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词条 Ivan the Terrible (Prokofiev)
释义

  1. History

     Composition history  Performance history  Publication history 

  2. Manuscript numbers

  3. Film score cues

     Ivan the Terrible (Part 1, 1944)  Ivan the Terrible: The Boyar Conspiracy (Part 2, 1944) 

  4. Scoring and instrumentation

  5. Versions by other hands

     Oratorio by Levon Atovmyan (1961)  Oratorio by Abram Stasevich (1961)  Ballet by Mikhail Chulaki (1975)  Oratorio by Michael Lankester (1988)  Concert Scenario by Christopher Palmer (1991) 

  6. Recordings

     Audio  Video 

  7. References

  8. External links

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Ivan the Terrible ({{lang-ru|Иван Грозный}}), Op. 116, is the score composed by Sergei Prokofiev in 1942–45 for Sergei Eisenstein's film Ivan the Terrible and its sequel, the first two parts of an incomplete trilogy. The project was Prokofiev's second collaboration with Eisenstein, the first being the popular Aleksandr Nevskiy (1938). The majority of the non-liturgical song texts were written by Vladimir Lugovskoy, who collaborated with Prokofiev on the texts for Aleksandr Nevskiy.

The subject of the "First Tale" (Part 1) is the early years, 1547 to 1565, of the reign of Ivan IV of Russia: his coronation, his intent to curb the powers of the boyars, his wedding, his conquest of Kazan, his almost fatal illness, the poisoning and death of his first wife Anastasiya, the formation of the Oprichniki, and his abdication.

The "Second Tale" (Part 2), subtitled The Boyar Conspiracy, covers the years 1565 to 1569, and concerns the defection of Prince Kurbskiy to Poland-Lithuania, Ivan's disputes with Philip II, Metropolitan of Moscow, the intrigues of the boyars, the excesses of the Oprichniki, the attempted coup by the boyars and Ivan's aunt, Yefrosinya Staritskaya, the murder of her son Vladimir Staritsky, and Ivan's triumph over his domestic enemies.

The film scores were not published during Prokofiev's lifetime. They were arranged in 1961 as an oratorio for soloists, chorus, and orchestra by Levon Atovmyan, one of Prokofiev's assistants. However, before this version could be performed, the music received its concert premiere in 1961 in Moscow in the form of an oratorio for speaker, soloists, chorus, and orchestra by Abram Stasevich, who conducted the scores for Eisenstein.

In 1973 the composer Mikhail Chulaki and choreographer Yuri Grigorovich drew on Prokofiev's film scores to create the ballet Ivan the Terrible, which was given its premiere in 1975. Later performing editions of the scores include an oratorio put together by Michael Lankester (1989), and a concert scenario by Christopher Palmer (1991). The restoration of the entire original film score has been published and recorded.

History

Composition history

{{Gallery
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|File:Sergey_Prokofyev.jpg|
Sergei Prokofiev
(1891–1953)

|File:Sergei Eisenstein 02.jpg|
Sergei Eisenstein
(1898–1948)

}}

Performance history

The film Ivan the Terrible (Part One) premiered on 30 December 1944. The sequel, The Boyar Conspiracy (Part Two), was not shown until 1958.

The concert premiere of the soundtrack film score, as restored by Frank Strobel, took place on 16 September 2016 at the Musikfest Berlin, accompanied by a showing of the film in the Great Hall of the Konzerthaus Berlin. Strobel conducted the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin and the Rundfunkchor Berlin, with soloists Marina Prudenskaya (contralto) and Alexander Vinogradov (bass).

