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Sadko (opera)

Sadko (Russian: Садко, tr. Sadkó listen , the name of the main character) is an 1898 opera in seven scenes by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. The libretto was written by the composer, with assistance from Vladimir Belsky, Vladimir Stasov, and others.[1] Rimsky-Korsakov was first inspired by the bylina of Sadko in 1867, when he completed a tone poem on the subject, his Op. 5. After finishing his second revision of this work in 1891, he decided to turn it into a dramatic work.[2]

Sadko
Opera by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Feodor Chaliapin as the Varangian Guest, in 1897
Native title
Russian: Садко
LibrettistRimsky-Korsakov
LanguageRussian
Premiere
7 January 1898

The music is highly evocative, and Rimsky-Korsakov's famed powers of orchestration are abundantly evident throughout the score. According to the Soviet critic Boris Asafyev, writing in 1922,[3] Sadko constitutes the summit of Rimsky-Korsakov's craft. From the opus 5 tone poem the composer quoted its most memorable passages, including the opening theme of the swelling sea,[1] and other themes as leitmotives[4] – he himself set out to "utilize for this opera the material of my symphonic poem, and, in any event, to make use of its motives as leading motives for the opera".[5]

Performance history

The composer was closely involved in the "assiduous" rehearsals, and he "drilled the orchestra with great care, together with [the conductor] Esposito who proved a very fair musician". Rimsky also corrected errors in the score and worked hard with the chorus. Apart from the Sea-King singer "whom I could not endure" he approved of all the solo singers and singled out Zabyela, who "sang magnificently" and Syekar-Rozhanski.[6]

The world premiere took place on 7 January 1898 (O.S. 26 December 1897), presented by the Russian Private Opera at the Solodovnikov Theatre in Moscow. Its conductor was Eugenio Esposito,[7][need quotation to verify] the brother of Michele Esposito,[8] with scenic designers Konstantin Korovin and Sergey Malyutin. The production was financed by the railway tycoon Savva Mamontov; this was the first time that one of Rimsky-Korsakov's operas was staged by a commercial theatre rather than the Imperial Theatres.[9] The St. Petersburg premiere followed 26 January 1901 at the Mariinsky Theatre, conducted by Eduard Nápravník, with scenic design by Apollinary Vasnetsov.[citation needed]

In 1906, the opera was presented at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow conducted by Vyacheslav Suk, with scenic design by Konstantin Korovin. The first US performance occurred at the Metropolitan Opera in New York on 25 January 1930 in French with Tullio Serafin, followed a year later by the first performance in London in June 1931.[10]

A truncated production was mounted in Monte Carlo in 1921, conducted by Victor de Sabata, with Dimitri Smirnov in the title role. Revivals took place at the Bolshoi in 1935, 1949 and 1963. A production at the Berlin Staatsoper in 1947 featured Ludwig Suthaus, Erna Berger and Margarete Klose.[11] Aleksandr Ptushko directed a film of the opera in 1952 with the music but without singing.[11] A new production by Alexei Stepaniuk for the Mariinsky Theatre in 1993 was later toured to Paris (Théâtre des Champs-Élysées) and recorded.[11]

Sadko is rarely performed today outside the Russian Federation. However, there have been recent perfromances by Opera Vlaanderen and in Bratislava.

