
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The Russian composer Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov might be described as an operatic dynamo: he composed fifteen of them himself and had a hand in editing, orchestrating, and promoting important operas by his fellow countrymen: Mussorgsky’s “Boris Godunov” and “Khovantschina,” Borodin’s “Prince Igor,” and Dargomïzhsky’s “The Stone Guest.”
Rimsky-Korsakov’s fifteen operas are rarely staged with any regularity outside Russia, although instrumental suites and excerpts from them have proven immensely popular as concert pieces.
The familiar “Flight of the Bumble-Bee” is from a Rimsky-Korsakov opera that premiered in Moscow on today’s date in 1900, and, like most of his operas, is based on Russian fairytales. The opera’s full title is: “The Tale of Tsar Saltan, of his Son the Renowned and Mighty Bogatïr Prince Guidon Saltanovich, and of the Beautiful Swan-Princess.”
If you think the title is a bit long, consider the required cast of performers, which in addition to thirteen main characters calls for Boyars and their wives, courtiers, nursemaids, sentries, troops, boatmen, astrologers, footmen, singers, scribes, servants and maids, dancers of both sexes, 33 knights of the sea with their leader Chernomor, a squirrel, and – oh yes – a bumblebee.
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844 – 1908) — Flight of the Bumble Bee, from Tsar Saltan (Philharmonia Orchestra; Vladimir Ashkenazy, cond.) London 460 250
Rimsky-Korsakov — Flight of the Bumble Bee (Budapest Clarinet Quintet) Naxos 8.553427
Rimsky-Korsakov — Flight of the Bumble Bee (Itzhak Perlman, violin; Samuel Sanders, piano) EMI 54882
4.7
1010 ratings
The Russian composer Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov might be described as an operatic dynamo: he composed fifteen of them himself and had a hand in editing, orchestrating, and promoting important operas by his fellow countrymen: Mussorgsky’s “Boris Godunov” and “Khovantschina,” Borodin’s “Prince Igor,” and Dargomïzhsky’s “The Stone Guest.”
Rimsky-Korsakov’s fifteen operas are rarely staged with any regularity outside Russia, although instrumental suites and excerpts from them have proven immensely popular as concert pieces.
The familiar “Flight of the Bumble-Bee” is from a Rimsky-Korsakov opera that premiered in Moscow on today’s date in 1900, and, like most of his operas, is based on Russian fairytales. The opera’s full title is: “The Tale of Tsar Saltan, of his Son the Renowned and Mighty Bogatïr Prince Guidon Saltanovich, and of the Beautiful Swan-Princess.”
If you think the title is a bit long, consider the required cast of performers, which in addition to thirteen main characters calls for Boyars and their wives, courtiers, nursemaids, sentries, troops, boatmen, astrologers, footmen, singers, scribes, servants and maids, dancers of both sexes, 33 knights of the sea with their leader Chernomor, a squirrel, and – oh yes – a bumblebee.
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844 – 1908) — Flight of the Bumble Bee, from Tsar Saltan (Philharmonia Orchestra; Vladimir Ashkenazy, cond.) London 460 250
Rimsky-Korsakov — Flight of the Bumble Bee (Budapest Clarinet Quintet) Naxos 8.553427
Rimsky-Korsakov — Flight of the Bumble Bee (Itzhak Perlman, violin; Samuel Sanders, piano) EMI 54882
1,337 Listeners
3,892 Listeners
178 Listeners
502 Listeners
7,686 Listeners
38,175 Listeners
73 Listeners
38 Listeners
59 Listeners
43,488 Listeners
235 Listeners
25,735 Listeners
110,916 Listeners
2,086 Listeners
55,879 Listeners
4,142 Listeners
6,246 Listeners