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Ruslan and Lyudmila (opera)

Ruslan and Lyudmila (Russian: Руслан и Людмила, tr. Ruslán i Lyudmíla listen) is an opera in five acts (eight tableaux) composed by Mikhail Glinka between 1837 and 1842. The opera is based on the 1820 poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin. The Russian libretto was written by Valerian Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik and N. A. Markevich, among others. Pushkin's death in the famous duel prevented him from writing the libretto himself as planned.

Ruslan and Lyudmila
Opera by Mikhail Glinka
Title page of a score (A. Gutheil, Moscow, 1885)
Native title
Russian: Руслан и Людмила
Librettist
LanguageRussian
Based onRuslan and Ludmila
by Alexander Pushkin
Premiere
27 November 1842 (1842-11-27)
Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre, Saint Petersburg

Today, the best-known music from the opera is its overture.

Performance history edit

The premiere took place in Saint Petersburg on 27 November(Old Style) 1842 at the Bolshoi Kamenniy Teatr. The initial lack of enthusiasm for this Russian-inspired production has been attributed to the Saint Petersburg's audience's growing taste at the time for Italian opera, which was so pronounced that in 1843, Tsar Nicholas I established an Italian opera company in the Bolshoi Kamenniy Teatr, and the Russian opera company lost its home.[1] Four years later, the opera was given its Moscow premiere at the Bolshoi Theatre in 1846. The opera has been a mainstay of the Bolshoi, having staged over 700 performances in 9 different productions over the past 165 years.[2]

The opera was first performed in the UK on 4 June 1931 at the Lyceum Theatre in London and in the US as a concert version in New York on 26 December 1942. It was given its first staged performance in the US by Sarah Caldwell's Opera Company of Boston on 5 March 1977.[3]

Roles edit

Roles, voice types, premiere casts for Saint Petersburg and Moscow
Role Voice type Saint Petersburg premiere,
27 November(Old Style) 1842
Conductor: Karl Albrecht
Moscow premiere, 1846
Conductor: Ivan Iogannis
Svetozar, Great Prince of Kiev bass Sergey Baykov
Lyudmila, his daughter soprano Mariya Stepanova Mariya Stepanova
Ruslan, a Kievan knight, Lyudmila's betrothed bass Osip Petrov Semen Hulak-Artemovsky
Ratmir, a Khazar prince contralto Anfisa Petrova Anna Petrova-Vorobyova
Farlaf, a Varangian knight bass Dominic Tozi Osip Petrov
Gorislava, a captive of Ratmir soprano Emiliya Lileyeva Emiliya Lileyeva
Finn, a good sorcerer tenor Lev Leonov Lev Leonov
Naina, an evil sorceress mezzo-soprano Yelizaveta Rïkalova (Marcel)
Bayan, a bard tenor N. Likhansky
Chorus, silent roles: the evil sorcerer Chernomor, the Head, Sons of Svetozar, knights, boyars and boyarynyas, chamber-maids and nurse-maids, page boys, bodyguards, cupbearers, stolniks, the Prince's armed force, people, maids of the magic castle, blackamoors, dwarves, slaves of Chernomor, nymphs, water nymphs

Synopsis edit

Time: The time of Kievan Rus' (9th to 13th centuries)
Place: Kiev; various imaginary and fantastic locations

Act 1 edit

In Svetozar's banquet hall, the wedding feast for Ruslan and Lyudmila is taking place. The guests listen to Bayan sing a song foretelling misfortune for the bride and groom, followed by happiness from true love. Lyudmila, saddened by the prospect of leaving her father, offers words of comfort to her unsuccessful suitors, Farlaf and Ratmir, and then pledges herself to Ruslan. Svetozar blesses the couple. All of a sudden everything goes dark and there is a crash of thunder. The people are paralysed by a spell while two monsters carry Lyudmila away. When light returns and everyone recovers, they panic over Lyudmila's disappearance. Svetozar promises half his kingdom and Lyudmila's hand to the man who brings her back. The three suitors ready themselves for the journey to find Lyudmila.