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast
Moscow, 7 January 1898
(Conductor: Eugenio Esposito)
Premiere cast
St. Petersburg, 26 January 1901
(Conductor: Eduard Nápravník)
Foma Nazarich, doyen, elder of Novgorod tenor
Luka Zinovich, governor, elder of Novgorod bass Vladimir Mayboroda
Sadko, gusli-player and singer in Novgorod tenor Anton Sekar-Rozhansky Aleksandr Davïdov
Lyubava Buslayevna, his young wife mezzo-soprano Aleksandra Rostovtseva Nina Fride
Nezhata, young gusli-player from Kiev contralto Varvara Strakhova Mariya Dolina
Duda, skomorokh bass Aleksandr Brevi
Sopel, skomorokh tenor
The Varangian, overseas guest bass I. Aleksanov Aleksandr Antonovsky
The Indian, overseas guest tenor Yekab Karklin Mitrofan Chuprïnnikov
The Venetian, overseas guest baritone I. Petrov Aleksandr Smirnov
Ocean-Sea, the Sea King bass Anton Bedlevich Konstantin Serebryakov
Volkhova, the beautiful princess; his youngest, favorite daughter soprano Emilia Negrin-Schmidt Adelaida Bolska
The Apparition, a mythic mighty warrior in the guise of a pilgrim baritone
Chorus, silent roles: Merchants of Novgorod, wandering minstrels, sailors, maidens, inhabitants of the undersea kingdom, people

Synopsis

 
Volkhova costume design by Mikhail Vrubel, 1897
 
Volkhova costume design by Mikhail Vrubel, 1897

(Note: Instead of traditional acts, Sadko is divided in seven scenes, and, as that type of structure would suggest, is more loosely constructed than a traditional opera. The opera is usually performed in three or five acts, depending on how the scenes are grouped: Three acts – 1–2, 3–4, 5–6–7 or 1–2–3, 4, 5–6–7: Five acts – 1, 2–3, 4, 5–6, 7)

Time: The historical figure Sadko lived in the 12th century.
Place: The action takes place in Novgorod and in the legendary realm of the Sea-King.

The opera tells the story of Sadko, a gusli player (guslar), who leaves his wife, Lubava, and home in Novgorod and eventually returns a wealthy man. During his years of travel he amasses a fortune, weds the daughter of the King and Queen of the Ocean and has other adventures. Upon his return, the city and Lubava rejoice.

Scene 1 – The rich mansion of a guild in Novgorod

The wealthy Novgorod merchants congratulate themselves on their prosperity. Nezhata, a gusli player from Kiev, sings an heroic song. In reply, Sadko also sings, but the merchants laugh at him when he suggests that Novgorod would be more prosperous if a river joined Lake Ilmen to the ocean.

Scene 2 – The shores of Lake Ilmen

Sadko wanders unhappily by the lakeside. His singing attracts some swans, one of which changes into Volkhova, the Sea Princess, who wishes to marry a mortal. She explains to Sadko how to catch three golden fish which will lead to his fortune after a long voyage. The Princess promises to him to wait patiently for his return. At dawn, from the lake the voice of the Sea-King is heard. He calls his daughters home into the depths. The girls once again turn into white swans and swim away into the distance.

Scene 3 – An attic in Sadko's home (in Novgorod)

Sadko's wife, Lubava, is missing her husband. She is happy when he comes home at last, but distressed when he announces his intention to leave immediately in order to seek his fortune.

Scene 4 – A pier in Novgorod (on the banks of Lake Ilmen)

Merchants assemble at the quayside and Nezhata sings another gusli song. The merchants deride Sadko when he explains how he will win his fortune by catching three golden fish. Sadko bets them that he can do this, and, after he is successful in catching the fish, he wins their ships to take on his voyage. He sets about gathering a crew for his voyage. Three visiting merchants, a Viking, an Indian and a Venetian, sing in turn of their homelands (Song of India). Sadko decides to set sail for Venice.

Scene 5 – A peaceful expanse of the ocean

Sadko's fleet of ships is returning home, laden with treasure, but becomes becalmed. Sadko's crew throw treasure over the side to propitiate the Sea-King, but no wind appears. Sadko is left behind, clinging to a log, when the wind suddenly picks up while he is overboard.

Scene 6 – In the depths of the sea

The scene shifts to the realm of the sea-king, where Sadko sings to the king and queen, winning the hand of their daughter, Volkhova. The wedding celebrations become so boisterous that a storm springs up, sinking ships on the surface of the sea, and the realm of the Sea-King is destroyed. The end of the reign of the pagan king is heralded by an apparition of a Christian pilgrim (actually St Nicholas of Mozhaysk).[12] Sadko and Volkhova escape the destruction on a sea-shell.

