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Moscow, Cheryomushki

Moscow, Cheryomushki (Russian: Москва, Черёмушки; Moskva, Cheryómushki) is an operetta in three acts by Dmitri Shostakovich, his Op. 105. It is sometimes referred to as simply Cheryomushki. Cheryomushki is a district in Moscow full of cheap subsidized housing built in 1956, and the word is also commonly used for such housing projects in general.

The libretto was written by the experienced team of Vladimir Mass [ru] and Mikhail Chervinsky [ru], leading Soviet humorists of the day. The satirical plot dealt with a topical theme geared to one of the most pressing concerns of urban Russians, the chronic housing shortages and the difficulties of securing liveable conditions. 'Cheryomushki' translates to “bird-cherry trees” and the operetta was named after a real housing estate in south-west Moscow.

The work was completed in 1958 and was premiered in Moscow on 24 January 1959. The operetta is reminiscent of Shostakovich's popular music of the period, yet at the same time it engages a satirical assessment of the housing redevelopments in Moscow.

Composition history Edit

Cheryomushki belongs in the category of Shostakovich's lighter works. While this idiom lent the operetta some initial success, the work soon became forgotten in the Soviet operetta repertoire. For a long time the work remained unknown in the West, and this is partially linked to the decline of the operetta form in the postwar years, and the emergence of newer genres such as the musical.[citation needed]

The operetta tells the story of a group of friends and acquaintances who have been granted new apartments in this residential development. The different aspects of the housing problem are represented by each of the many characters.

  • Sasha, after his recent marriage to Masha, finds that the young couple cannot live together as they have no home. Sasha shares a communal apartment with one of his fellow museum guides, Lidochka and her father, Semyon Semyonovich, while, on the other side of town, Masha shares a room in a temporary hostel.
  • Boris is an explosives expert, who sought to settle in Moscow having worked in many parts of the Soviet Union. In the opening of the operetta, Boris encounters an old acquaintance, Sergei, who works as a chauffeur for a high-ranking official. Sergei meets and falls in love with Liusia, a young alluring construction worker from the Cheryomushki site.
  • The seven “good” characters are unsurprisingly confronted by enemies with conflicting interests. Fyodor Drebednev is an obnoxious bureaucrat who is responsible for the building of the Cheryomushki estate and the allocation of the apartments. Drebednov has been married three times, but now has a new partner, Vava, a Machiavellian young woman who uses her affair as a means of acquiring a new apartment. Barabashkin is the lower-rank estate manager, who is likewise corrupt as his superior, Drebednov.

Performance history Edit

Moscow, Cheryomushki was premiered on 24 January 1959 at the Moscow Operetta Theatre [ru] conducted by Grigori Stolyarov [ru]. Pimlico Opera staged the European premiere at the Lyric Theatre (Hammersmith), London, on 20 October 1994 in a newly commissioned translation by David Pountney and a reduced orchestration by Gerard McBurney. It was revived on 8 February 2004 at the Grand Théâtre de Genève, on 17 December 2004 at the Opéra Nouvel of Lyon. It also embarked on a UK Tour with Opera North and played at the Bregenzer Festspiele with Summer Strallen as Lidochka and Richard Leavey, Michelle Pentecost and Lee Meadows in the ensemble, April 2012 at Chicago Opera Theater.[citation needed] Welsh National Opera produced the work under the title Cherry Town, Moscow in October 2022.[1] Victorian Opera (Melbourne) titled it Melbourne, Cheremushki for their 2023 production at the Arts Centre Melbourne.[2]