Act 2 edit

Tableau 1

Ruslan comes upon the cave of the kindly wizard Finn, who tells him that the evil sorcerer Chernomor has absconded with Lyudmila and that Ruslan is the man who will destroy him. Ruslan asks Finn why he lives in this deserted place, and Finn relates the story of many years ago, when he was a shepherd in his distant homeland (he says he is "a Finn") and fell in love with a beautiful girl named Naina. When she rejected his declaration of love, he went off to do battle with enemies for booty. Returning with this booty, he presented it to Naina, but she yet again spurned him. Then he resolved to study magic to win her; many years went by, and through sorcery he finally summoned an old, grey-haired, humpbacked woman – it was Naina, who now was mad with passion for him. He ran away from her and has been hiding from her ever since. For abandoning her, Naina is consumed by vengeful hatred, which will likewise fall upon Ruslan. Assuring him that Lyudmila will not be harmed, Finn instructs Ruslan to head north, and the two of them exit in opposite directions.

Tableau 2

In a deserted place, the cowardly Farlaf wonders whether he should continue searching for Lyudmila, when the decrepit Naina approaches him. She promises to get Lyudmila for him and send Ruslan far away. She disappears, and Farlaf rejoices in his triumph.

 
Ruslan Meeting the Talking Head, by Ivan Bilibin

Tableau 3

Ruslan, having come upon a foggy desert strewn with weapons and bones from a past battle, wonders at the cause of this scene and whether he, too, may end up the same way. He chooses a new shield and spear from the ground to replace his broken weaponry, but cannot find a sword heavy enough to complete his new set of armor. When the fog lifts, a giant Head is revealed and blows through its lips to bring up a storm so as to drive Ruslan away. When Ruslan strikes the head with his spear, the Head falls back and reveals a sword underneath. He takes it and asks the Head whence it came. As it is dying, the Head explains that it once was a giant, and his dwarf brother is the evil sorcerer Chernomor. The sword was destined to kill both of them; so, in order to forestall fate, Chernomor tricked the giant, beheaded him, and flew his live head away to the distant desert to keep the sword protected underneath it. With the sword now in Ruslan's hands, the Head calls for vengeance on Chernomor.

Act 3 edit

Young maidens are luring passing travelers to enter Naina's magical castle. Gorislava appears, looking for Ratmir, who had taken her captive and then abandoned her. After she goes away for a moment, Ratmir himself comes on the scene and falls under the spell of the maidens, who seduce him with dance. The final guest attracted to the castle is Ruslan, who finds himself forgetting Lyudmila upon seeing Gorislava. Suddenly Finn appears; and, after pronouncing a happy fate for Ratmir with Gorislava, and for Ruslan with Lyudmila, the castle turns into a forest as they resolve to rescue Lyudmila.

Act 4 edit

 
The Gardens of Chernomor, by Andreas Roller (1842)

Within Chernomor's magical gardens, Lyudmila longs for Ruslan and resists the influence of the enchanted surroundings. Chernomor with his retinue arrives; dances are performed. A trumpet call signals a challenge from Ruslan. Chernomor puts Lyudmila under a sleeping spell and goes off to fight Ruslan, who shortly comes on the scene triumphantly wearing Chernomor's beard around his helmet. Although he is disheartened by Lyudmila's condition, Ruslan, along with Ratmir and Gorislava, resolve to return to Kiev with Lyudmila to seek the aid of the magicians there. Chernomor's former slaves freely come along.

Act 5 edit

Tableau 1

In a moonlit valley, Ruslan, Ratmir, and Gorislava, with Lyudmila, have camped for the night. Ratmir, who is standing guard, worries about Ruslan, and then expresses his happiness at his reunion with Gorislava. Suddenly the slaves report that Lyudmila once again has been abducted and that Ruslan has left in search of her. Finn appears, gives a magic ring to Ratmir that will awaken Lyudmila when she is brought back to Kiev.

Tableau 2

Lyudmila lies asleep in Svetozar's banquet hall. It turns out that Farlaf, with Naina's assistance, kidnapped Lyudmila and brought her to Kiev so as to appear to have been her rescuer. However, he cannot waken her. Horses approach, and Ruslan, Ratmir, and Gorislava arrive. Ruslan brings the magic ring to Lyudmila, and she awakens. As the tableau opens onto a view of Kiev, the people rejoice in their gods, their motherland, and the young couple.