Scene 7 – Novogrod, a green meadow on the shores of Lake Ilmen

Sadko is asleep by the lakeside. Volkhova watches over him and sings a lullaby. Before he wakes, she bids him farewell and then disappears, becoming changed into the River Volkhova that now links Lake Ilmen with the sea. Lubava finds her husband asleep and wakes him: he believes that his voyage was nothing but a dream, but the sight of the new river and his fleet of ships convinces him that he really is now a very wealthy man.

Principal arias and numbers

 
Sadko, painting by Ilya Repin (1876)
 
  • Three arias fit into the plot as descriptions by foreign merchants of their respective countries.
    • Song of the Varangian Guest (Песня Варяжского гостя), or "Song of the Viking Guest"
    • Song of the Indian Guest (Песня Индийского гостя)
    • Song of the Venetian Guest (Песня Веденецкого гостя)
  • Volkhova's Lullaby (Колыбельная Волховы)

Recordings

  • 1950, Nikolai Golovanov (conductor), USSR Bolshoi Theatre Soloists, Chorus and Orchestra, Georgi Nalepp (Sadko), Yelizaveta Shumskaya (Volkhova), Vera Davydova (Lyubava), Sergei Krasovsky (King of the Sea), Yelizaveta Antonova (gusli-player), Sergei Koltypin (Buffoon 1), Alexei Peregudov (Buffoon 2), Tikhon Chernyakov (Novgorod head), Stephan Nikolau (voyvode), Mark Reizen (Viking merchant), Ivan Kozlovsky (Indian merchant), Pavel Lisitsian (Venetian merchant), Ilya Bogdanov (Mighty Old Man). (Melodiya LP M10 01480, 4 records; Preiser Mono 90655, 3 discs; Naxos Classical Archives 9.80931-33).
  • 1994, Valery Gergiev (conductor), Kirov Orchestra and Chorus of the Marijinski Theater, St. Petersburg, Vladimir Galouzine (Sadko), Valentina Tsidipova (Volkhova), Marianna Tarassova (Lyubava), Sergei Aleksashkin (King of the Sea). (Philips CD 442 138–2, 3 discs; reissued as part of Decca set Rimsky-Korsakov: 5 Operas 478 2705, 11 discs, but without text or translation).

Video

  • 1980 live performance: Yuri Simonov (conductor), Orchestra & Chorus of the Bolshoi Theatre. Vladimir Atlantov (Sadko), Tamara Milashkina (Volkhova), Irina Arkhipova (Lyubava), Boris Morozov (King of the Sea), Alexandre Ognivstev (Viking Guest), Lev Kuznetsov (Indian Guest), Alexander Voroshilo (Venetian Merchant). Mono. 173 minutes. (DVD VAI 4512; Classound DVD CLASS 001)
  • 1994, Valery Gergiev (conductor), Kirov Orchestra and Chorus of the Marijinski Theater (artist details as for CD version listed)

Related works

  • Rimsky-Korsakov's earlier symphonic poem Sadko, Op. 5 (1867), may be regarded as a precursor to the opera, as it is based on the same story and the opera incorporates several musical ideas from the orchestral work. There are three versions:
  1. Episode from the Bïlina of Sadko (1867)
  2. Musical Tableau–Sadko (1869)
  3. Musical Tableau–Sadko (1892)

Adaptations

In 1922 the English composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji wrote a pastiche on the "Hindu Merchant's Song" as the third of his Three Pastiches for Piano. In 1953, a Russian film directed by Aleksandr Ptushko entitled Sadko based on the opera and featuring Rimsky-Korsakov's music was released. The 1953 Soviet biopic Rimsky-Korsakov features pieces of the opera. Tommy Dorsey's 1938 instrumental arrangement of the "Song of the Indian Guest" is a jazz classic, compiled on This Is Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra, Vol. 1.

