When Musorgsky revised his opera Boris Godunov in 1871–1872 as a condition for its eventual performance in 1874, he made many changes that went far beyond what the Imperial Theaters demanded of him. Among these changes was the composition of a crowd scene outside Moscow, in which the rebellious populace hails the Pretender, to replace a crowd scene at Red Square in which a submissive, hungry crowd beg Boris for bread. The original scene came, like the rest of the libretto, directly from Pushkin’s eponymous play. The new scene reflected a new view of the historical events, and Musorgsky wrote his own text for it. The two scenes are ideologically at odds, particularly as regards their view of the Russian nation in relation to the Russian peop...
Russian Opera in the Age of Psychological Prose examines the relationship between opera and literatu...
The article attempts to reveal the complexity and stereoscopic nature of the conflict in the Pushkin...
This article discusses a number of topical issues on the choice of conducting means of expression in...
In this paper I point out how the machinery of politics is set on the stage in Pushkin’s Boris Godun...
Modest Musorgsky completed two versions of his opera Boris Godunov between 1869 and 1874, with signi...
This monograph offers a critical interpretation of Pushkin's “romantic tragedy”, Boris Godunov and M...
We encounter three inserted narratives in Boris Godunov – both in Pushkin and in Musorgsky. The firs...
We encounter three inserted narratives in Boris Godunov – both in Pushkin and in Musorgsky. The firs...
Pushkin's Boris Godunov (1825) has been subjected since its publication to critical and scholarly sc...
Nineteenth-century Russian music has often been considered something ‘special’. This is a conviction...
Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837) deals with crucial turning-points in the rise of the Russian state in ...
The rejection of Boris Godunov for the lack of a female part led Modest Musorgskii to revise the ope...
Gregori Kozintsev produced Gamlet (1964) as a film adaptation of Shakespeare\u27s Hamlet during a ch...
When the Moscow Art Theater appeared in New York in 1924, it was the apostle of a new dramatic natur...
The performance of A Life for the Tsar at the Teatro Dal Verme in Milan (20th May 1874) coincided wi...
Russian Opera in the Age of Psychological Prose examines the relationship between opera and literatu...
The article attempts to reveal the complexity and stereoscopic nature of the conflict in the Pushkin...
This article discusses a number of topical issues on the choice of conducting means of expression in...
In this paper I point out how the machinery of politics is set on the stage in Pushkin’s Boris Godun...
Modest Musorgsky completed two versions of his opera Boris Godunov between 1869 and 1874, with signi...
This monograph offers a critical interpretation of Pushkin's “romantic tragedy”, Boris Godunov and M...
We encounter three inserted narratives in Boris Godunov – both in Pushkin and in Musorgsky. The firs...
We encounter three inserted narratives in Boris Godunov – both in Pushkin and in Musorgsky. The firs...
Pushkin's Boris Godunov (1825) has been subjected since its publication to critical and scholarly sc...
Nineteenth-century Russian music has often been considered something ‘special’. This is a conviction...
Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837) deals with crucial turning-points in the rise of the Russian state in ...
The rejection of Boris Godunov for the lack of a female part led Modest Musorgskii to revise the ope...
Gregori Kozintsev produced Gamlet (1964) as a film adaptation of Shakespeare\u27s Hamlet during a ch...
When the Moscow Art Theater appeared in New York in 1924, it was the apostle of a new dramatic natur...
The performance of A Life for the Tsar at the Teatro Dal Verme in Milan (20th May 1874) coincided wi...
Russian Opera in the Age of Psychological Prose examines the relationship between opera and literatu...
The article attempts to reveal the complexity and stereoscopic nature of the conflict in the Pushkin...
This article discusses a number of topical issues on the choice of conducting means of expression in...