Roles Edit

Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 24 January 1959
Conductor: Grigori Stolyarov [ru]
Alexander (called Sasha), a guide at the Museum of the History and Reconstruction of Moscow baritone
Masha, Sasha's wife mezzo-soprano
Lidochka, a fellow museum guide of Sasha's soprano
Semyon Semyonovich, Lidochka's father bass
Boris (called Borya), an explosives expert tenor
Sergei, works as a chauffeur for a high-ranking official and an old acquaintance of Boris tenor
Liusia, a young and alluring construction worker from the Cheryomushki site soprano
Fyodor Drebednev, a bureaucrat who works at the Cheryomushki construction site and who allocates apartments tenor
Vava, having an affair with Drebednev soprano
Barabashkin, a lower-rank estate manager baritone

Synopsis Edit

Time: 1950s
Place: Cheryomushki District in southwest Moscow

Act 1 Edit

The old house where Sasha, Lidochka and her father lived subsides. Consequently, Sasha and his wife Masha, as well as Lidochka and her father, are granted newly built apartments in Cheryomushki. The group are driven to the estate by Sergei, who knows Cheryomushki since his on-off girlfriend Liusia worked there, and by Boris, who has fallen in love with Lidochka. Unfortunately, when they arrive, the estate manager Barabashkin is unwilling to hand over the keys, restricting access to many of the apartments.

Act 2 Edit

Since Barabashkin will not give up the keys, Boris cunningly uses the construction crane to lift Lidochka and her father into their new apartment through their window. While they are settling into their new home, Drebednov and Barabashkin abruptly burst through a hole in the wall from the adjacent flat. The new occupants are ejected, but Barabashkin's intentions are uncovered. He has refused to give Lidochka and her father the keys in order that Drebednov, who allocated the adjacent apartment to his girlfriend, could please her by illegally taking two apartments and joining them together to make more luxurious accommodation. By doing this, the old lecher tried to ensure Vava's continuing devotion. After the corruption of Drebednov is revealed, Sasha and Masha hold a housewarming party at their flat, where the good characters agree to defeat Drebednov and Barabashkin.

In the closing scene, Boris attempts to exploit a previous liaison with Vava by making love to her when he knows Drebednov will see them, thus undermining their affair. However, his underhand plot is dismissed by his idealistic friends, who seek a less realistic solution. Liusia helps the tenants create a magic garden, complete with a bench, where bureaucrats are not heard and only the truth is told. Consequently, Drebednov and Barabashkin confess their crimes and are vanquished. They all live happily ever after.

Interpretations Edit

The operetta is one of Shostakovich's longest compositions and includes pastiches of various musical genres and styles.

Shostakovich criticized his own work. Just days before the opera's premiere at the Moscow Operetta Theatre, he wrote to his friend Isaac Glikman:

I am behaving very properly and attending rehearsals of my operetta. I am burning with shame. If you have any thoughts of coming to the first night, I advise you to think again. It is not worth spending time to feast your eyes and ears on my disgrace. Boring, unimaginative, stupid. This is, in confidence, all I have to tell you.[3]

Soviet ethnomusicologists[which?] have long asserted that Cheryomushki is abundant with intonations of popular Soviet material. In the second fantasy scene, “Lidochka and Boris’s Duet”, Shostakovich parodies the nationalist aesthetics of the Mighty Handful. This is the scene in which the infatuated Boris smuggles Lidochka into her apartment on the crane. With its mock medieval melody, the parallel fifths in the bass line and the use of a horn solo, the orchestral introduction recalls a retrospective style, reminiscent of Yaroslavna's arioso from Borodin’s opera Prince Igor or the first bars of the “bardic” slow movement from Borodin's 2nd Symphony. For the Soviet audiences, the intonation of popular styles would have been immediately recognisable.[citation needed]

Screen adaptation Edit

In 1963, Lenfilm released a film version directed by Gerbert Rappaport, under the shorter title Cheryomushki. The film featured additional music by Shostakovich.

English adaptation Edit

Pimlico Opera recorded the piece with an English libretto in 1995 on tape and CD, distributed with BBC Music Magazine, volume 3, number 8.