Principal arias and numbers edit

Overture Act 1

Aria: Cavatina "I'm sad, dear father!", Каватина «Грустно мне, родитель дорогой!» (Lyudmila)

Act 2

Aria: Ballad "Welcome, my son", Баллада «Добро пожаловать, мой сын» (Finn, Ruslan)
Aria: Rondo "The hour of my triumph is near", Рондо «Близок уж час торжества моего» (Farlaf)
Aria: "O field, field, who has strewn you with dead men's bones", «О поле, поле, кто тебя усеял мертвыми костями» (Ruslan)

Act 3

Aria: "Night shadow's followed the ardent heat", «И жар и зной сменила ночи тень» (Ratmir)
Dances

Act 4

Aria: Aria (Lyudmila)
March: Chernomor's March, «Марш Черномора» (orchestra)
Oriental Dances, «Восточные танцы» (orchestra)
  1. Turkish Dance, «турецкий танец»
  2. Arabian Dance, «арабский танец»
  3. Lezginka, «лезгинка»

Structure edit

Analysis edit

 
Glinka composing Ruslan and Lyudmila, by Ilya Repin

As with A Life for the Tsar, Ruslan employs some aspects of Russian folk music; it is also noted for imaginative use of dissonance, chromaticism, and Eastern elements. Of particular consequence is the use of the whole tone scale for the first time in Russian music.[4] It is particularly associated thematically with Chernomor and, as a result, became so popular among Russian composers for suggesting evil or ominous personages or situations, that even today Russian musicians refer to the whole tone scale as gamma Chernomora, or "Chernomor's scale".[5]

The rollicking overture is one of the best known orchestral showpieces in the West and known for being a nightmare for bassists.[6] An orchestral feature of act 1 is the use of piano and harp to suggest the timbre of the gusli. Glinka's debt to Western operatic models is abundantly apparent in Farlaf's Rondo, a Russian emulation of Figaro's "Largo al factotum" from Rossini's The Barber of Seville.

Glinka's variation treatment of folk melody crystallized in Ruslan into what has been called his influential "changing background technique", used, for example, in Finn's ballad and the Head's narrative, but seen to best advantage in the Persian Chorus that opens act 3, where the tune remains intact through five statements while the orchestral background is changed completely on each repetition.[7]

Along with its counterpart A Life for the Tsar, this second opera by Glinka confirmed a Russian national operatic foundation that was to be built upon by the next generation of Russian composers. In particular, Ruslan served as the model for Russian operatic fairy tales, particularly those of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.[8]

Recordings edit

In popular culture edit

The 1992 video game Tetris Classic incorporated the opera's overture as its title theme, and arranged selections of the opera are featured throughout the game.[9][10] The overture was also used as the theme tune for the TV series Mom,[11] the children's TV series Oscar's Orchestra, and the BBC Radio 4 sitcom Cabin Pressure.[12]

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Maes, Francis (2001). A History of Russian Music: From Kamarinskaya to Babi Yar. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. pp. 24–25. ISBN 0-520-21815-9.
  2. ^ "Bolshoi Theatre presents first première on its refurbished Main Stage". State Academic Bolshoi Theatre of Russia. Retrieved 29 September 2012.
  3. ^ Holden, Amanda, ed. (2001). The New Penguin Opera Guide. New York: Penguin Putnam. p. 312. ISBN 0-14-029312-4.
  4. ^ Kahan, Sylvia (2009). In Search of New Scales: Prince Edmond De Polignac, Octatonic Explorer. Rochester, New York: University of Rochester Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-58046-305-8.
  5. ^ Bruhn, Siglind (2002). Voicing the Ineffable: Musical Representations of Religious Experience. Hillsdale, New York: Pendragon Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-1-57647-089-3.
  6. ^ "CSO Llewellyn Series: Violin features standout Tchaikovsky from Harry Bennetts", The Canberra Times, 9 November 2017
  7. ^ Brown, David (1980). Russian Masters 1: Glinka, Borodin, Balakirev, Musorgsky, Tchaikovsky. New York: W. W. Norton. p. 20. ISBN 0-393-31585-1.
  8. ^ Ferman, V. (2002). "Pushkin in Russian Music". Pushkin: A Collection of Articles and Essays on the Great Russian Poet A. S. Pushkin. Honolulu: University Press of the Pacific. p. 185. ISBN 0-89875-917-X.
  9. ^ Goldin, Stephen (1992). Tetris Classic instruction manual. Spectrum HoloByte. p. 3.
  10. ^ Riezenman, Michael (September 1992). "EEs' tools & toys: Tetris set to music". IEEE Spectrum. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. p. 84.
  11. ^ "Mom (TV Series 2013– )". IMDb. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  12. ^ "Cabin Pressure – Production Details". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 27 January 2015.

