BBC Music Magazine

Rimsky-korsakov

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Sadko (DVD)

Nazhmiddin Mavlyanov, Aida Garifullin­a, Ekaterina Semenchuk; Bolshoi Theater Orchestra/timur Zangiev; dir. Dmitri Tcherniako­v (Moscow, 2020)

Bel Air Classiques DVD: BAC188;

Blu-ray: BAC488 186 mins (2 discs) Perhaps it’s the Russiannes­s of Rimsky’s operas that makes them hard to export. A folk story of the would-be troubadour

Sadko winning a fortune thanks to the Princess Volkhova, youngest daughter of the Sea Tsar, who as a final gift gives the city of Novgorod a river to the sea, somehow belongs East of the Ukraine.

Dmitri Tcherniako­v’s Bolshoi production puts Sadko, his wife Lubava and the sea Princess into modern dress with each interviewe­d about their hopes and wishes before the curtain rises on what appears to be an ironised version of how Russians see their own patriotic history. The ‘heroic’ life Sadko longs for is a fantasy with the Mother Russia sets wheeled about by an army of proletaria­n technician­s in overalls and yellow forage caps. Mind you, you are unlikely to see the lavish fish costumes for the under-the-sea wedding between Sadko and Volkhova this side of a Black Sea resort wedding.

Nazhmiddin Mavlyanov is a sturdy Sadko, scarcely ever off the stage. While Aida Garifullin­a’s Princess Volkhova, flitting about in an unflatteri­ng tie-dye nightie, is a distinctly Slav soprano with a tendency to push the voice too hard. As the abandoned wife Lubava, Ekaterina Semenchuk is a ‘grumpy’ mezzo. Rightly, the solo for the Varangian Merchant (Dmitry Ulianov) who will accompany

Sadko on his voyages stops the show. But it’s Rimsky’s sparkling score that really shines and the luxuriant tone painting of a master orchestrat­or with the Bolshoi orchestra under Timur Zangiev give it their best best. Christophe­r Cook

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

PICTURE & SOUND ★★★★

 ?? ?? A Russian fantasy: the Bolshoi’s production of Rimsky’s Sadko
A Russian fantasy: the Bolshoi’s production of Rimsky’s Sadko
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