The Pimlico version was presented fully staged by "Young Friends of Opera" (later to become "Opera Factory") in 1998 in Auckland, New Zealand. Director Carmel Carroll, music director Claire Caldwell, choreography Mary-Jane O'Reilly, design John Eaglen. The cast of more than 50 included in lead roles Deidre Harris, Sarah Kent, Harriet Moir, Rebecca Samuel, Andrew Buchanan, John Humphries, Sebastian Hurrell, Wade Kernot and Chris Vovan.

One recent English adaptation of the libretto was written by Meg Miroshnik, and produced at Chicago Opera Theater in April 2012. This version used a reduction of the original orchestral score for 14 players commissioned by Pimlico Opera in 1994 by Gerard McBurney.[4]

An English-language production of Moscow, Cheryomushki under the name Cherry Town, Moscow will be performed by WNO Youth Opera in the Wales Millennium Centre in 2022, with a new English translation by David Pountney.

Instrumental arrangements Edit

A suite for orchestra was arranged in 1997 by Andrew Cornall for a Decca recording by Riccardo Chailly.[5] A suite arranged for cello and piano was made by Matthew Barley and performed by him and Stephen De Pledge on their 2005 album Reminding.[6][7]

References Edit

Notes

  1. ^ "Welcome to Cherry Town, Moscow". Welsh National Opera. 28 September 2022. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  2. ^ "Victorian Opera: Melbourne, Cheremushki". Limelight. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  3. ^ Fay, p 231
  4. ^ "COT's Shostakovich a tangy blend of song and dance". Chicago Tribune.
  5. ^ "Dmitri Shostakovich (Andrew Cornall) – Moscow Cheryomushki: Suite".
  6. ^ Kerr, Elizabeth (13 August 2022). "Ebony & ivories". New Zealand Listener: 93.
  7. ^ Reminding Quartz QTZ2032 [1]

Sources

  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Performances under the title Cheryomushki". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Performances under the title Cjerjomushki". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Fay, Laurel (1999), Shostakovich: A Life. Oxford University Press.
  • MacDonald, Ian (1990). The New Shostakovich. Oxford University Press.
  • McBurney, Gerard, (2004). “Fried Chicken in the Bird-Cherry Trees”, in Faye, Laurel (ed): Shostakovich and his World. Princeton University Press.
  • Wilson, Elizabeth (2006). Shostakovich: A Life Remembered. Faber and Faber Limited