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Taruskin 1997
  2. ^ Abraham, Gerald. Rimsky Korsakov – A Short Biography. Duckworth, London, 1945, pp. 87–88.
  3. ^ Quoted in Morrison 2001, p. 263
  4. ^ Abraham, pp. 96–97.[incomplete short citation]
  5. ^ Rimsky-Korsakoff 1924, p. 292.
  6. ^ Rimsky-Korsakoff 1924, pp. 313–314.
  7. ^ Taruskin 1997, para. 4.
  8. ^ Horner, para. 2.
  9. ^ Morrison 2001, p. 262.
  10. ^ Holden 2001, p. 752.
  11. ^ a b c Kaminski 2003, p. 1280
  12. ^ Morrison 2001, pp. 285–286.

Sources

  • Abraham, Gerald (1936). "XI. Sadko". Studies in Russian Music. London: William Reeves / The New Temple Press. pp. 221–245.
  • Holden, Amanda, ed. (2001). The New Penguin Opera Guide. New York: Penguin Putnam. ISBN 0-14-029312-4.
  • Horner, Keith. "Esposito, Michele". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  • Kaminski, Piotr (2003). "Rimski-Korsakov: Sadko". Mille et un opéras. Paris: Fayard.
  • Morrison, Simon (2001). "The Semiotics of Symmetry, or Rimsky-Korsakov's operatic history lesson". Cambridge Opera Journal. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 13 (3): 261–293. doi:10.1017/S0954586701002610. S2CID 191628071.
  • Rimsky-Korsakoff, NA (1924). My Musical Life. Translated by J A Joffe. London: Martin Secker.
  • Taruskin, Richard (1997). "Sadko". The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Retrieved 13 July 2015.

Further reading

  • Harewood, Lord: "Sadko", pp. 944–947 of Kobbé's Complete Opera Book (London: Putnam, 9th Edition 1976); ISBN 0-370-10020-4.
  • Huth, Andrew: booklet included in Rimsky-Korsakov: 5 Operas, Decca Music Group, 2011. 11 CDs 478 2705
  • Warrack, John and West, Ewan: The Oxford Dictionary of Opera (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992), ISBN 0-19-869164-5.

External links

  • Sadko: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Sadko, all dates". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Libretto in transliterated Russian plus Italian translation
  • Compressed version of the libretto in Russian
  • Review of Gergiev recording (CD version) by Steve Schwartz
  • Review of Gergiev recording (DVD version) by Roy J. Guenther
  • Discography
  • Sadko in Bolshoi (1980) on YouTube