Further reading edit

External links edit

ruslan, lyudmila, opera, ruslan, lyudmila, russian, Руслан, Людмила, ruslán, lyudmíla, listen, opera, five, acts, eight, tableaux, composed, mikhail, glinka, between, 1837, 1842, opera, based, 1820, poem, same, name, alexander, pushkin, russian, libretto, writ. Ruslan and Lyudmila Russian Ruslan i Lyudmila tr Ruslan i Lyudmila listen is an opera in five acts eight tableaux composed by Mikhail Glinka between 1837 and 1842 The opera is based on the 1820 poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin The Russian libretto was written by Valerian Shirkov Nestor Kukolnik and N A Markevich among others Pushkin s death in the famous duel prevented him from writing the libretto himself as planned Ruslan and LyudmilaOpera by Mikhail GlinkaTitle page of a score A Gutheil Moscow 1885 Native titleRussian Ruslan i LyudmilaLibrettistValerian Shirkov Nestor Kukolnik N A MarkevichLanguageRussianBased onRuslan and Ludmilaby Alexander PushkinPremiere27 November 1842 1842 11 27 Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre Saint PetersburgToday the best known music from the opera is its overture Contents 1 Performance history 2 Roles 3 Synopsis 3 1 Act 1 3 2 Act 2 3 3 Act 3 3 4 Act 4 3 5 Act 5 4 Principal arias and numbers 5 Structure 6 Analysis 7 Recordings 8 In popular culture 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPerformance history editThe premiere took place in Saint Petersburg on 27 November Old Style 1842 at the Bolshoi Kamenniy Teatr The initial lack of enthusiasm for this Russian inspired production has been attributed to the Saint Petersburg s audience s growing taste at the time for Italian opera which was so pronounced that in 1843 Tsar Nicholas I established an Italian opera company in the Bolshoi Kamenniy Teatr and the Russian opera company lost its home 1 Four years later the opera was given its Moscow premiere at the Bolshoi Theatre in 1846 The opera has been a mainstay of the Bolshoi having staged over 700 performances in 9 different productions over the past 165 years 2 The opera was first performed in the UK on 4 June 1931 at the Lyceum Theatre in London and in the US as a concert version in New York on 26 December 1942 It was given its first staged performance in the US by Sarah Caldwell s Opera Company of Boston on 5 March 1977 3 nbsp Aleksandra Krutikova as Ratmir 1880s nbsp Fyodor Shalyapin as Farlaf 1901 nbsp Lidiya Zvyagina as Ratmir 1900s nbsp Antonina Nezhdanova as Lyudmila 1911 Roles editRoles voice types premiere casts for Saint Petersburg and Moscow Role Voice type Saint Petersburg premiere 27 November Old Style 1842Conductor Karl Albrecht Moscow premiere 1846Conductor Ivan IogannisSvetozar Great Prince of Kiev bass Sergey BaykovLyudmila his daughter soprano Mariya Stepanova Mariya StepanovaRuslan a Kievan knight Lyudmila s betrothed bass Osip Petrov Semen Hulak ArtemovskyRatmir a Khazar prince contralto Anfisa Petrova Anna Petrova VorobyovaFarlaf a Varangian knight bass Dominic Tozi Osip PetrovGorislava a captive of Ratmir soprano Emiliya Lileyeva Emiliya LileyevaFinn a good sorcerer tenor Lev Leonov Lev LeonovNaina an evil sorceress mezzo soprano Yelizaveta Rikalova Marcel Bayan a bard tenor N LikhanskyChorus silent roles the evil sorcerer Chernomor the Head Sons of Svetozar knights boyars and boyarynyas chamber maids and nurse maids page boys bodyguards cupbearers stolniks the Prince s armed force people maids of the magic castle blackamoors dwarves slaves of Chernomor nymphs water nymphsSynopsis editTime The time of Kievan Rus 9th to 13th centuries Place Kiev various imaginary and fantastic locations Act 1 edit In Svetozar s banquet hall the wedding feast for Ruslan and Lyudmila is taking place The guests listen to Bayan sing a song foretelling misfortune for the bride and groom followed by happiness from true love Lyudmila saddened by the prospect of leaving her father offers words of comfort to her unsuccessful suitors Farlaf and