moscow, cheryomushki, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, factual, accuracy, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, help,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Moscow Cheryomushki news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Moscow Cheryomushki Russian Moskva Cheryomushki Moskva Cheryomushki is an operetta in three acts by Dmitri Shostakovich his Op 105 It is sometimes referred to as simply Cheryomushki Cheryomushki is a district in Moscow full of cheap subsidized housing built in 1956 and the word is also commonly used for such housing projects in general The libretto was written by the experienced team of Vladimir Mass ru and Mikhail Chervinsky ru leading Soviet humorists of the day The satirical plot dealt with a topical theme geared to one of the most pressing concerns of urban Russians the chronic housing shortages and the difficulties of securing liveable conditions Cheryomushki translates to bird cherry trees and the operetta was named after a real housing estate in south west Moscow The work was completed in 1958 and was premiered in Moscow on 24 January 1959 The operetta is reminiscent of Shostakovich s popular music of the period yet at the same time it engages a satirical assessment of the housing redevelopments in Moscow Contents 1 Composition history 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 4 2 Act 2 5 Interpretations 6 Screen adaptation 7 English adaptation 8 Instrumental arrangements 9 ReferencesComposition history EditCheryomushki belongs in the category of Shostakovich s lighter works While this idiom lent the operetta some initial success the work soon became forgotten in the Soviet operetta repertoire For a long time the work remained unknown in the West and this is partially linked to the decline of the operetta form in the postwar years and the emergence of newer genres such as the musical citation needed The operetta tells the story of a group of friends and acquaintances who have been granted new apartments in this residential development The different aspects of the housing problem are represented by each of the many characters Sasha after his recent marriage to Masha finds that the young couple cannot live together as they have no home Sasha shares a communal apartment with one of his fellow museum guides Lidochka and her father Semyon Semyonovich while on the other side of town Masha shares a room in a temporary hostel Boris is an explosives expert who sought to settle in Moscow having worked in many parts of the Soviet Union In the opening of the operetta Boris encounters an old acquaintance Sergei who works as a chauffeur for a high ranking official Sergei meets and falls in love with Liusia a young alluring construction worker from the Cheryomushki site The seven good characters are unsurprisingly confronted by enemies with conflicting interests Fyodor Drebednev is an obnoxious bureaucrat who is responsible for the building of the Cheryomushki estate and the allocation of the apartments Drebednov has been married three times but now has a new partner Vava a Machiavellian young woman who uses her affair as a means of acquiring a new apartment Barabashkin is the lower rank estate manager who is likewise corrupt as his superior Drebednov Performance history EditMoscow Cheryomushki was premiered on 24 January 1959 at the Moscow Operetta Theatre ru conducted by Grigori Stolyarov ru Pimlico Opera staged the European premiere at the Lyric Theatre Hammersmith London on 20 October 1994 in a newly commissioned translation by David Pountney and a reduced orchestration by Gerard McBurney It was revived on 8 February 2004 at the Grand Theatre de Geneve on 17 December 2004 at the Opera Nouvel of Lyon It also embarked on a UK Tour with Opera North and played at the Bregenzer Festspiele with Summer Strallen as Lidochka and Richard Leavey Michelle Pentecost and Lee Meadows in the ensemble April 2012 at Chicago Opera Theater citation needed Welsh National Opera produced the work under the title Cherry Town Moscow in October 2022 1 Victorian Opera Melbourne titled it Melbourne Cheremushki for their 2023 production at the Arts Centre Melbourne 2 Roles EditRoles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 24 January 1959Conductor Grigori Stolyarov ru Alexander called Sasha a guide at the Museum of the History and Reconstruction of Moscow baritoneMasha Sasha s wife mezzo sopranoLidochka a fellow museum guide of Sasha s sopranoSemyon Semyonovich Lidochka s father bassBoris called Borya an explosives expert tenorSergei works as a chauffeur for a high ranking official and an old acquaintance of Boris tenorLiusia a young and alluring construction worker from the Cheryomushki site sopranoFyodor Drebednev a bureaucrat who works at the Cheryomushki construction site and who allocates apartments tenorVava having an affair with Drebednev sopranoBarabashkin a lower rank estate manager baritoneSynopsis EditTime 1950s Place Cheryomushki District in southwest MoscowAct 1 Edit The old house where Sasha Lidochka and her father lived subsides Consequently Sasha and his wife Masha as well as Lidochka and her father are granted newly built apartments in Cheryomushki The group are driven to the estate by Sergei who knows Cheryomushki since his on off girlfriend Liusia worked there and by Boris who has fallen in love with Lidochka Unfortunately when they arrive the estate manager Barabashkin is unwilling to hand over the keys