sadko, opera, sadko, russian, Садко, sadkó, listen, help, info, name, main, character, 1898, opera, seven, scenes, nikolai, rimsky, korsakov, libretto, written, composer, with, assistance, from, vladimir, belsky, vladimir, stasov, others, rimsky, korsakov, fir. Sadko Russian Sadko tr Sadko listen help info the name of the main character is an 1898 opera in seven scenes by Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov The libretto was written by the composer with assistance from Vladimir Belsky Vladimir Stasov and others 1 Rimsky Korsakov was first inspired by the bylina of Sadko in 1867 when he completed a tone poem on the subject his Op 5 After finishing his second revision of this work in 1891 he decided to turn it into a dramatic work 2 SadkoOpera by Nikolai Rimsky KorsakovFeodor Chaliapin as the Varangian Guest in 1897Native titleRussian SadkoLibrettistRimsky KorsakovLanguageRussianPremiere7 January 1898Solodovnikov Theatre MoscowThe music is highly evocative and Rimsky Korsakov s famed powers of orchestration are abundantly evident throughout the score According to the Soviet critic Boris Asafyev writing in 1922 3 Sadko constitutes the summit of Rimsky Korsakov s craft From the opus 5 tone poem the composer quoted its most memorable passages including the opening theme of the swelling sea 1 and other themes as leitmotives 4 he himself set out to utilize for this opera the material of my symphonic poem and in any event to make use of its motives as leading motives for the opera 5 Contents 1 Performance history 2 Roles 3 Synopsis 4 Principal arias and numbers 5 Recordings 5 1 Video 6 Related works 7 Adaptations 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPerformance history EditThe composer was closely involved in the assiduous rehearsals and he drilled the orchestra with great care together with the conductor Esposito who proved a very fair musician Rimsky also corrected errors in the score and worked hard with the chorus Apart from the Sea King singer whom I could not endure he approved of all the solo singers and singled out Zabyela who sang magnificently and Syekar Rozhanski 6 The world premiere took place on 7 January 1898 O S 26 December 1897 presented by the Russian Private Opera at the Solodovnikov Theatre in Moscow Its conductor was Eugenio Esposito 7 need quotation to verify the brother of Michele Esposito 8 with scenic designers Konstantin Korovin and Sergey Malyutin The production was financed by the railway tycoon Savva Mamontov this was the first time that one of Rimsky Korsakov s operas was staged by a commercial theatre rather than the Imperial Theatres 9 The St Petersburg premiere followed 26 January 1901 at the Mariinsky Theatre conducted by Eduard Napravnik with scenic design by Apollinary Vasnetsov citation needed In 1906 the opera was presented at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow conducted by Vyacheslav Suk with scenic design by Konstantin Korovin The first US performance occurred at the Metropolitan Opera in New York on 25 January 1930 in French with Tullio Serafin followed a year later by the first performance in London in June 1931 10 A truncated production was mounted in Monte Carlo in 1921 conducted by Victor de Sabata with Dimitri Smirnov in the title role Revivals took place at the Bolshoi in 1935 1949 and 1963 A production at the Berlin Staatsoper in 1947 featured Ludwig Suthaus Erna Berger and Margarete Klose 11 Aleksandr Ptushko directed a film of the opera in 1952 with the music but without singing 11 A new production by Alexei Stepaniuk for the Mariinsky Theatre in 1993 was later toured to Paris Theatre des Champs Elysees and recorded 11 Sadko is rarely performed today outside the Russian Federation However there have been recent perfromances by Opera Vlaanderen and in Bratislava Roles EditRole Voice type Premiere castMoscow 7 January 1898 Conductor Eugenio Esposito Premiere castSt Petersburg 26 January 1901 Conductor Eduard Napravnik Foma Nazarich doyen elder of Novgorod tenorLuka Zinovich governor elder of Novgorod bass Vladimir MayborodaSadko gusli player and singer in Novgorod tenor Anton Sekar Rozhansky Aleksandr DavidovLyubava Buslayevna his young wife mezzo soprano Aleksandra Rostovtseva Nina FrideNezhata young gusli player from Kiev contralto Varvara Strakhova Mariya DolinaDuda skomorokh bass Aleksandr BreviSopel skomorokh tenorThe Varangian overseas guest bass I Aleksanov Aleksandr AntonovskyThe Indian overseas guest tenor Yekab Karklin Mitrofan ChuprinnikovThe Venetian overseas guest baritone I Petrov Aleksandr SmirnovOcean Sea the Sea King bass Anton Bedlevich Konstantin