Publication history

  • 1958, 'Songs and Choruses from the Music for the Film Ivan the Terrible', vocal scores, published by Levon Atovmyan in the magazine Sovetskaya Muzyka; the six numbers included:[1]
    1. 'The Black Cloud'
    2. 'Ocean-Sea'
    3. 'Song of Praise'
    4. 'The Swan'
    5. 'The Cannoneers'
    6. 'Song about the Beaver'
    7. 1960, 'Songs and Choruses from Cantatas, Oratorios, and Films', published by Levon Atovmyan, vocal scores, Sovetskiy Kompozitor; the numbers from Ivan the Terrible included:[2]
    8. 'The Oath of the Oprichniki'
    9. 'Song of Fyodor Basmanov and the Oprichniki'
    10. 'Song of the Oprichniki'
    11. 1997, Ivan the Terrible, manuscript film score, full score, edition by Marina Rakhmanova and Irina Medvedeva, Musikverlage Hans Sikorski, Hamburg[3]
    12. 2016, Ivan the Terrible, soundtrack film score, full score, edition by Frank Strobel, Musikverlage Hans Sikorski, Hamburg

Manuscript numbers

The numbers in Prokofiev's manuscript scores are listed in the table below.

Note: The column marked 'S' shows the numbering of the musical numbers by Musikverlage Hans Sikorski, the publisher of the restored manuscript film score (zeros have been inserted before single digit numbers for sorting purposes). 'A' stands for Anhang (the appendix), which includes the liturgical numbers used in the film that were either arranged by Prokofiev or were not written into his score of Ivan the Terrible.

The table can be sorted by clicking on the buttons in the title bar. The default sequence can be restored by refreshing the browser (press F5).

No.STitleEnglishSourceScoring
0101УвертюраOvertureProkofievChorus, orchestra
0202Смерть ГлинскойDeath of GlinskayaProkofievChorus, orchestra
0303Марш молодого ИванаMarch of the Young IvanProkofievOrchestra
0404aОкеан-мореOcean-SeaProkofievSoloist, chorus, orchestra
0504bОкеан-мореOcean-SeaProkofievOrchestra
0605Шуйский и псариShuyskiy and the HuntsmenProkofievOrchestra
07A01Кирие элейсонKyrie eleisonLiturgyChorus
08A02Софрониевская херувимская песньSofroniy's Cherubic SongMonastic song, transcribed by KastalskyChorus
0906Многая лета!Many Years!Traditional, arranged by ProkofievChorus
1007ВеличаниеPraise SongProkofievChorus, orchestra
1108ЛебедьThe SwanProkofievChorus, orchestra
1209ЮродивыйThe Holy FoolProkofievOrchestra
1310БунтThe RiotProkofievOrchestra
1411Выход татарEntrance of the TatarsProkofievOrchestra
1512Пушки движутся на КазаньThe Cannons Move to KazanProkofievOrchestra
1613Палатка ИванаIvan's TentProkofievOrchestra
1714Степь татарскаяTatar SteppeProkofievChorus, orchestra
1815ПушкариThe CannoneersProkofievChorus, orchestra
1916ТатарыThe TatarsProkofievOrchestra
2017Трубы КурбскогоKurbskiy's TrumpetsProkofievBrass
2118АтакаAttackProkofievOrchestra
2219Зависть МалютыMalyuta's JealousyProkofievOrchestra
2320Казань взятаKazan is TakenProkofievOrchestra
24A04Душе мояMy SoulObikhodChorus
25A05Многомилостиве ГосподиMost Merciful LordObikhodChorus
2621Иван умоляет боярIvan Implores the BoyarsProkofievOrchestra
2722Болезнь АнастасииAnastasiya's IllnessProkofievOrchestra
2823Отравление АнастасииThe Poisoning of AnastasiyaProkofievOrchestra
29A06Вечная памятьEternal RemembranceObikhodChorus
30A07Со святыми упокойRest with the SaintsObikhodChorus
31A08Сам един есиThou AloneObikhod, transcribed by VinogradovChorus
3224Иван у гроба АнастасииIvan at Anastasiya's CoffinProkofievOrchestra
3325Клятва опричниковOath of the OprichnikiProkofievChorus, orchestra
3426Вернись!Come Back!ProkofievChorus, orchestra
3527ФанфарыFanfaresProkofievBrass
3627aПолонезPolonaiseProkofievOrchestra
37A09Не рыдай мене, матиDo not Sob for Me, MotherIvanovChorus
38A10Уне тебе бяше, ИудоIt Were Better for You, JudasLiturgyChorus
3928aДивен БогWondrous is GodBortnyanskyChorus
4028bПение отроковSinging of the BoysProkofiev3 Boys
4129Песня про бобраSong about the BeaverProkofievSoloist, orchestra
4230aПляски опричников:
Хаотическая пляска
Dances of the Oprichniki:
Chaotic Dance
ProkofievOrchestra
4330bПляски опричников:
Организованная пляска
Dances of the Oprichniki:
Orderly Dance
ProkofievOrchestra
4431Куплеты опричниковSong of the OprichnikiProkofievSoloist, chorus, orchestra
4531aКуплеты опричниковSong of the OprichnikiProkofievOrchestra
4632a
32b
Хор опричниковChorus of the OprichnikiProkofievChorus, orchestra
4732cУбийство ВладимираVladimir's MurderProkofievOrchestra
4833Выход ИванаEntrance of IvanProkofievOrchestra

