Dmitri Hvorostovsky has with roughly ten-year-intervals 
          recorded Mussorgsky’s unfinished song-cycle 
Songs and Dances 
          of Death. In January 1993 he set it down with the Kirov Orchestra 
          under Gergiev in the Shostakovich orchestration, in August 2004 he sang 
          the same version with the St. Petersburg Philharmonic under Temirkanov 
          in Albert Hall at a Proms concert. 
(review). 
          This was coupled with Rachmaninov’s 
Symphonic Dances while 
          the earlier version had a number of Russian opera arias. On the present 
          disc he has returned to Mussorgsky’s original with piano accompaniment. 
          
            
          Hvorostovsky has retained his magnificent dark-tinted baritone in wonderful 
          shape and it is a pleasure to listen to him more than twenty years after 
          his sensational victory at the Cardiff “Singer of the World”-competition 
          in 1989. It is possible that the tone has darkened slightly but there 
          are no signs of wear so far. It could also be argued that his interpretations 
          are even deeper than before but again this is marginal - he was a deep-probing 
          singer also in his relative youth. The 
Lullaby is masterly, the 
          
Serenade has all those important nuances that make you listen 
          with extra closeness, the 
Trepak is invested with violent frenzy 
          and 
The Field Marshal crowns the cycle impressively, not least 
          thanks to his superb articulation. His regular accompanist is a worthy 
          partner - the ‘accompaniment’ is just as important as the 
          singing and Ivari Ilja finds so many colours that one doesn’t 
          miss the orchestra. 
            
          This song-cycle is very often the centre-piece of any recital where 
          it is performed, but on this disc the surroundings are almost equals. 
          Tchaikovsky’s 
Six Songs Op. 73 belong among his last compositions, 
          only followed by his 
Pathétique symphony and his third 
          piano concerto. They are mature works, not too frequently heard, I’m 
          afraid, but they are masterpieces and though they are not strictly speaking 
          a song-cycle there is a unity about them that is very telling. The texts 
          by Daniel Rathaus (or Ratgauz) had all been written the year before 
          Tchaikovsky set them. They are nature poems in, mostly, dark colours 
          and melancholy moods. Whether there is a premonition of death here is 
          another matter. Rathaus lived until 1937 and was only 24 when he wrote 
          them, but the overriding atmosphere in the music has similarities to 
          the 
Pathétique which, according to some opinions, Tchaikovsky 
          wrote anticipating his own imminent death. The songs are not all gloomy 
          on the surface - the fourth song, 
The sun has set, breathes optimism 
          in the final lines: 
I am madly happy, oh, my beautiful friend / Unendingly 
          happy in this night with you! but the music says something else. 
          The same goes for the passionate 
In the midst of gloomy days, 
          where the poet exclaims: 
And again my desire to live glows with passion 
          / To breathe as one with you, to love you! The final song 
Again, 
          as before is an anguished farewell: 
My friend, please, pray to 
          God for me, / Since I am already praying for you. It is soft and 
          inward and Hvorostovsky sings it with immense beauty. 
            
          Sergei Taneyev is probably the least known of the three composers represented 
          on this disc but his music is not infrequently heard today. He studied 
          composition with Tchaikovsky and left a quite substantial oeuvre including 
          four symphonies, lots of chamber music - there are eleven string quartets 
          for a start. He regarded his opera 
Oresteia as his masterpiece 
          - it is being performed at 
Bard 
          Summerscape this year thanks to the enlightened Leon Botstein amd 
          the Bard grandees (Ed.). There are more than sixty songs. The six songs 
          recorded here are charming with a 
Minuet that is rather Haydnesque, 
          a 
Not the wind from on high with a lovely melody in ¾ 
          time, a thrilling 
Winter path with a virtuoso accompaniment, 
          the strange 
Stalactites with a very special accompaniment where 
          one hears the water drops falling. A remarkable composition! As an encore 
          we hear the powerful and dramatic 
Anxiously beats the heart. 
          
            
          After Tchaikovsky and Mussorgsky these songs may seem lightweight but 
          they are certainly fascinating and the singing and playing throughout 
          is riveting. A disc not only for lovers of Russian music. 
            
          
Göran Forsling