SerebryakovVolkhova the beautiful princess his youngest favorite daughter soprano Emilia Negrin Schmidt Adelaida BolskaThe Apparition a mythic mighty warrior in the guise of a pilgrim baritoneChorus silent roles Merchants of Novgorod wandering minstrels sailors maidens inhabitants of the undersea kingdom peopleSynopsis Edit Volkhova costume design by Mikhail Vrubel 1897 Volkhova costume design by Mikhail Vrubel 1897 Note Instead of traditional acts Sadko is divided in seven scenes and as that type of structure would suggest is more loosely constructed than a traditional opera The opera is usually performed in three or five acts depending on how the scenes are grouped Three acts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 or 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Five acts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Time The historical figure Sadko lived in the 12th century Place The action takes place in Novgorod and in the legendary realm of the Sea King The opera tells the story of Sadko a gusli player guslar who leaves his wife Lubava and home in Novgorod and eventually returns a wealthy man During his years of travel he amasses a fortune weds the daughter of the King and Queen of the Ocean and has other adventures Upon his return the city and Lubava rejoice Scene 1 The rich mansion of a guild in NovgorodThe wealthy Novgorod merchants congratulate themselves on their prosperity Nezhata a gusli player from Kiev sings an heroic song In reply Sadko also sings but the merchants laugh at him when he suggests that Novgorod would be more prosperous if a river joined Lake Ilmen to the ocean Scene 2 The shores of Lake IlmenSadko wanders unhappily by the lakeside His singing attracts some swans one of which changes into Volkhova the Sea Princess who wishes to marry a mortal She explains to Sadko how to catch three golden fish which will lead to his fortune after a long voyage The Princess promises to him to wait patiently for his return At dawn from the lake the voice of the Sea King is heard He calls his daughters home into the depths The girls once again turn into white swans and swim away into the distance Scene 3 An attic in Sadko s home in Novgorod Sadko s wife Lubava is missing her husband She is happy when he comes home at last but distressed when he announces his intention to leave immediately in order to seek his fortune Scene 4 A pier in Novgorod on the banks of Lake Ilmen The Song of the Indian Guest source source 1929 recording of transcription for violin and piano featuring violinist Vasa Prihoda Problems playing this file See media help Merchants assemble at the quayside and Nezhata sings another gusli song The merchants deride Sadko when he explains how he will win his fortune by catching three golden fish Sadko bets them that he can do this and after he is successful in catching the fish he wins their ships to take on his voyage He sets about gathering a crew for his voyage Three visiting merchants a Viking an Indian and a Venetian sing in turn of their homelands Song of India Sadko decides to set sail for Venice Scene 5 A peaceful expanse of the oceanSadko s fleet of ships is returning home laden with treasure but becomes becalmed Sadko s crew throw treasure over the side to propitiate the Sea King but no wind appears Sadko is left behind clinging to a log when the wind suddenly picks up while he is overboard Scene 6 In the depths of the seaThe scene shifts to the realm of the sea king where Sadko sings to the king and queen winning the hand of their daughter Volkhova The wedding celebrations become so boisterous that a storm springs up sinking ships on the surface of the sea and the realm of the Sea King is destroyed The end of the reign of the pagan king is heralded by an apparition of a Christian pilgrim actually St Nicholas of Mozhaysk 12 Sadko and Volkhova escape the destruction on a sea shell Scene 7 Novogrod a green meadow on the shores of Lake IlmenSadko is asleep by the lakeside Volkhova watches over him and sings a lullaby Before he wakes she bids him farewell and then disappears becoming changed into the River Volkhova that now links Lake Ilmen with the sea Lubava finds her husband asleep and wakes him he believes that his voyage was nothing but a dream but the sight of the new river and his fleet of ships convinces him that he really is now a very wealthy man Principal arias and numbers Edit Sadko painting by Ilya Repin 1876 Nadezhda Zabela Vrubel as Volkhova by Mikhail Vrubel 1898 Three arias fit into the plot as descriptions by foreign merchants of their respective countries Song of the Varangian Guest