The performance duration is about 100 minutes.

Several numbers can be divided into two parts, each of which are sometimes quoted in the film separately:

  • The first half of the 'Overture' is the orchestral 'A Storm Approaches' (the Ivan theme); the second half is the chorus 'The Black Cloud'.
  • The first part of 'The Death of Glinskaya' accompanies, in the second film, the flashback of the poisoning of the 8-year-old-Ivan's mother; the second part is the chorus 'On the Bones of our Enemies'.
  • The first half of 'Come Back!' depicts the people's chorus of supplication after Ivan's abdication; the second half is the 'Finale' (a variation of 'A Storm Approaches'), which concludes both films.

Scoring and instrumentation

The two film scores together require a contralto or mezzo-soprano (in 'Ocean-Sea' and 'Song about the Beaver'), a baritone or bass (in 'Song of the Oprichniki'), a bass (in 'Many Years!'), mixed (SATB) chorus, and the following instrumentation:

  • Strings: violins I & II, violas, cellos, double basses
  • Woodwinds: piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, english horn, 3 clarinets, E-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, 4 bassoons, contrabassoon
  • Brass: 5 horns, 5 trumpets, 3 trombones, 2 tubas
  • Percussion: timpani, bass drum, snare drum, triangle, tambourine, cymbals, tam-tam, bells, church bells, glockenspiel, xylophone, wood block, whip
  • Other: piano, harp

Versions by other hands

Oratorio by Levon Atovmyan (1961)

Performance history

Atovmyan's oratorio finally received its public premiere on 28 January 2012 at the Royal Festival Hall, London. Vladimir Jurowski conducted the London Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus. The soloists were Ewa Podleś and Andrey Breus.

The Russian premiere took place on 2 April 2012 in the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory. Vladimir Jurowski conducted the London Philharmonic Orchestra with the Sveshnikov State Academic Russian Choir and the Chamber Choir of the Moscow Conservatory. The soloists were Elena Zaremba and Andrey Breus.

The North American premiere took place on 18 October 2012 at Davies Symphony Hall, San Francisco. Vladimir Jurowski conducted the San Francisco Symphony and Chorus. The soloists were Elena Zaremba and Andrey Breus.

Numbers

Atovmyan's oratorio is in 8 sections, some consisting of several numbers (or parts of numbers) from the film score—refer to 'Sequence' below:[4]

No.OriginalEnglishSequence
1
Иван и бояреIvan and the Boyars• A Storm Approaches
• The Black Cloud
• The Riot
• Ivan Implores the Boyars
• Come back!
• On the Bones of Our Enemies
• A Storm Approaches
2
Песня про бобраSong about the BeaverSong about the Beaver
3
ОпричнинаThe Oprichnina• Chaotic Dance of the Oprichniki
• Chorus of the Oprichniki
• Orderly Dance of the Oprichniki
• Song of the Oprichniki
• Oath of the Oprichniki
• Orderly Dance of the Oprichniki
4
ЛебедьThe SwanThe Swan
5
АнастасияAnastasiya• Anastasiya's Illness
• The Poisoning of Anastasiya
• Anastasiya's Illness
6
Океан-мореOcean-Sea• The Entrance of Ivan
• Ocean-Sea
7
Взятие КазаниThe Taking of Kazan• Ivan's Tent
• The Tatars
• Entrance of the Tatars
• The Tatars
• The Cannoneers
• The Cannons Move to Kazan
• Kurbskiy's Trumpets
• Attack
• Kazan is Taken
• Ivan's Tent
8
ВеличаниеPraise Song• March of the Young Ivan
• Praise Song
• The Death of Glinskaya
• On the Bones of our Enemies
• A Storm Approaches

The performance duration is about 45 minutes.

