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The Nightingale (opera)

The Nightingale (Russian: Соловей, romanized: Solovey) is a short opera in three acts by Igor Stravinsky to a Russian-language libretto by him and Stepan Mitusov, based on a tale by Hans Christian Andersen: a nasty Chinese Emperor is reduced to tears and made kind by a small grey bird. It was completed on 28 March 1914 and premiered a few weeks later, on 26 May, by the Ballets Russes conducted by Pierre Monteux at the Palais Garnier in Paris. Publication, by the then Paris-based Éditions Russes de Musique, followed only in 1923 and caused the opera to become known by its French title of Le Rossignol and French descriptor of conte lyrique, or lyric tale, despite its being wholly Russian.

The Nightingale
Opera by Igor Stravinsky
Set design for the premiere by Alexandre Benois
Descriptionlyric tale
Native title
Russian: Соловей
Librettist
  • the composer
  • Stepan Mitusov
Based on"The Nightingale"
by Hans Christian Andersen
Premiere
26 May 1914 (1914-05-26)

Composition edit

Stravinsky began work on the opera in 1908 but put it aside after receiving the next year the commission from Sergei Diaghilev for the ballet The Firebird. He returned to it in 1913 after he had completed three ballets for Diaghilev, Petrushka and The Rite of Spring being the others. Act 1, set at the seashore, was mostly complete by 1909; acts 2 and 3, set at court, were finished in early 1914. Stravinsky was no doubt aware of the advances in his style and technique during the intervening years.

In 1917, Stravinsky created a separate concert work, a symphonic poem, from music from the opera. It was published in 1921 as Chant du Rossignol (Song of the Nightingale).[1]

Performance history edit

For the opera's premiere, the singers were in the pit while their roles were mimed and danced on stage; the mise-en-scène was by Alexandre Benois, who also designed the sets and costumes, and Alexander Sanin; Boris Romanov [ru] was the choreographer.[2] The American premiere took place on 6 March 1926, but in French, at the Metropolitan Opera; this company would perform The Nightingale in its original language for the first time on 3 December 1981.

The Santa Fe Opera in New Mexico presented many operas by Stravinsky during the decade after its founding in 1956. These included, in 1957, The Rake's Progress. Performances of The Nightingale with Stravinsky himself conducting took place in 1962 as part of the composer's 80th birthday celebrations. Other stagings took place in 1963, 1969, 1970 and 1973.[3] In 2014 The Nightingale was paired with Mozart's The Impresario; its action took place in Paris in the 1920s.[4] Santa Fe's cast this time included Brenda Rae, Erin Morley, Meredith Arwady and Anthony Michaels-Moore.[5]

In its 2009 Toronto season, the Canadian Opera Company staged the opera together with shorter works by Stravinsky as The Nightingale and Other Short Fables. This production, directed by Robert Lepage, toured to Japan (the New National Theatre Tokyo),[citation needed] France (2010, Aix-en-Provence Festival),[6] the United States (2011, Brooklyn Academy of Music),[7] Australia (2024 Adelaide Festival).[8]

Roles edit

 
Costume design by Benois for the Fisherman
Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 26 May 1914[9]
Conductor: Pierre Monteux
Nightingale (Соловей) coloratura soprano Aurelia Dobrovolska
Fisherman (Рыбак) tenor Aleksandr Varfolomejev
Cook (Кухарочка) soprano Maria Brian
Emperor (Император) bass Pjotr Pavel Andrejev
Chamberlain (Камергер) bass Aleksandr Belianin
Bonze (Бонза) bass Nikolaj Goulajev
Death (Смерть) contralto Elisabeth Petrenko
1st Japanese emissary (Японский посол 1) soprano Mamsina
2nd Japanese emissary bass Vasilj Saranov
3rd Japanese emissary tenor Fodor Ernst

Synopsis edit

Time: Ancient times
Place: China.

The Fisherman acts as commentator on the story's events.[10]

Act 1 edit

At the seashore just before sunrise, a Fisherman hears the song of the Nightingale, which causes him to forget his troubles. The Cook has brought officials from the court of the Emperor to hear the Nightingale, telling of the beauty of its singing. However, the Nightingale is nowhere to be heard. The Court Chamberlain promises the Cook a position as private cook to the Emperor, if she can find the Nightingale, who finally appears, and receives an invitation from the Cook and the Chamberlain to sing for the Emperor. The Nightingale accepts the invitation, but says that its sweetest song is in the forest.

