Gala Mariinsky
Music by Prokofiev, Minkus, Bach/Gounod, Rossini, Mozart, Mussorgsky, Tchaikovsky,
Czerny, Bizet, Saint-Saëns, Stravinsky, Gounod, Wagner and Verdi
Instrumental soloists: Denis Matsuev (piano), Leonidas Kavakos (violin) and
Yuri Bashmet (viola)
Opera: Anna Netrebko (soprano), Olga Borodina (mezzo), Ekaterina Semenchuk (mezzo),
Sergei Semishkur (tenor), Placido Domingo (baritone), Akexei Markov (baritone),
Yevgeny Nikitin (bass-baritone), Ildar Abdrazakov (bass), René Pape (bass),
Mikhail Petrenko (bass),
Academy of Young Singers, Children's Chorus and Chorus of the Mariinsky
Theatre
Ballet: Diana Vishneva, Yekaterina Kondaurova, Ulana Lopatkina, Vladimir Shklyarov,
soloists and corps de ballet of the Mariinsky Theatre, Vaganova Ballet Academy
Ballet
Chorus and Orchestra of the Mariinsky Theatre/Valery Gergiev
Stage direction: Vasilyeva Barkhatov
Television direction: Don Kent
rec. live, Mariinsky II, St Petersburg, 2 May 2013
Sound format: PCM stereo
Picture format: 16:9
Resolution: 1080i High Definition
Region: worldwide
ARTHAUS MUSIK Blu-ray 108153 [120:00]
Today might not seem the best time to be living in Russia
but we can only look on in envy - especially from London with its endless
wrangling over when, where or even whether to build a new concert hall of
international standard - as that country enjoys a striking new addition to
its music scene.
Mariinsky II was inaugurated in May 2013. Within a modern but generally unremarkable
exterior, its designers have successfully created at its heart a very attractive
main auditorium that, while recognisably traditional in shape, also incorporates
the latest hi-tech equipment. At almost 80,000 square metres spread over 10
floors, Mariinsky II is one of the world's largest theatre/concert
venues and, situated alongside the familiar original mid-nineteenth century
Mariinsky Theatre and a concert hall opened in 2006, now forms part of a substantial
arts complex under the control of its ubiquitous supremo Valery Gergiev.
Although the booklet notes describe this as an "Opening Night Black Tie
Gala Concert", shots of the audience suggest that lounge suits were actually
the order of the day, with even Vladimir Putin himself - who appears to be
sitting democratically in the stalls - dressed down for the occasion. In fact,
sitting just behind the President is a man who, horror of horrors, isn't
wearing a tie at all, be it black or any other colour. Given the event's
high profile, it is also worth recording that by no means every seat was filled
that night.
Quite understandably, the evening's programme eschewed anything remotely
highbrow in favour of a mixed sequence of generally familiar and crowd-pleasing
musical excerpts, mostly from the 19th century. None was longer than eight
minutes or so, presumably ensuring that even the least appreciative audience
member wouldn't be bored. The featured artists, both native-born, including
Matsuev, Bashmet, Netrebko, Borodina and Vishneva, and from further afield,
such as Kavakos, Domingo and Pape, were joined on stage by the full range
of the Mariinsky's musical resources - the opera and ballet companies,
chorus, youth ensembles and orchestra.
As seen on this newly-released recording, however, the evening gets off to
a rather odd start. While the orchestra plays music from Prokofiev's
Romeo and Juliet, a terrible semi-animated film - featuring, for
some unexplained reason, a cartoon diamond bouncing around the new building's
interior - is projected onto the rear of the stage. The presumably somewhat
bemused audience thereupon seemingly feels obliged to burst into a round of
applause right in the middle of the music.
The second item on the programme is something of a let-down. The kingdom
of the shades, as choreographed by Petipa for Minkus's ballet
La Bayadère, is usually considered the most exquisitely beautiful
spectacle in classical ballet. Traditionally, 32 members of the corps
de ballet enter one after the other down a diagonal ramp at the back
of the stage, executing a seemingly endless series of arabesques and repeatedly
cross-crossing the ranks of the ones following on behind them. That makes
for a stunning visual spectacle, best appreciated at home on stunning HD in
a 2013 performance from the Bolshoi Ballet (BelAir Classiques Blu-ray BAC501).
On this occasion, however, for some reason the Mariinsky producers do away
with the ramp so that the dancers simply enter and cross the stage at ground
level, thereby sacrificing that breathtaking theatrical effect. Even an extra
18 dancers placed in support at the back of the stage aren't, I fear,
enough to compensate, especially when all we can see is their hand gestures
and not their leg movements. The booklet boasts of Mariinsky II's ability
to deploy "sets for at least four productions in the stage area at the
same time", so it's hard to fathom why the traditional ramped
set for this scene - the fourth longest of the 23 items in the production
and so, I'd have thought, a pretty important one to get right - wasn't
included.
