains that she has married him off to a troublesome, bossy woman. He sends her away, and decides to take over the match-making duties himself. He paints an idealistic and hassle-free picture of married life for his friend: “There will be a bird in its cage and some embroidery. Just imagine yourself in your chair, quiet and serene and at your side a little caressing woman, all round and pretty. Her hand will stroke you…like this…”

A reluctant Podkolyosin resists Kochkarev’s demands that he at least visit the girl:”Leave it for now… come on, we’ll go tomorrow”. And Kochkarev answers: “You’re an idiot and coward! You are even worse… you’re a sissy and an ass!” And Kochkarev literally shoves Podkolesin out of the door of his apartment. Here the 1st act ends.

[edit] Quotations

“I would very much like my characters on the stage to speak like living people, and in such a manner that the character and force of the intonation, supported by the orchestra and forming the background for their speech, would gain its object, that is, my music must be the artistic reproduction of human speech in all its subtle nuances.” (Mussorgsky).

“I have completed the first act. It rained without stopping for three days running and I worked without stopping in keeping with the weather. The Marriage gave me not a minute of calm – so I wrote it” (Mussorgsky, Summer 1868)

"With all its jolting contrasts and exaggerations, when the composer, in the best Russian- Petersburg tradition, mocks his characters but at the same time "weeps" over them." (Solomon Volkov)

[edit] Discography

  • 1982, Gennady Rozhdestvensky (conductor), USSR Ministry of Culture Symphony Orchestra, Vladimir Khrulev (Podkolyosin), Alexander Podbolotor (Kochkarev), Ludmilla Kolmakoa (Fyokla Ivanovna), Vladimir Ribasenko (Stepan)

[edit] Music and sound samples

The opening bars of the opera
The opening bars of the opera








[edit] External links