Scoring and instrumentation

Atovmyan's oratorio is scored for contralto or mezzo-soprano (in 'Ocean-Sea' and 'Song about the Beaver') and baritone (in 'Song of the Oprichniki'), mixed (SATB) chorus, and the following instrumentation:

  • Strings: violins I & II, violas, cellos, double basses
  • Woodwinds: 2 piccolos, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, english horn, 2 clarinets, E-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon
  • Brass: 4 horns, 5 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba
  • Percussion: timpani, piccolo timpani, bass drum, snare drum, triangle, tambourine, cymbals, tam-tam, bells, xylophone, wood block, whip
  • Other: piano, celesta, 2 harps

Oratorio by Abram Stasevich (1961)

The following commentary, by one T. Korganov, was printed in the preface to Stasevich's vocal score in 1961:

"Without adding material of his own or making changes to the composer's manuscript, A. Stasevich approached the music for the film in a creative manner turning it into an oratorio consisting of 20 numbers. By repeating certain episodes and sections, and by linking them in a variety of ways, Stasevich was able to turn the various parts of this substantial work into self-contained numbers. In order to comply with the dictates of musical logic, he did not always adhere strictly to the order of the musical episodes prescribed by the plot. Thus certain episodes were transformed into tripartite structures, and others expanded to become rather large movements. Certain changes were also made to the orchestration, and certain instrumental lines were reinforced ... Stasevich also added another formal determinant in the shape of a speaker."[5]
Performance history

The premiere took place on 23 April 1961 in the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory. Abram Stasevich conducted the Moscow State Philharmonic Orchestra.[6]

Publication history
  • 1962, Ivan the Terrible, oratorio by Abram Stasevich, vocal score, Sovetskiy Kompozitor, Moscow[7]
  • 1972, Ivan the Terrible, oratorio by Stasevich, full score, Sovetskiy Kompozitor, Moscow[8]
Numbers

Stasevich's oratorio is in 20 movements, some consisting of several numbers (or parts of numbers) from the film score—refer to 'Sequence' below:

No.OriginalEnglishSequence
1
УвертюраOverture• A Storm Approaches
• The Black Cloud
• The Death of Glinskaya
• Shuyskiy and the Huntsmen
• The Death of Glinskaya
• The Black Cloud
• A Storm Approaches
2
Марш молодого ИванаMarch of the Young IvanMarch of the Young Ivan
3
Океан-мореOcean-SeaOcean-Sea
4
Царём буду!I Shall Be Tsar!A Storm Approaches
5
Дивен БогWondrous is GodWondrous is God
6
Многая лета!Many Years!• Many Years
• Ocean-Sea
• Many Years!
7
ЮродивыйThe Holy Fool• The Holy Fool
• The Riot
• The Holy Fool
8
ЛебедьThe Swan• The Swan
• Praise Song
• The Swan
9
На костях враговOn the Bones of Our EnemiesOn the Bones of Our Enemies
10
ТатарыThe Tatars• Entrance of the Tatars (2 times)
• The Tatars
• Entrance of the Tatars
11
ПушкариThe Cannoneers• The Cannoneers
• Ivan's Tent
• The Cannoneers
12
На Казань!To Kazan!• The Cannons Move to Kazan
• Entrance of Ivan
• The Tatar Steppe
• Entrance of Ivan
• Ivan's Tent
• The Tatar Steppe
• Ivan theme
• Kurbskiy's Trumpets
• Attack
• Malyuta's Jealousy
• Attack
• The Tatars
• The Cannoneers
• Kazan is Taken
13
Иван умоляет боярIvan Implores the Boyars• Ivan Implores the Boyars
• The Tatar Steppe
14
Ефросинья и АнастасияYefrosinya and Anastasiya• The Poisoning of Anastasiya
• Anastasiya's Illness
• The Poisoning of Anastasiya
15
Песня про бобра
(колыбельная Ефросиньи)
Song about the Beaver
(Yefrosinya's Lullaby)
Song about the Beaver
16
Иван у гроба АнастасииIvan at the Coffin of AnastasiyaSinging of the Boys
17
Клятва ОпричниковOath of the Oprichniki• Chorus of the Oprichniki
• Oath of the Oprichniki
18
Песня Фёдора Басманова
с опричниками
Song of Fyodor Basmanov
with the Oprichniki
Song of the Oprichniki
19
Пляска ОпричниковDance of the Oprichniki• Chaotic Dance of the Oprichniki
• Orderly Dance of the Oprichniki
20
ФиналFinale• Ivan at the Coffin of Anastasiya
• Come Back!
• Finale
• On the Bones of Our Enemies
• Ivan Theme

