
- Producer's Note
- Full Cast Listing
- Cover Art
Pristine's Soviet Series: Khaikin's 1955 Eugene Onegin
Classic Melodiya recording from the Bolshoi Theatre in new 32-bit XR remaster
This is the first in a planned series of Soviet operatic recordings transferred and remastered from Melodiya LP pressings, and as such is a new experience for me. I know the Red Army was able to acquire a good number of German taped recordings at the end of the war, and with them one assumes the technology to play them, but beyond this my knowledge of Soviet recording technolody is very slender.
This recording, made in 1955 in the Bolshoi Theatre, is a fine example of what they could do, and stands equal to any Western contemporary in its technical quality. That said, it remains resolutely of its era, and XR remastering has worked wonders with the tonal quality of the recording. I've also gently relieved a rather dry acoustic that did the soloists few favours.
TCHAIKOVSKY Eugene Onegin, Op. 24
Recorded in 1955
Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow
Transfers from Melodiya LPs
D 011287 - 011292
Eugene Belov - Eugene Onegin
Galina Vishnevskaya - Tatiana
Ivan Petrov - Prince Gremin
Sergei Lemeshev - Lensky
Larissa Avdeyeva - Olga
Valentina Petrova - Larina
Eugena Verbitskaya - Philipyevna
Georgi Pankov - Captain
Igor Mikhailov - Zaretsky
Andrei Sokolov - Triquet
Nikolai Timchenko - Precentor
Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra and Chorus
Chorus Master - Mikhail Shorin
Conductor - Boris Khaikin
Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer:
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Galina Vishnevskaya
Fanfare Review
The Khaikin performance retains its position as one of the essential recordings of this beloved opera. This Pristine release is probably the best way to hear it.
This classic 1955 Melodiya recording
has been reissued a good many times on CD, twice by Melodiya itself,
twice on the Opera d’Oro label, and by Preiser, Myto, BMG, Legato, and
Bravissimo. As a performance, it has not been superseded by more recent
recordings. Since the performance is a known quantity, the main issue
with this release is how it compares in sound quality with other
reissues.
The Bravissimo reissue is part of a
very inexpensive 14-disc set, coupled with four other vintage
Russian-opera recordings. The fact that its overall timings are
identical to those of Opera d’Oro suggests a common source, as do the
occasional faint clicks heard on both versions (Opera d’Oro and
Bravissimo are both part of the Allegro group). But the Bravissimo sound
is better balanced, with a bit less glare on the voices, although still
colorless compared to the
As for the performance, Boris Khaikin’s
fluent, urgent, and dramatically charged leadership is a major plus.
The cast is a reminder that in this repertoire there is no substitute
for singers who are accustomed to performing in Russian and completely
comfortable with the language, as opposed to those who are coached in
Russian pronunciation with greater or lesser success for an occasional
Russian role. It allows one to hear Galina Vishnevskaya at the height of
her very considerable powers and the great lyric tenor Sergei Lemeshev,
perhaps a bit past his prime but still compelling, in what were
signature roles for each of them. As Tatiana, Vishnevskaya offers
passion, dramatic effectiveness, and a beautiful but characteristically
Russian sound with a strong chest register. In the letter scene, she
evinces strength and determination as well as vulnerability and longing,
leaving no doubt as to how this young girl could transform herself into
the regal Princess Gremina of the final act. In his confrontation with
Onegin at the Larins’ ball, Lemeshev conveys Lensky’s rage and
frustration powerfully but without hysteria. His aria in the duel scene
is full of expressive nuance and projects the poet’s utter despair
without becoming saccharine, as it sometimes can be. In Gremin’s aria,
few competitors come close to the majestic Ivan Petrov, with his
combination of unsurpassed weight, solidity, and beauty of tone and
moving expressivity. Although less renowned than the others, Evgeny
Belov (not “Eugene,” as
The
In 35:2 I discussed some of the stereo recordings of this opera, concluding that I could not recommend a stereo recording and suggesting instead that collectors turn to Khaikin’s mono version. I now find, however, that I was too hard on the 1984 Bolshoi performance led by Gennady Cherkasov, on the Alto label. I faulted the conductor and the sound quality, but on further hearing I think Cherkasov’s leadership, if somewhat cautious, is efficient and precise. The recording, made not in the Bolshoi Theater but in a Moscow Radio studio, is too bright and lacking in bass presence, with balances that sometimes place the orchestra too much in the background, but it still allows one to appreciate the efforts of an excellent all-Russian cast that includes Yury Mazurok, Tamara Milashkina, Tamara Siniavskaya, Vladimir Atlantov, and Evgeny Nesterenko. The recordings led by Semyon Bychkov (Philips or Decca) and James Levine (DG) have some value, but faulty Russian pronunciation by at least some of the principal singers in each case precludes a general recommendation. One stereo recording I had not heard when I wrote the earlier review is the Sony set conducted by Emil Tchakarov, which is better recorded than Cherkasov’s performance. The solid cast, mostly Bulgarian but with Mazurok repeating the title role and Nicolai Gedda as Lensky, has few problems with Russian pronunciation. Anna Tomowa-Sintow is convincing as Tatiana and successfully scales down her voice to impersonate a sensitive, vulnerable young girl, more so than the vocally sumptuous but very commanding and mature-sounding Milashkina. Tchakarov’s pacing is often leisurely, although not as much so as Valery Gergiev’s in this past season’s Met broadcast, and is generally effective, only rarely bordering on the lethargic. True Onegin aficionados will also want the pre-war Bolshoi recording on Naxos, especially notable for the idiomatic leadership of the two conductors involved, Aleksandr Melik-Pashaev and Aleksandr Orlov, the kinder, gentler, less declamatory Onegin of Panteleimon Nortsov, the appealing Tatiana of Elena Kruglikova, and the distinctive Lensky of Ivan Kozlovsky. The sound of Kozlovsky’s voice is something of an acquired taste, but he delivers sensitive lyricism and dramatic power as required. Even in Ward Marston’s remastering for Naxos, however, the sound quality is several cuts below that of the Khaikin recording.
Notwithstanding this competition, the
Khaikin performance retains its position as one of the essential
recordings of this beloved opera. This
Daniel Morrison
This article originally appeared in Issue 37:5 (May/June 2014) of Fanfare Magazine.