Ratmir and then pledges herself to Ruslan Svetozar blesses the couple All of a sudden everything goes dark and there is a crash of thunder The people are paralysed by a spell while two monsters carry Lyudmila away When light returns and everyone recovers they panic over Lyudmila s disappearance Svetozar promises half his kingdom and Lyudmila s hand to the man who brings her back The three suitors ready themselves for the journey to find Lyudmila Act 2 edit Tableau 1Ruslan comes upon the cave of the kindly wizard Finn who tells him that the evil sorcerer Chernomor has absconded with Lyudmila and that Ruslan is the man who will destroy him Ruslan asks Finn why he lives in this deserted place and Finn relates the story of many years ago when he was a shepherd in his distant homeland he says he is a Finn and fell in love with a beautiful girl named Naina When she rejected his declaration of love he went off to do battle with enemies for booty Returning with this booty he presented it to Naina but she yet again spurned him Then he resolved to study magic to win her many years went by and through sorcery he finally summoned an old grey haired humpbacked woman it was Naina who now was mad with passion for him He ran away from her and has been hiding from her ever since For abandoning her Naina is consumed by vengeful hatred which will likewise fall upon Ruslan Assuring him that Lyudmila will not be harmed Finn instructs Ruslan to head north and the two of them exit in opposite directions Tableau 2In a deserted place the cowardly Farlaf wonders whether he should continue searching for Lyudmila when the decrepit Naina approaches him She promises to get Lyudmila for him and send Ruslan far away She disappears and Farlaf rejoices in his triumph nbsp Ruslan Meeting the Talking Head by Ivan BilibinTableau 3Ruslan having come upon a foggy desert strewn with weapons and bones from a past battle wonders at the cause of this scene and whether he too may end up the same way He chooses a new shield and spear from the ground to replace his broken weaponry but cannot find a sword heavy enough to complete his new set of armor When the fog lifts a giant Head is revealed and blows through its lips to bring up a storm so as to drive Ruslan away When Ruslan strikes the head with his spear the Head falls back and reveals a sword underneath He takes it and asks the Head whence it came As it is dying the Head explains that it once was a giant and his dwarf brother is the evil sorcerer Chernomor The sword was destined to kill both of them so in order to forestall fate Chernomor tricked the giant beheaded him and flew his live head away to the distant desert to keep the sword protected underneath it With the sword now in Ruslan s hands the Head calls for vengeance on Chernomor Act 3 edit Young maidens are luring passing travelers to enter Naina s magical castle Gorislava appears looking for Ratmir who had taken her captive and then abandoned her After she goes away for a moment Ratmir himself comes on the scene and falls under the spell of the maidens who seduce him with dance The final guest attracted to the castle is Ruslan who finds himself forgetting Lyudmila upon seeing Gorislava Suddenly Finn appears and after pronouncing a happy fate for Ratmir with Gorislava and for Ruslan with Lyudmila the castle turns into a forest as they resolve to rescue Lyudmila Act 4 edit nbsp The Gardens of Chernomor by Andreas Roller 1842 Within Chernomor s magical gardens Lyudmila longs for Ruslan and resists the influence of the enchanted surroundings Chernomor with his retinue arrives dances are performed A trumpet call signals a challenge from Ruslan Chernomor puts Lyudmila under a sleeping spell and goes off to fight Ruslan who shortly comes on the scene triumphantly wearing Chernomor s beard around his helmet Although he is disheartened by Lyudmila s condition Ruslan along with Ratmir and Gorislava resolve to return to Kiev with Lyudmila to seek the aid of the