After that disappointment, things begin to look up when a children's
choir sings the Bach/Gounod Ave Maria most affectingly, even though
several of the younger children are quite visibly overawed by the occasion.
The impressive bass Ildar Abdrazakov subsequently comes on stage to sing Don
Basilio's La calunnia from The barber of Seville,
after which we encounter the first real show-stopper of the evening when Denis
Matsuev gives an outstandingly virtuosic performance of Grigory Ginzburg's
arrangement of the Fantasy on Figaro's cavatina.
After the Mariinsky opera company's chorus has delivered an idiomatic
acclamation at the coronation of Tsar Boris Godunov, as imagined
by Mussorgsky, there is, though, another missed opportunity. When an artist
of the calibre of Leonidas Kavakos is featured on the programme, it seems
nothing less than perverse to assign him the somewhat limited role of accompanying
a dancer and hardly to show him on screen at all. Ulyana Lopatkina certainly
performs beautifully in choreographer John Neumeier's Pavlova and
Cecchetti, set to Tchaikovsky's music, but the star violinist's
luxury casting is essentially thrown away.
Allowing for their young ages, children from the Vaganova Academy of Russian
Ballet’s junior classes perform both affectingly and very creditably
to Czerny's music in Harald Lander's Études - a full
version of which on DVD would be very welcome - even though, in the pit, Maestro
Gergiev looks on nervously as though wishing he'd followed the traditional
theatrical advice never to work with children. Adult soloists Anastasia Kolegova,
Kim Kimin and Filipp Styopin then join in, with the young prize-winning Korean
Kimin producing some quite spectacular physical effects (44:29-44:35). Unfortunately,
at this point and for the next few items on the programme an electronic image
of some sort is introduced as the stage backdrop. Composed of closely-spaced
horizontal lines, it looks fine from the audience's perspective - but
whenever close-ups on the performers bring it near the camera lens it introduces
an uncomfortable degree of striation that detracts from the overall clarity
of the on-screen image.
As evidenced by her performance of Les tringles des sistres from
Bizet's Carmen, Ekaterina Semenchuk is not the world's
greatest actress. Her impersonation of a gypsy - essentially lowering her
head and looking up soulfully, à la Princess Diana, while making
stabbing gestures with her fingers - is cruelly exposed when performed in
a formal concert gown and with no props or on-stage action to divert the attention
elsewhere. She certainly sings characterfully, but is taxed by Gergiev's
decision, after a very deliberately paced opening, to speed things up even
more markedly than usual. The Bizet theme then continues as Diana Vishneva
gives a high-kicking and sexy performance in an excerpt from Rodion Shchedrin's
1967 ballet Carmen suite which many readers will no doubt recall
from Rozhdestvensky/Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra's subsequent recording
that featured no less than 47 ear-popping percussion instruments according
to the Melodiya LP cover of the time.
The annoying electronic backdrop becomes even more annoying in a subsequent
excerpt from Tchaikovsky's Iolanta for it begins to change
every 10 or 15 seconds, adding a completely unnecessary distraction as Alexei
Markov delivers a strong performance of the Duke of Burgundy's passionate
Kto mozhet stravnitsya s Matildoy moyey. The next artist to appear
on-stage, Yuri Bashmet, once again suffers the Kavakos treatment, if perhaps
not quite to the same extent, as he is utilised simply in support of ballerina
Ekaterina Kondaurova who takes the role of Saint-Saëns's Dying
swan. Ms Kondaurova herself is most affecting in the role, though, right
to the end, her swan certainly appears to put up a more spirited resistance
to its demise than many others have done.
Another showstopper then comes along in the form of the familiar Song
of the Volga boatmen - or "Hey, ukhnem" ("yo, heave, ho")
as it's better known in Russia and is billed here. Bass Mikhail Petrenko
takes complete command of the stage for this one. I have absolutely no doubt
that in real life he loves kittens and helps old ladies across the road, but
here he adopts a notably threatening facial expression, as though impersonating
a deckhand who'd feed you to the fishes as soon as look at you. Delivering
the song direct to camera and supported by the men of the Mariinsky chorus,
similarly intimidating in spite of their incongruous outfit of dinner jackets,
he proves the maxim that less can very easily be more. The audience loves
it.
While Stravinsky's The rite of spring may no longer cause
riots in the theatre, it is probably still radical enough to frighten any
members of the audience whose conception of ballet derives from childhood
LPs of the Nutcracker suite. Ms Kondaurova and fellow soloists Daria
Pavlenko, Yuri Smekalov and Alexander Sergeyev therefore give us only eight
minutes worth in Sasha Waltz's choreography, but, even so, it offers
a welcome and bracing corrective to the schmaltzy flavour of many of the other
items on the evening's programme. The men of the Mariinsky chorus then
acquit themselves well once again as they support René Pape in his vigorous
delivery of Le veau d'or from Gounod's Faust.
