Mikhail GLINKA (1804 - 1857)
Ivan Susanin (A Life for the Tsar) (1836)
Nicola Ghiuselev (bass) - Ivan Susanin; Elena Stoyanova (soprano) -
Antonida, Susanin’s daughter; Hristina Angelakova (mezzo-soprano)
- Vanya, an orphan; Roumen Doikov (tenor) - Bogdan Sobinin, Antonida’s
bridegroom; Nicolai Stoilov (bass) - A Russian soldier; Angel Petkov
(tenor) - A Polish messenger; Dimiter Stanchev (bass) - Sigismund III,
King of Poland
Sofia National Opera Chorus and Orchestra/Ivan Marinov
rec. August 1986, Bulgaria Concert Hall
BRILLIANT OPERA COLLECTION 94220 [3 CDs: 75:36 + 61:25 + 63:05]
“Glinka belonged to, or rather founded, the Russian national school
of opera. He was also the first Russian composer who set Russian music
on the European musical map. He travelled widely in Europe, met both
Bellini and Donizetti in Milan and it is possible to hear an influence
from them in this, the first of his two operas. There are several arias
that have a typical Italian bel canto cantilena. He was also
influenced by Rossini; vocally if not dramatically. Sobinin’s
part seems modelled after Arnold in Guillaume Tell with its extremely
high-lying tessitura and need for power and brilliance. Still it is
the Russian element that dominates this score, not least in the important
choral parts. It’s also characteristic of much of the Russian
operatic legacy that the chorus, the Russian people, play such an important
part. He might have learnt something from Rossini, Guillaume Tell
again, but essentially the patriotic feeling paired with an easily recognizable
Russian tone was his pioneering contribution to Russian music. This
element became part and parcel of the Russian operatic tradition, witness
the operas of Mussorgsky, Borodin and Rimsky-Korsakov.
“Premiered in 1836, Ivan Susanin was an immediate success.
When before the first performance Glinka changed the title to A Life
for the Tsar the Tsar also took it to his heart, not surprisingly,
and accepted Glinka’s dedication. During the Soviet regime the
subject of the opera was not comme-il-faut but since it was regarded
as a kind of national opera the text was revised, on Stalin’s
initiative, eliminating all references to the Romanov dynasty. With
the original title restored it was played again at the Bolshoi in 1939.
The revision also meant that parts of the score were removed altogether.”
The above paragraphs are from my review of a Naxos reissue of a Bolshoi
recording originally set down in 1947 and 1950. With all the omissions
mentioned it had a playing time around 35 minutes shorter than the present
recording, which as far as I can understand is absolutely complete.
The action takes place in a village near Moscow and in a Polish army
camp in 1613. In the first act Ivan Susanin, a peasant, brings the news
that the Polish invaders are marching towards Moscow. This causes general
alarm. His son-in-law to be, the soldier Sobinin, comes home and reports
that the Polish forces have been defeated and a new Tsar elected. This
also means that now Sobinin and Antonida can be married. In act two
a big ball is held in the Polish camp. The officers learn that a new
Tsar is to be crowned and plan to kidnap him. In the third act, while
the village people sing patriotic songs about Russia’s victory
and Susanin is planning his daughter’s wedding, Polish soldiers
arrive and try to force Susanin to show them where the future Tsar is
hidden. He agrees but decides to lead them astray and sends his foster-son
Vanya to warn the young Tsar. In the fourth act the soldiers realise
that Susanin has fooled them and he is killed. The epilogue takes place
in Moscow, in Red Square, where the people rejoice in the salvation
of the Tsar and mourn Susanin as a hero. Finally the Tsar arrives and
is crowned.
The colourful music cries out for a spectacular recording and alas that
is not quite what it gets. Though fairly decent it is still a lacklustre
sound, the orchestra sounds dull and flat. This is damaging for the
overture, not anywhere near to the scintillating fireworks of the Ruslan
and Luydmila opening but still an atmospheric piece; but even more
for the second act, in the Polish camp, which in effect is a prolonged
ballet sequence with very little action. I don’t think the orchestral
playing is to blame. The conducting is at least workmanlike and the
well-drilled Sofia chorus is really excellent, in particular the female
voices. The sound is homogenous and with few sprawling voices sticking
out - a far cry from the raw sounds of the old Bolshoi recording. This
is utterly important, since the chorus is in effect the main protagonist.
The focus is on the Russian people. There are even more choral scenes
here than in Boris Godunov, and the crowning glory is the concluding
jubilant double chorus (CD 3 tr. 12).
The solo singing is more variable. Elena Stoyanova, who sings Antonida,
has a basically beautiful voice but her heavy vibrato and shrill top
notes in the long run become rather tiring and there is very little
tonal variety. This Antonida is a very one-dimensional character. Her
husband-to-be, Sobinin, is a hellishly difficult role with high tessitura
and several high Cs. Roumen Doikov is a fighter and he has the stamina
and the top notes, which are delivered with amazing ease but the tone
is bright and penetrating. That said, he can sing softly at times and
then the sound is quite agreeable. He also has the measure of Sobinin’s
fiendishly difficult act IV aria (CD 3 tr. 2). It isn’t beautiful
but he makes it, which is worth a minor celebration. The only really
successful recordings of that aria are with two Nordic singers, Danish-born
Helge Roswaenge, singing it in German in 1942 and the young Nicolai
Gedda in the original Russian from 1957.
The trouser role Vanya doesn’t appear until the beginning of act
III and then with a smile of recognition from the listener who has already
heard the theme in the overture. Hristina Angelakova has personality
but also a vibrato that borders on a wobble. Such is her identification
with the role and her dramatic power that, especially in the great scene
in act IV (CD 3 tr. 3), one readily overlooks that defect.
In the title role we hear one of the foremost basses of the second half
of the 20th century, Nicola Ghiuselev. He was overshadowed
by his compatriot Nicolai Ghiaurov and the Russian Evgeny Nesterenko
but he had a long international career and recorded extensively. Here
aged 50 the tone is somewhat greyer than in recordings from the previous
decades but his legato singing is still exemplary as is his nobility
of tone and he gives a rounded and deeply moving portrait of the folk
hero Ivan Susanin.
Of existing alternative recordings there is the aforementioned 1957
set under Igor Markevitch with Christoff and Gedda. There’s another
production from Sofia 1989 under Emil Tchakarov with Boris Martinovich,
Alexandrina Pendachanska, Chris Merritt and Stefania Toczyska. The best
of all categories is to my mind a DVD from Bolshoi 1992 under Alexander
Lazarev with Nesterenko, Marina Mescheriakova, Alexander Lomonosov and
Elena Zaremba.
However, at Brilliant Classics’ budget price - this recording
was previously available on Capriccio - this is a cheap way of getting
to know the full score of this historically important opera and with
one of the great basses of the not so distant past.
Göran Forsling