Performance duration is about 75 minutes.

Scoring and instrumentation

Stasevich's oratorio is scored for contralto (in 'Ocean-Sea' and 'Song about the Beaver') and baritone (in 'Song of the Oprichniki'), mixed (SATB) chorus, and the following instrumentation:

  • Strings: violins I & II, violas, cellos, double basses
  • Woodwinds: 3 flutes (including 2 piccolos), 3 oboes (including english horn), 5 clarinets (including E-flat clarinet & bass clarinet), alto saxophone, baritone saxophone, 4 bassoons (including contrabassoon)
  • Brass: 4 horns, 5 trumpets, 3 trombones, 2 tubas
  • Percussion: timpani, bass drum, snare drum, triangle, tambourine, cymbals, tam-tam, church bells, glockenspiel, xylophone, wood block, metal bar, whip
  • Other: piano, 2 gusli, 2 harps

Ballet by Mikhail Chulaki (1975)

The ballet Ivan the Terrible was arranged by Mikhail Chulaki for a 1975 production by choreographer Yuriy Grigorovich at the Bolshoy Theatre. The two act (7 scenes) work consists of selections from Prokofiev's film score for Ivan the Terrible supplemented with excerpts from his Symphony No. 3 (1928), Russian Overture (1936), and 'The Field of the Dead' from the film score for Aleksandr Nevskiy (1938).

Performance history

The world premiere performance took place on 20 February 1975 at the Bolshoy Theatre. Algis Zhuraitis conducted. The cast included Yuriy Vladimirov (Ivan), Natalya Bessmertnova (Anastasiya), and Boris Akimov (Kurbskiy).

Oratorio by Michael Lankester (1988)

Performance history

The premiere took place on 4 May 1988. Michael Lankester conducted the Hartford Symphony Orchestra.[9]

Numbers

This version of Ivan the Terrible consists of 29 numbers.[10]

The performance duration is about 95 minutes.

Concert Scenario by Christopher Palmer (1991)

Christopher Palmer discusses his Ivan the Terrible concert scenario in the notes to a Chandos CD recording made a few days after the work's premiere:

"...in 1962 Abram Stasevich (1906-1971), who had conducted Ivan for the film soundtrack, published his Ivan the Terrible 'oratorio' for speaker, soloists, chorus and orchestra which incorporated all the major musical sequences in the film plus a few that had been left out (notably 'Russian Sea'). It is in this form that the Ivan music has been known outside the film ever since, and in this form that critics have tended to find it long and diffuse. The main problem is the speaker, introduced by Stasevich primarily because he had been unwise enough to try and incorporate a large number of short fragmentary episodes, and had to find a way of stitching them together. Unfortunately once the speaker was in, he seemed to take over the entire work—much to its detriment in terms of narrative intelligibility and tightness of structure. My new 'performing version' eliminates the speaker and shorter sections (most of which are pastiche Russian-liturgical music of minimal Prokofievian interest). It also restores a number of episodes to their original format, most importantly the assassination of the Pretender in Part II—the climax of the film and one of the most electrifying moments in film music. While retaining Stasevich's make-up of most of the larger movements, I have reverted largely to the film's original sequence of musical events."[11]