Act 2 edit

Courtiers festoon the palace with lanterns in advance of the singing of the Nightingale. The Cook describes the Nightingale to the courtiers noting that it is small, gray and virtually invisible, but its song causes its listeners to cry. A procession denotes the Emperor's arrival. He commands the Nightingale to sing, and its singing touches him so deeply that he offers the bird a reward of a golden slipper to wear about its neck. Later, three Japanese emissaries offer the Emperor a mechanical nightingale, which begins to sing. The Emperor is delighted by this novelty. Taking insult at this, the genuine bird flies away, and the angered emperor orders it banished from his realm. He names the mechanical bird "first singer".

Act 3 edit

The Emperor is ill and near death; the figure of Death appears in the Emperor's chamber. The ghosts of the Emperor's past deeds visit him while he calls for his court musicians, but the genuine Nightingale has reappeared, in defiance of the imperial edict, and has begun to sing. Death hears the Nightingale's song and is greatly moved, and asks it to continue, which it does on condition that Death returns to the emperor his crown, sword and standard. Death assents and gradually removes himself from the scene as the Nightingale continues to sing. The Emperor slowly regains his strength, and on seeing the Nightingale, offers it the "first singer" post at court. The Nightingale says that it is satisfied with the Emperor's tears as reward, and promises to sing for him each night from dusk until dawn.

Recordings edit

Year Cast: Nightingale,
Emperor,
Cook,
Death,
Bonze,
Fisherman,
Chamberlain
Conductor,
orchestra and chorus
Label
1990 Phyllis Bryn Julson,
Neil Howlett,
Felicity Palmer,
Elizabeth Laurence,
Michael George,
Ian Caley,
John Tomlinson
Pierre Boulez,
BBC Singers and BBC Symphony Orchestra
CD: Erato Disques
Cat.: 4509-98955-2
plus other pieces[11]
1997 Olga Trifonova,
Paul Whelan,
Pippa Longworth,
Sally Burgess,
Andrew Greenan,
Robert Tear,
Stephen Richardson
Robert Craft,
London Voices and Philharmonia Orchestra
CD: MusicMasters, later Naxos
Cat.: 8557501
plus The Rite of Spring[12]
1999 Natalie Dessay,
Albert Schagidullin,
Marie McLaughlin,
Violeta Urmana,
Maxime Mikhailov,
Vsevolod Grivnov,
Laurent Naouri
James Conlon,
Chorus and Orchestra of the Opéra National de Lyon
CD: EMI Classics
Cat.: 7243 5 56874 2 5
plus Renard;
a film was made of The Nightingale a few years later using this recording and released as a
Virgin Classics DVD: Cat.: 7243 5 44242 9 8

References edit

  1. ^ Le Chant du rossignol, (Stravinsky): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  2. ^ Official program of the premiere.
  3. ^ Santa Fe Opera's performance database
  4. ^ Details of the 2014 production, santafeopera.org
  5. ^ James Keller, "Songbirds at the Opera: The Impresario and Le rossignol, The Santa Fe New Mexican, 18 July 2014
  6. ^ "Lepage's Nightingale wows France". CBC News. 14 July 2010. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  7. ^ "8 Things to Know About The Nightingale and Other Short Fables". Canadian Opera Company. 5 January 2018. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  8. ^ "The Nightingale and Other Fables" (production details). State Opera of South Australia. 2023. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  9. ^ Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Le Rossignol, 26 May 1914". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  10. ^ Calvocoressi, Michel-Dimitri (1 June 1914). "M. Igor Stravinsky's Opera: The Nightingale". The Musical Times. 55 (856): 372–374. doi:10.2307/906925. JSTOR 906925.
  11. ^ Stravinsky / Boulez – Pulcinella, The Song of the Nightingale, The Nightingale, L'Histoire du soldat at Discogs
  12. ^ "Craft / Lso / Philharmonia - Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring - The Nightingale CD", CD Universe