In an evening generally free from anything in the way of on-stage props, the
entry from the wings of no less than six horseless carriages comes as something
of a surprise. They hold the 14 soloists who take part in Act 2, scene 4 of
Rossini's Il vaggio a Reims. This excerpt also marks the first
arrival on stage of superstar Anna Netrebko who here sings the role of Madame
Cortese. The addition of the props and a varied range of attractive and colourful
costumes, the presence of more than just one or two artists on stage, a true
sense of ensemble performance and Rossini's sparkling score all serve
to give a real lift to this particular part of the evening and it has to be
judged as one of its particular successes.
As the Rossini ends, we see that there is one occupant of the carriages who
has yet to emerge - Olga Borodina, here to give us Mon coeur s'ouvre
à ta voix, the best-known aria from Saint-Saëns's Samson et
Dalila. The audience, responding, I suspect, to the familiarity of the
melody rather than to the performance - good though that is - is in raptures.
Unfortunately, the mixed nature of this recording then comes into evidence
once again as the annoying electronic backdrop destroys much of the pleasure
that might have been derived from watching dancers Olga Esina and Alexander
Sergeyev deliver a rather erotic depiction of Leda and the swan as
choreographed by Roland Petit to the music of Bach.
Another superstar - Placido Domingo - is next to arrive, on a stage dominated
by gigantic suits of armour, helmets and gauntlets. His Winterstürme wichen
dem Wonnemond from Wagner's Die Walküre is perhaps a
little less heroic than a younger man might have delivered but he compensates
with a warm, romantic glow to his voice and the experience that comes with
artistic maturity. The audience responds, once again, with great enthusiasm.
A ballet interlude - the closing section of Diamonds from George
Balanchine's Jewels, set to the highly danceable finale of
Tchaikovsky's third symphony - gives the Mariinsky corps de ballet
a chance to sparkle before it's time for the return of one of the heavweight
stars, Ms Netrebko. This time she gives us a powerful account of the Act 1,
scene 1 cavatina (Vieni! t'affretta) from Verdi's Macbeth.
Knocked out by Ms Netrebko's thrilling high notes, the over-eager audience
bursts into applause while she is still only half way through.
After Lady Macbeth's wickedness, someone obviously thought that it
was time for a little lightheartedness, so Ms Netrebko remains on stage for
Mozart's duettino Là ci darem la mano (Don Giovanni)
where she is serenaded, one after the other, by five of the male solo singers
- not the six suggested by the careless booklet notes. Her first suitor brings
her a bunch of roses; not to be outdone, the second brings her a full basket
of them; the third offers a large potted rose bush; while the fourth wheels
a whole market stall of the flowers onto the stage. Ms Netrebko's fifth
admirer is Placido Domingo who serenades her from the conductor's rostrum
where he's temporarily taken over Maestro Gergiev's duties.
With many of the main participants already on stage, the remaining space is
now filled by all the artists we've seen so far, including the full
opera and ballet companies, while the vocalists perform the majestic closing
pages of Tchaikovsky's Iolanta and bring Mariinsky II’s
inaugural gala to an end.
It must have been an impressive evening, no doubt very enjoyable to those
in the audience and gratifying to the Russian social and political elite whose
support made the new complex possible. All that said, I'm really not
so sure about the way it has transferred to the Blu-ray Disc under review.
Quite obviously, that major problem with the electronic backdrop raises issues
of visual quality but, underlying that, there’s a more basic issue.
While the performances are never less satisfying, virtually everything we
see is surprisingly plainly done and fails to celebrate – surely the
point of any gala - the new auditorium's supposedly extensive resources.
General viewers - at whom this recording with its lack of any overarching
artistic theme and its unchallenging contents is presumably targeted, are
also badly served by: (1) the lack of any extra features - instead, the main
screen offers just options to play the concert or to watch trailers for other
DVDs. Thus the disc misses an obvious trick by failing to include even a brief
filmed guide to the building, which is, after all, the raison d'être
of the whole production. Although the booklet notes do major on Mariinsky
II's architecture and facilities, they do so in a dry piece of text
that reads like an architect's initial pitch to the company's
board of directors; (2) completely inadequate details of the music being performed,
its context and any biographical information about the performers involved;
(3) no subtitling of lyrics on the disc, which might have helped make sense
of what's being sung for those unfamiliar with the various operas;
(4) poor presentation, both in the booklet and on screen - did no-one, for
instance, proof-read a caption stating that the choreography is by "Sasha
Walz" when she is really Sasha Waltz?
I suspect that those who buy this disc will have been tempted by the odd individual
item or two. I cannot, however, imagine that too many viewers will decide
to sit through the whole occasion again once they have watched it for the
first time.
Rob Maynard