Performance history

The concert scenario received its premiere on 28 February 1991 at the Royal Festival Hall in London. Neeme Järvi conducted the Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus.[12]

Numbers

The 'new' work is in 13 movements,[13] some consisting of several numbers (or parts of numbers) from the film score—refer to 'Sequence' below:

No.TitleSequence
1
Overture• A Storm Approaches
• The Black Cloud
• The Death of Glinskaya
• Shuyskiy and the Huntsmen
• The Death of Glinskaya
• The Black Cloud
• A Storm Approaches
2
Russian SeaOcean-Sea
3
Wedding• The Swan
• Praise Song
• The Swan
4
Fire• The Holy Fool
• The Riot
• The Holy Fool
5
Tartars and Cannoneers• Entrance of the Tatars (2 times)
• The Tatars
• Entrance of the Tatars
• The Cannoneers
• Ivan's Tent
• The Cannoneers
6
The Storming of Kazan• The Cannons Move to Kazan
• Entrance of Ivan
• The Tatar Steppe
• Entrance of Ivan
• Ivan's Tent
• The Tatar Steppe
• Ivan theme
• Kurbskiy's Trumpets
• Attack
• Malyuta's Jealousy
• Attack
• The Tatars
• The Cannoneers
• Kazan is Taken
7
Ivan's SicknessIvan Implores the Boyars
8
At the Polish Court• Fanfares
• Polonaise
9
Anastasia• The Poisoning of Anastasiya
• Anastasiya's Illness
• The Poisoning of Anastasiya
10
Song of the Beaver
(Ephrosynia's Lullaby)
Song about the Beaver
11
The Banquet• Chaotic Dance of the Oprichniki
• Orderly Dance of the Oprichniki
• Song of the Oprichniki
• Chaotic Dance of the Oprichniki
• Orderly Dance of the Oprichniki
12
Murder in the Cathedral• Chorus of the Oprichniki
• Vladimir's Murder
13
Finale (Coda)Finale (Ivan theme)

The performance duration is about 60 minutes.