Further reading edit

External links edit

nightingale, opera, this, article, about, 1914, igor, stravinsky, opera, 1982, opera, musical, same, name, charles, strouse, nightingale, musical, 2012, jolla, musical, nightingale, musical, nightingale, russian, Соловей, romanized, solovey, short, opera, thre. This article is about the 1914 Igor Stravinsky opera For the 1982 opera musical of the same name by Charles Strouse see Nightingale musical For the 2012 La Jolla musical see The Nightingale musical The Nightingale Russian Solovej romanized Solovey is a short opera in three acts by Igor Stravinsky to a Russian language libretto by him and Stepan Mitusov based on a tale by Hans Christian Andersen a nasty Chinese Emperor is reduced to tears and made kind by a small grey bird It was completed on 28 March 1914 and premiered a few weeks later on 26 May by the Ballets Russes conducted by Pierre Monteux at the Palais Garnier in Paris Publication by the then Paris based Editions Russes de Musique followed only in 1923 and caused the opera to become known by its French title of Le Rossignol and French descriptor of conte lyrique or lyric tale despite its being wholly Russian The NightingaleOpera by Igor StravinskySet design for the premiere by Alexandre BenoisDescriptionlyric taleNative titleRussian SolovejLibrettistthe composer Stepan MitusovBased on The Nightingale by Hans Christian AndersenPremiere26 May 1914 1914 05 26 Palais Garnier Paris Contents 1 Composition 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 4 2 Act 2 4 3 Act 3 5 Recordings 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksComposition editStravinsky began work on the opera in 1908 but put it aside after receiving the next year the commission from Sergei Diaghilev for the ballet The Firebird He returned to it in 1913 after he had completed three ballets for Diaghilev Petrushka and The Rite of Spring being the others Act 1 set at the seashore was mostly complete by 1909 acts 2 and 3 set at court were finished in early 1914 Stravinsky was no doubt aware of the advances in his style and technique during the intervening years In 1917 Stravinsky created a separate concert work a symphonic poem from music from the opera It was published in 1921 as Chant du Rossignol Song of the Nightingale 1 Performance history editFor the opera s premiere the singers were in the pit while their roles were mimed and danced on stage the mise en scene was by Alexandre Benois who also designed the sets and costumes and Alexander Sanin Boris Romanov ru was the choreographer 2 The American premiere took place on 6 March 1926 but in French at the Metropolitan Opera this company would perform The Nightingale in its original language for the first time on 3 December 1981 The Santa Fe Opera in New Mexico presented many operas by Stravinsky during the decade after its founding in 1956 These included in 1957 The Rake s Progress Performances of The Nightingale with Stravinsky himself conducting took place in 1962 as part of the composer s 80th birthday celebrations Other stagings took place in 1963 1969 1970 and 1973 3 In 2014 The Nightingale was paired with Mozart s The Impresario its action took place in Paris in the 1920s 4 Santa Fe s cast this time included Brenda Rae Erin Morley Meredith Arwady and Anthony Michaels Moore 5 In its 2009 Toronto season the Canadian Opera Company staged the opera together with shorter works by Stravinsky as The Nightingale and Other Short Fables This production directed by Robert Lepage toured to Japan the New National Theatre Tokyo citation needed France 2010 Aix en Provence Festival 6 the United States 2011 Brooklyn Academy of Music 7 Australia 2024 Adelaide Festival 8 Roles edit nbsp Costume design by Benois for the FishermanRoles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 26 May 1914 9 Conductor Pierre MonteuxNightingale Solovej coloratura soprano Aurelia DobrovolskaFisherman Rybak tenor Aleksandr VarfolomejevCook Kuharochka soprano Maria BrianEmperor Imperator bass Pjotr Pavel AndrejevChamberlain Kamerger bass Aleksandr BelianinBonze Bonza bass Nikolaj GoulajevDeath Smert contralto Elisabeth Petrenko1st Japanese emissary Yaponskij posol 1 soprano Mamsina2nd Japanese emissary bass Vasilj Saranov3rd Japanese emissary tenor Fodor ErnstSynopsis editTime Ancient times Place China The Fisherman acts as commentator on the story s events 10 Act 1 edit At the seashore just before sunrise a Fisherman hears the song of the Nightingale which causes him to forget his troubles The Cook has brought officials from the court of the Emperor to hear