Delos is at pains to point out that this is not
your run-of-the-mill highlights disc. This is the first issue in
a series entitled ‘Great Scenes’, aiming to capture the essence
of an opera on one CD or SACD. The idea is to ‘preserve the flow
of an opera’s story and character portrayal’.
The line-up of soloists is certainly an impressive
one. It is wonderful to note that Elena Prokina takes the part of
Lisa; and Dmitri Hvorostovsky hardly needs any introduction.
Queen of Spades is, indeed, one of Tchaikovsky’s
sublime masterworks, and Executive Producer Amelia Haygood’s eloquent
avowal of allegiance on the booklet’s back cover is entirely justified.
This opera requires a performance which is unwavering in its belief.
For the most part, this newcomer is remarkably impressive in this
respect. The quality of the orchestral contribution is made clear
in the Prelude (Track 1), in which Orbelian gets the Philharmonia
of Russia to sculpt lovely, yearning lines.
Latvian tenor Sergei Larin takes the part of Hermann.
His voice is firm, his diction good. However, his opening avowal
of love is not fully sustained, so that when he sings, ‘That another
might possess her while I do not dare to kiss her footprints, consumes
me with jealousy’, it is mightily difficult to believe him. Vassily
Gerello is more inside his part (Tomsky) in his ‘One day at Versailles’.
He regales us with his tale in a firm bass, moving inexorably towards
the climax, ‘Tri karty’ (‘Three cards’).
Marina Domaschenko, as Paulina, is listed as a
mezzo but her voice is almost that of a contralto, which gives her
song a sad air and means her repetitions of ‘Mogila’ (‘Grave’) are
truly ominous. She also has an ability to make recitatives highly
dramatic.
Prokina makes her mark in the next excerpt, a passage
that features Lisa (Prokina) and Masha (later also Hermann). Prokina
is particularly beautiful of voice, clean of intonation and articulation
and yet also emotive (Track 5). It says a lot that in the first
excerpt from Act Two (‘You are so sad, my dear’), a passage dominated
by Yeletsky, Liza’s one line is so precisely characterised it remains
in the memory above and beyond Hvorostovsky’ avowals of love. This
is not to imply Hvorostovsky is a failure, however. His scene from
Act 3 (‘Poor thing! What an abyss …’), with its dramatically effective
choral interjections, does genuinely present Hermann’s fear convincingly
(track 11).
Elena Obraztsova shares the laurels with Prokina,
for her account of her Act 2 Scene 2 aria (‘O how I detest today’s
world’). Obraztsova’s range is little short of amazing, her tone
that of double cream.
There is an element of fun to this recording, too,
in Tomsky’s song ‘If sweet maidens’, wherein again the chorus makes
the most of its contributions.
The casting of this disc is fascinating, with Obraztsova
very well established, and with Domaschenko not yet thirty years
old. Perhaps it is this mix which gives this recording a feeling
of spontaneity and excitement. Very strongly recommended.
Colin Clarke
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Prelude
'I do not know her name'
'One day at Versailles'
'I'll sing for you'
'Why these tears'
'Forgive me, heavenly creature'
'You are so sad...I love you'
'Oh, how I detest today's world'
'Do not be frightened'
'Poor thing! What an abyss'
'I am so frightened'
'Midnight is near'
'What if the clock chimes'
'We will drink and be happy'
'If sweet maidens'
'What is our life'
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