Recordings

Audio

YearConductorOrchestra and choirSoloistsVersion
1965?Abram StasevichMoscow State Philharmonic Orchestra,
Moscow State Choir
Valentina Levko (mezzo-soprano),
Anatoly Mokrenko (baritone),
Aleksandr Estrin (speaker)
Stasevich
1972Maksim ShostakovichLondon Philharmonic Orchestra,
Yurlov Choral Kapella
Stasevich
1978Riccardo MutiPhilharmonia Orchestra,
Ambrosian Chorus
Irina Arkhipova (mezzo-soprano),
Anatoly Mokrenko (baritone),
Boris Morgunov (speaker)
Stasevich
1979Leonard SlatkinSaint Louis Symphony Orchestra and ChorusClaudine Carlson (mezzo-soprano),
Samuel Timberlake (bass),
Without speaker
Stasevich
1984Alipi NaydenovRussian Philharmonic Orchestra,
Danube Sounds Choir
Vessela Zorova (mezzo-soprano),
Dimiter Stanchev (bass),
Boris Morgunov (speaker)
Stasevich
1991Neeme JärviThe Philharmonia Orchestra and ChorusLinda Finnie (contralto),
Nikita Storojev (bass-baritone)
Palmer
1993Mstislav RostropovichLondon Symphony Orchestra and Chorus,
The New London Children's Choir
Tamara Sinyavskaya (mezzo-soprano),
Sergei Leiferkus (baritone),
Christopher Plummer (narrator)
Lankester
1993Vladimir FedoseyevOstankino Television-Radio Symphony Orchestra,
Yurlov Choral Kapella
Nina Romanova (mezzo-soprano),
Grigory Gritsuk (bass),
Boris Morgunov (speaker)
Stasevich
1995Dmitriy KitayenkoRadio-Sinfonie-Orchester Frankfurt,
Danish National Radio Choir,
Kinderchor Frankfurt
Tamara Sinyavskaya (mezzo-soprano),
Wolfgang Brendel (baritone),
Sergey Yursky (speaker)
Stasevich
1997Valeriy GergievRotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra,
Chorus of the Kirov Orchestra
Lyubov Sokolova (mezzo-soprano),
Nikolay Putilin (baritone),
Without speaker
Stasevich
2000Vladimir FedoseyevTchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra,
Yurlov Choral Kapella,
Children's Choir of Studio Vesna
Irina Chistyakova (contralto),
Dmitry Stepanovich (bass)
Film score (manuscript)
2003Valeriy PolyanskyState Symphonic Kapella of Russia,
Russian State Symphonic Kapella
Lyudmila Kuznetsova (mezzo-soprano),
Sergey Toptygin (baritone)
Film score (manuscript)
2004Leonard SlatkinBBC Symphony Orchestra and ChorusIrina Chistyakova (mezzo-soprano),
James Rutherford (bass-baritone),
Simon Russell Beale (speaker)
Stasevich
2013Tugan SokhievDeutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin,
Rundfunkchor Berlin,
Staats- und Domchor Berlin
Olga Borodina (mezzo-soprano),
Ildar Abdrazakov (bass)
Stasevich
2018Frank StrobelRundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin,
Rundfunkchor, Berlin
Marina Prudenskaya (mezzo-soprano),
Alexander Vinogradov (bass)
Film score (soundtrack)
2019Heinrich HänslerKammerorchester des Rheins & ChorGustavo Monastra (speaker)free selection of different versions.

Video

YearConductorOrchestraRolesVersion
1976Algis ZhuraitisBolshoi Theatre OrchestraYuri Vladimirov (Ivan),
Natalia Bessmertnova (Anastasia),
Boris Akimov (Kurbsky),
Bolshoi Ballet
Chulaki
1990Algis ZhuraitisBolshoi Theatre OrchestraIrek Mukhamedov (Ivan),
Natalya Bessmertnova (Anastasia),
Gediminas Taranda (Kurbsky),
Bolshoi Ballet
Chulaki
2003Vello PähnOrchestre de l’Opéra de ParisNicolas Le Riche (Ivan),
Eleonora Abbagnato (Anastasia),
Karl Paquette (Kurbsky),
Ballet de l'Opéra National de Paris
Chulaki

References

Notes
1. ^GSCMMC-Sikorski (2000: p. 10)
2. ^Kravetz (2010: p. 5
3. ^GSCMMC-Sikorski (2000: p. 1)
4. ^Kravetz, N. (2010: p. 7)
5. ^GSCMMC-Sikorski (2000: p.1)
6. ^Kravetz (2010: p. 13)
7. ^GSCMMC-Sikorski (2000: p. 10)
8. ^GSCMMC-Sikorski (2000: p. 10)
9. ^Kravetz (2010: p. 14)
10. ^Kravetz (2010: p. 14)
11. ^Palmer (1991)
12. ^Palmer (1991)
13. ^Palmer (1991)
Sources
  • Glinka State Central Museum of Musical Culture, Moscow, and Musikverlag Hans Sikorski, Hamburg, The complete music for the film 'Ivan the Terrible, notes to CD NI 5662/3, Nimbus Records Ltd. 2000
  • Kravetz, Nelly, An Unknown Ivan the Terrible Oratorio, Three Oranges Journal No. 19, 2010
  • Palmer, Christopher, Ivan the Terrible: Concert Scenario, notes to CD CHAN 8977, Chandos Records Ltd. 1991

External links

  • Prokofiev Ivan/OperaToday
{{Sergei Prokofiev}}

7 : Compositions by Sergei Prokofiev|Films scored by Sergei Prokofiev|Film soundtracks|1944 compositions|1945 compositions|Compositions with a narrator|Cultural depictions of Ivan the Terrible

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