Pesnya Varyazhskogo gostya or Song of the Viking Guest Song of the Indian Guest Pesnya Indijskogo gostya Song of the Venetian Guest Pesnya Vedeneckogo gostya Volkhova s Lullaby Kolybelnaya Volhovy Recordings Edit1950 Nikolai Golovanov conductor USSR Bolshoi Theatre Soloists Chorus and Orchestra Georgi Nalepp Sadko Yelizaveta Shumskaya Volkhova Vera Davydova Lyubava Sergei Krasovsky King of the Sea Yelizaveta Antonova gusli player Sergei Koltypin Buffoon 1 Alexei Peregudov Buffoon 2 Tikhon Chernyakov Novgorod head Stephan Nikolau voyvode Mark Reizen Viking merchant Ivan Kozlovsky Indian merchant Pavel Lisitsian Venetian merchant Ilya Bogdanov Mighty Old Man Melodiya LP M10 01480 4 records Preiser Mono 90655 3 discs Naxos Classical Archives 9 80931 33 1994 Valery Gergiev conductor Kirov Orchestra and Chorus of the Marijinski Theater St Petersburg Vladimir Galouzine Sadko Valentina Tsidipova Volkhova Marianna Tarassova Lyubava Sergei Aleksashkin King of the Sea Philips CD 442 138 2 3 discs reissued as part of Decca set Rimsky Korsakov 5 Operas 478 2705 11 discs but without text or translation Video Edit 1980 live performance Yuri Simonov conductor Orchestra amp Chorus of the Bolshoi Theatre Vladimir Atlantov Sadko Tamara Milashkina Volkhova Irina Arkhipova Lyubava Boris Morozov King of the Sea Alexandre Ognivstev Viking Guest Lev Kuznetsov Indian Guest Alexander Voroshilo Venetian Merchant Mono 173 minutes DVD VAI 4512 Classound DVD CLASS 001 1994 Valery Gergiev conductor Kirov Orchestra and Chorus of the Marijinski Theater artist details as for CD version listed Related works EditRimsky Korsakov s earlier symphonic poem Sadko Op 5 1867 may be regarded as a precursor to the opera as it is based on the same story and the opera incorporates several musical ideas from the orchestral work There are three versions Episode from the Bilina of Sadko 1867 Musical Tableau Sadko 1869 Musical Tableau Sadko 1892 Adaptations EditIn 1922 the English composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji wrote a pastiche on the Hindu Merchant s Song as the third of his Three Pastiches for Piano In 1953 a Russian film directed by Aleksandr Ptushko entitled Sadko based on the opera and featuring Rimsky Korsakov s music was released The 1953 Soviet biopic Rimsky Korsakov features pieces of the opera Tommy Dorsey s 1938 instrumental arrangement of the Song of the Indian Guest is a jazz classic compiled on This Is Tommy Dorsey amp His Orchestra Vol 1 References EditNotes a b Taruskin 1997 Abraham Gerald Rimsky Korsakov A Short Biography Duckworth London 1945 pp 87 88 Quoted in Morrison 2001 p 263 Abraham pp 96 97 incomplete short citation Rimsky Korsakoff 1924 p 292 Rimsky Korsakoff 1924 pp 313 314 Taruskin 1997 para 4 Horner para 2 Morrison 2001 p 262 Holden 2001 p 752 a b c Kaminski 2003 p 1280 Morrison 2001 pp 285 286 Sources Abraham Gerald 1936 XI Sadko Studies in Russian Music London William Reeves The New Temple Press pp 221 245 Holden Amanda ed 2001 The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam ISBN 0 14 029312 4 Horner Keith Esposito Michele The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Retrieved 13 July 2015 Kaminski Piotr 2003 Rimski Korsakov Sadko Mille et un operas Paris Fayard Morrison Simon 2001 The Semiotics of Symmetry or Rimsky Korsakov s operatic history lesson Cambridge Opera Journal Cambridge Cambridge University Press 13 3 261 293 doi 10 1017 S0954586701002610 S2CID 191628071 Rimsky Korsakoff NA 1924 My Musical Life Translated by J A Joffe London Martin Secker Taruskin Richard 1997 Sadko The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Retrieved 13 July 2015 Further reading EditHarewood Lord Sadko pp 944 947 of Kobbe s Complete Opera Book London Putnam 9th Edition 1976 ISBN 0 370 10020 4 Huth Andrew booklet included in Rimsky Korsakov 5 Operas Decca Music Group 2011 11 CDs 478 2705 Warrack John and West Ewan The Oxford Dictionary of Opera New York Oxford University Press 1992 ISBN 0 19 869164 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sadko opera Sadko Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Sadko all dates L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Libretto in transliterated Russian plus Italian translation Compressed version of the libretto in Russian Review of Gergiev recording CD version by Steve Schwartz Review of Gergiev recording DVD version by Roy J Guenther Discography Sadko in Bolshoi 1980 on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sadko opera amp oldid 1143270918, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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