the Nightingale telling of the beauty of its singing However the Nightingale is nowhere to be heard The Court Chamberlain promises the Cook a position as private cook to the Emperor if she can find the Nightingale who finally appears and receives an invitation from the Cook and the Chamberlain to sing for the Emperor The Nightingale accepts the invitation but says that its sweetest song is in the forest Act 2 edit Courtiers festoon the palace with lanterns in advance of the singing of the Nightingale The Cook describes the Nightingale to the courtiers noting that it is small gray and virtually invisible but its song causes its listeners to cry A procession denotes the Emperor s arrival He commands the Nightingale to sing and its singing touches him so deeply that he offers the bird a reward of a golden slipper to wear about its neck Later three Japanese emissaries offer the Emperor a mechanical nightingale which begins to sing The Emperor is delighted by this novelty Taking insult at this the genuine bird flies away and the angered emperor orders it banished from his realm He names the mechanical bird first singer Act 3 edit The Emperor is ill and near death the figure of Death appears in the Emperor s chamber The ghosts of the Emperor s past deeds visit him while he calls for his court musicians but the genuine Nightingale has reappeared in defiance of the imperial edict and has begun to sing Death hears the Nightingale s song and is greatly moved and asks it to continue which it does on condition that Death returns to the emperor his crown sword and standard Death assents and gradually removes himself from the scene as the Nightingale continues to sing The Emperor slowly regains his strength and on seeing the Nightingale offers it the first singer post at court The Nightingale says that it is satisfied with the Emperor s tears as reward and promises to sing for him each night from dusk until dawn Recordings editYear Cast Nightingale Emperor Cook Death Bonze Fisherman Chamberlain Conductor orchestra and chorus Label1990 Phyllis Bryn Julson Neil Howlett Felicity Palmer Elizabeth Laurence Michael George Ian Caley John Tomlinson Pierre Boulez BBC Singers and BBC Symphony Orchestra CD Erato DisquesCat 4509 98955 2plus other pieces 11 1997 Olga Trifonova Paul Whelan Pippa Longworth Sally Burgess Andrew Greenan Robert Tear Stephen Richardson Robert Craft London Voices and Philharmonia Orchestra CD MusicMasters later NaxosCat 8557501plus The Rite of Spring 12 1999 Natalie Dessay Albert Schagidullin Marie McLaughlin Violeta Urmana Maxime Mikhailov Vsevolod Grivnov Laurent Naouri James Conlon Chorus and Orchestra of the Opera National de Lyon CD EMI ClassicsCat 7243 5 56874 2 5plus Renard a film was made of The Nightingale a few years later using this recording and released as aVirgin Classics DVD Cat 7243 5 44242 9 8References edit Le Chant du rossignol Stravinsky Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Official program of the premiere Santa Fe Opera s performance database Details of the 2014 production santafeopera org James Keller Songbirds at the Opera The Impresario and Le rossignol The Santa Fe New Mexican 18 July 2014 Lepage s Nightingale wows France CBC News 14 July 2010 Retrieved 28 July 2023 8 Things to Know About The Nightingale and Other Short Fables Canadian Opera Company 5 January 2018 Retrieved 16 April 2021 The Nightingale and Other Fables production details State Opera of South Australia 2023 Retrieved 28 July 2023 Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Le Rossignol 26 May 1914 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Calvocoressi Michel Dimitri 1 June 1914 M Igor Stravinsky s Opera The Nightingale The Musical Times 55 856 372 374 doi 10 2307 906925 JSTOR 906925 Stravinsky Boulez Pulcinella The Song of the Nightingale The Nightingale L Histoire du soldat at Discogs Craft Lso Philharmonia Stravinsky The Rite of Spring The Nightingale CD CD UniverseFurther reading editTaruskin Richard 1998 The Nightingale in Stanley Sadie ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Vol 3 pp 604 605 London Macmillan ISBN 0 333 73432 7 1 56159 228 5 Walsh Stephen The Nightingale in Amanda Holden Ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam pp 906 907 ISBN 0 14 029312 4External links edit nbsp Media related to Solovey Le Rossignol at Wikimedia Commons The Nightingale Stravinsky Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Nightingale opera amp oldid 1190003194, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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