magicians there Chernomor s former slaves freely come along Act 5 edit Tableau 1In a moonlit valley Ruslan Ratmir and Gorislava with Lyudmila have camped for the night Ratmir who is standing guard worries about Ruslan and then expresses his happiness at his reunion with Gorislava Suddenly the slaves report that Lyudmila once again has been abducted and that Ruslan has left in search of her Finn appears gives a magic ring to Ratmir that will awaken Lyudmila when she is brought back to Kiev Tableau 2Lyudmila lies asleep in Svetozar s banquet hall It turns out that Farlaf with Naina s assistance kidnapped Lyudmila and brought her to Kiev so as to appear to have been her rescuer However he cannot waken her Horses approach and Ruslan Ratmir and Gorislava arrive Ruslan brings the magic ring to Lyudmila and she awakens As the tableau opens onto a view of Kiev the people rejoice in their gods their motherland and the young couple Principal arias and numbers editOverture Act 1 Aria Cavatina I m sad dear father Kavatina Grustno mne roditel dorogoj Lyudmila Act 2 Aria Ballad Welcome my son Ballada Dobro pozhalovat moj syn Finn Ruslan Aria Rondo The hour of my triumph is near Rondo Blizok uzh chas torzhestva moego Farlaf Aria O field field who has strewn you with dead men s bones O pole pole kto tebya useyal mertvymi kostyami Ruslan Act 3 Aria Night shadow s followed the ardent heat I zhar i znoj smenila nochi ten Ratmir DancesAct 4 Aria Aria Lyudmila March Chernomor s March Marsh Chernomora orchestra Oriental Dances Vostochnye tancy orchestra Turkish Dance tureckij tanec Arabian Dance arabskij tanec Lezginka lezginka Structure editOvertureAct 1 No 1 Introduction No 2 Cavatina Lyudmila No 3 FinaleAct 2 No 4 Entr acte No 5 Ballad Finn No 6 Duettino Ruslan Finn No 7 Scene and Rondo Farlaf No 8 Aria Ruslan No 9 Scene with the Head No 10 Finale Tale of the Head Act 3 No 11 Entr acte No 12 Persian Chorus No 13 Cavatina Gorislava No 14 Aria Ratmir No 15 Dances Allegro moderato Adagio Grazioso Coda No 16 Finale Act 4 No 17 Entr acte No 18 Scene and Aria Lyudmila No 19 March of Chernomor No 20 Oriental Dances No 21 Chorus No 22 FinaleAct 5 No 23 Entr acte No 24 Romance Ratmir No 25 Recitative and Chorus No 26 Duet Finn Ratmir No 27 FinaleAnalysis edit nbsp Glinka composing Ruslan and Lyudmila by Ilya RepinAs with A Life for the Tsar Ruslan employs some aspects of Russian folk music it is also noted for imaginative use of dissonance chromaticism and Eastern elements Of particular consequence is the use of the whole tone scale for the first time in Russian music 4 It is particularly associated thematically with Chernomor and as a result became so popular among Russian composers for suggesting evil or ominous personages or situations that even today Russian musicians refer to the whole tone scale as gamma Chernomora or Chernomor s scale 5 The rollicking overture is one of the best known orchestral showpieces in the West and known for being a nightmare for bassists 6 An orchestral feature of act 1 is the use of piano and harp to suggest the timbre of the gusli Glinka s debt to Western operatic models is abundantly apparent in Farlaf s Rondo a Russian emulation of Figaro s Largo al factotum from Rossini s The Barber of Seville Glinka s variation treatment of folk melody crystallized in Ruslan into what has been called his influential changing background technique used for example in Finn s ballad and the Head s narrative but seen to best advantage in the Persian Chorus that opens act 3 where the tune remains intact through five statements while the orchestral background is changed completely on each repetition 7 Along with its counterpart A Life for the Tsar this second opera by Glinka confirmed a Russian national operatic foundation that was to be built upon by the next generation of Russian composers In particular Ruslan served as the model for Russian operatic fairy tales particularly those of Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov 8 Recordings edit1938 Samuil Samosud conductor Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra and Chorus Maksim Mikhaylov Svetozar Valeria Barsova Lyudmila Mark Reizen Ruslan Yelizaveta Antonova Ratmir Vasiliy Lubenchov Farlaf Yelena Slivinskaya Gorislava Nikander Khanayev Finn Lyudmila Stavrovskaya Naina Solomon Khromchenko Bayan 1952 Kirill Kondrashin conductor Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra and Chorus Vladimir Gavriushov Svetozar Vera Firsova Lyudmila Ivan Petrov Ruslan Eugenia Verbitskaya Ratmir Alexei Krivchenya Farlaf Nina Pokrovskaya Gorislava Georgi Nelepp Finn Elena Korneyeva Naina Sergei Lemeshev Bayan 1979 Yuri Simonov conductor Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra and Chorus Valeri Yaroslavtsev Svetozar Bela Rudenko Lyudmila Evgeny Nesterenko Ruslan Tamara Sinyavskaya Ratmir Boris Morozov Farlaf Nina Fomina Gorislava Aleksei Maslennikov Finn Galina Borisova Naina Alexander Arkhipov Bayan 1995 DVD Valery Gergiev conductor Kirov Orchestra Opera Chorus and Ballet St Petersburg in association with San Francisco Opera Mikhail Kit Svetozar Anna Netrebko Lyudmila Vladimir Ognovenko Ruslan Larissa Diadkova Ratmir Gennady Bezzubenkov Farlaf Galina Gorchakova Gorislava Konstantin Pluzhnikov Finn Irena Bogachova Naina Yuri Marusin Bayan 2011 DVD Vladimir Jurowski conductor Orchestra and Choir of the Bolshoi Theatre Albina Shagimuratova Lyudmila Mikhail Petrenko Ruslan Yuriy Mynenko Ratmir Almas Svilpa Farlaf Alexandrina Pendatchanska Gorislava Charles Workman de Finn Bayan Vladimir Ognovenko Svetozar Elena Zaremba Naina In popular culture editThe 1992 video game Tetris Classic incorporated the opera s overture as its title theme and arranged selections of the opera are featured throughout the game 9 10 The overture was also used as the theme tune for the TV series Mom 11 the children s TV series Oscar s Orchestra and the BBC Radio 4 sitcom Cabin Pressure 12 References editNotes Maes Francis 2001 A History of Russian Music From Kamarinskaya to Babi Yar Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press pp 24 25 ISBN 0 520 21815 9 Bolshoi Theatre presents first premiere on its refurbished Main Stage State Academic Bolshoi Theatre of Russia Retrieved 29 September 2012 Holden Amanda ed 2001 The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam p 312 ISBN 0 14 029312 4 Kahan Sylvia 2009 In Search of New Scales Prince Edmond De Polignac Octatonic Explorer Rochester New York University of Rochester Press p 41 ISBN 978 1 58046 305 8 Bruhn Siglind 2002 Voicing the Ineffable Musical Representations of Religious Experience Hillsdale New York Pendragon Press p 31 ISBN 978 1 57647 089 3 CSO Llewellyn Series Violin features standout Tchaikovsky from Harry Bennetts The Canberra Times 9 November 2017 Brown David 1980 Russian Masters 1 Glinka Borodin Balakirev Musorgsky Tchaikovsky New York W W Norton p 20 ISBN 0 393 31585 1 Ferman V 2002 Pushkin in Russian Music Pushkin A Collection of Articles and Essays on the Great Russian Poet A S Pushkin Honolulu University Press of the Pacific p 185 ISBN 0 89875 917 X Goldin Stephen 1992 Tetris Classic instruction manual Spectrum HoloByte p 3 Riezenman Michael September 1992 EEs tools amp toys Tetris set to music IEEE Spectrum Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers p 84 Mom TV Series 2013 IMDb Retrieved 3 March 2018 Cabin Pressure Production Details British Comedy Guide Retrieved 27 January 2015 Further reading editTaruskin Richard Ruslan and Lyudmila The New Grove Dictionary of Opera edited by Stanley Sadie subscription required External links edit nbsp Media related to Ruslan and Lyudmila opera at Wikimedia Commons Ruslan and Ludmila Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Overture animated score on YouTube Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ruslan and Lyudmila opera amp oldid 1151713442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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