restricting access to many of the apartments Act 2 Edit Since Barabashkin will not give up the keys Boris cunningly uses the construction crane to lift Lidochka and her father into their new apartment through their window While they are settling into their new home Drebednov and Barabashkin abruptly burst through a hole in the wall from the adjacent flat The new occupants are ejected but Barabashkin s intentions are uncovered He has refused to give Lidochka and her father the keys in order that Drebednov who allocated the adjacent apartment to his girlfriend could please her by illegally taking two apartments and joining them together to make more luxurious accommodation By doing this the old lecher tried to ensure Vava s continuing devotion After the corruption of Drebednov is revealed Sasha and Masha hold a housewarming party at their flat where the good characters agree to defeat Drebednov and Barabashkin In the closing scene Boris attempts to exploit a previous liaison with Vava by making love to her when he knows Drebednov will see them thus undermining their affair However his underhand plot is dismissed by his idealistic friends who seek a less realistic solution Liusia helps the tenants create a magic garden complete with a bench where bureaucrats are not heard and only the truth is told Consequently Drebednov and Barabashkin confess their crimes and are vanquished They all live happily ever after Interpretations EditThe operetta is one of Shostakovich s longest compositions and includes pastiches of various musical genres and styles Shostakovich criticized his own work Just days before the opera s premiere at the Moscow Operetta Theatre he wrote to his friend Isaac Glikman I am behaving very properly and attending rehearsals of my operetta I am burning with shame If you have any thoughts of coming to the first night I advise you to think again It is not worth spending time to feast your eyes and ears on my disgrace Boring unimaginative stupid This is in confidence all I have to tell you 3 Soviet ethnomusicologists which have long asserted that Cheryomushki is abundant with intonations of popular Soviet material In the second fantasy scene Lidochka and Boris s Duet Shostakovich parodies the nationalist aesthetics of the Mighty Handful This is the scene in which the infatuated Boris smuggles Lidochka into her apartment on the crane With its mock medieval melody the parallel fifths in the bass line and the use of a horn solo the orchestral introduction recalls a retrospective style reminiscent of Yaroslavna s arioso from Borodin s opera Prince Igor or the first bars of the bardic slow movement from Borodin s 2nd Symphony For the Soviet audiences the intonation of popular styles would have been immediately recognisable citation needed Screen adaptation EditIn 1963 Lenfilm released a film version directed by Gerbert Rappaport under the shorter title Cheryomushki The film featured additional music by Shostakovich English adaptation EditPimlico Opera recorded the piece with an English libretto in 1995 on tape and CD distributed with BBC Music Magazine volume 3 number 8 The Pimlico version was presented fully staged by Young Friends of Opera later to become Opera Factory in 1998 in Auckland New Zealand Director Carmel Carroll music director Claire Caldwell choreography Mary Jane O Reilly design John Eaglen The cast of more than 50 included in lead roles Deidre Harris Sarah Kent Harriet Moir Rebecca Samuel Andrew Buchanan John Humphries Sebastian Hurrell Wade Kernot and Chris Vovan One recent English adaptation of the libretto was written by Meg Miroshnik and produced at Chicago Opera Theater in April 2012 This version used a reduction of the original orchestral score for 14 players commissioned by Pimlico Opera in 1994 by Gerard McBurney 4 An English language production of Moscow Cheryomushki under the name Cherry Town Moscow will be performed by WNO Youth Opera in the Wales Millennium Centre in 2022 with a new English translation by David Pountney Instrumental arrangements EditA suite for orchestra was arranged in 1997 by Andrew Cornall for a Decca recording by Riccardo Chailly 5 A suite arranged for cello and piano was made by Matthew Barley and performed by him and Stephen De Pledge on their 2005 album Reminding 6 7 References EditNotes Welcome to Cherry Town Moscow Welsh National Opera 28 September 2022 Retrieved 8 March 2023 Victorian Opera Melbourne Cheremushki Limelight Retrieved 8 March 2023 Fay p 231 COT s Shostakovich a tangy blend of song and dance Chicago Tribune Dmitri Shostakovich Andrew Cornall Moscow Cheryomushki Suite Kerr Elizabeth 13 August 2022 Ebony amp ivories New Zealand Listener 93 Reminding Quartz QTZ2032 1 Sources Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Performances under the title Cheryomushki L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Performances under the title Cjerjomushki L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Fay Laurel 1999 Shostakovich A Life Oxford University Press MacDonald Ian 1990 The New Shostakovich Oxford University Press McBurney Gerard 2004 Fried Chicken in the Bird Cherry Trees in Faye Laurel ed Shostakovich and his World Princeton University Press Wilson Elizabeth 2006 Shostakovich A Life Remembered Faber and Faber Limited Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moscow Cheryomushki amp oldid 1143501218, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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