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Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges
 
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Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges

Valery Gergiev Audio CD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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V A L E R Y G E R G I E V
Valery Gergiev is internationally recognized as one of the most outstanding musical figures of his generation. His inspired leadership as Artistic and General Director of the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg, Russia, where he oversees the Kirov Orchestra, Ballet and Opera, has brought universal acclaim to this legendary institution. Together with the Kirov Opera… Read more in Amazon's Valery Gergiev Store

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Product details

  • Audio CD (15 Jan 2001)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Universal Classics
  • ASIN: B0000544G8
  • Other Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 89,643 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         


Disc 1:

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
Listen  1. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Prologue - Tragediy! Tragediy!Fyodor Kuznetsov 4:04£0.79
Listen  2. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 1 - Bedniy sïn!Vassily Gerello 5:05£0.79
Listen  3. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 1 - Igrï? Spektakli?Kirov Orchestra, St Petersburg 3:30£0.79
Listen  4. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 2 - Mag Cheliy!Vladimir Vaneev 4:01£0.79
Listen  5. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 3 - Moi zhelaniya vstrechayut prepyatstviyaValery Gergiev 3:43£0.79
Listen  6. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 3 - Kto etot chelovek?Olga Korzhenskaya 6:25£0.79
Listen  7. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 1 - Smeshno?Kirov Opera Chorus 6:41£0.79
Listen  8. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Divertisment nomer pervïy!Mikhail Kit 2:36£0.79
Listen  9. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Divertisment nomer vtoroy!Konstantin Pluzhnikov 2:55£0.79
Listen10. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Kha-kha...Kha-kha-kha...Evgeny Akimov 1:46£0.79
Listen11. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Varvar! Slushay!Larissa Shevchenko 2:54£0.79
Listen12. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Tri apelsina...tri apelsinaKirov Opera Chorus 2:46£0.79
Listen13. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Ti podnimayesh ruku na ottsa?Kirov Opera Chorus 3:32£0.79


Disc 2:

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
Listen  1. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 1 - Farfarello! Farfarello!Vladimir Vaneev 4:55£0.79
Listen  2. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 1 - Veter stikhEvgeny Akimov 3:57£0.79
Listen  3. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 2 - Gde mï?Konstantin Pluzhnikov 1:53£0.79
Listen  4. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 2 - Kto tut pishchit?Grigory Karassev 6:00£0.79
Listen  5. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - Nu kak zhe nam idtiValery Gergiev 4:02£0.79
Listen  6. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - Ya Printsessa LinettaLia Shevtzova 3:10£0.79
Listen  7. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - E...Truffaldino...TruffaldinoEvgeny Akimov 3:04£0.79
Listen  8. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - Da, ya Printsessa Ninetta!Anna Netrebko 7:12£1.09
Listen  9. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - Smeraldina...s bulavkoy...Kirov Opera Chorus 5:01£0.79
Listen10. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 4. Scene 1 - Akh! Negodnaya vedmaVladimir Vaneev 3:47£0.79
Listen11. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 4. Scene 2 - Tron v poryadke?Kirov Orchestra, St Petersburg 4:55£0.79
Listen12. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 4. Scene 2 - Strazha, veryovku!Konstantin Pluzhnikov 3:36£0.79


Product Description

BBC Music Magazine

It's a mystery that this magical, futurist opera has been so little recorded. It may be best known for its visual imagery and stage trickery, most famously the giant princess-disgorging oranges. But it has equally a score that if not exactly rich in melody (the famous March notwithstanding) is compelling in its absurdity, originality and wit. The only other available version, Kent Nagano's 1989 account with the Opera de Lyon, though well played and decently sung, suffers from unsubtly exaggerated characterisation. It's also disadvantaged by being in French - the language in which the opera was first performed but not written - and nothing like so suited to its rhythms and inflections as guttural, consonant-rich Russian.

Recorded live at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, this is the Kirov at its considerable best. The Love for Three Oranges is very much an ensemble piece thanks to the sheer size of the cast - 16 soloists, and a sprawling crowd of Eccentrics, Tragicals, Comicals, Lyricals etc, who interrupt and control the action like a Greek chorus - and the absence of dominant leads. And here there is a very real sense of a company at work. Even so there are star turns: the peerlessly dramatic Larissa Diadkova as the evil, manipulative Clarissa; Anna Netrebko as Ninetta; the towering bass Mikhail Kit as the King; and the plangent tenor Evgeny Akimov as the miserable Prince. Needless to say, the orchestra under Gergiev plays superbly, the score's intrinsic percussiveness precisely to the fore, but never at the expense of its lyricism.

Performance *****
Sound *****

© BBC Music Magazine 2001


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Customer Reviews

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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Kriov Sparkling at its best!, 26 Dec 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges (Audio CD)
This recording of the Love for Three Oranges is the only one available in its original language and therefore is definatly worth a listen. Valery Gergiev gives yet another thrilling performance of this futuristic opera. Although there are very few recognisable tunes throughout (excluding the March and the Scherzo) this opera is an absolute masterpiece that would have Wagner proud. There is the use of letimotifs (Music used to represent a certain mood or attitude) and a great sense of characterisation in the music. This singers over exagerate their parts which is essential in this opera. Considering that this is a live recording there is very little noise from the audience.This recording will bring you hours of enjoyable listening.
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5 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinatingly modern music for old tales, 11 Jan 2007
By 
This review is from: Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges (Audio CD)
The plot, if we can call that a plot, is very simple. A hypochondriac prince is going to die deprived of love because his cousin wants to get the throne of his father. Then this cousin and the Prime Minister use black magic and witches to get to their ends. The comedians and other entertainers try to make the Prince laugh. They will use courage and daring to bring him to the oranges that contain white princesses. The good side will take over and complete its mission. The Prince will be saved. But there are elements that are outdated and irretrievable. One particularly. The bad witch uses a woman to lure and trap the Prince. She is a slave, black and herself some kind of voodoo witch. You read my lips. This is not the only case of racism against black people at the beginning of the twentieth century since Strauss's Rosenkavalier also has a black Moslem servant, but only a servant who does not say a word. Here the case is a lot more severe. Yet the opera that is more an operatic and ballet piece is trying to get to a higher level opposing representatives of various genres, particularly the Highbrows, the Lowbrows, the Romantics, the Empty Heads and the Eccentrics. This is a meta-approach that tries to mix various genres in the same work, tragedy and comedy, romance and entertainment. This is also typical of its age and the composer who try to look for and find new architectures in the wake of the tragic first world war and the bolshevik revolution. But what is left that can still talk to us in the plot? Not much except maybe the obvious and easy absolute power of the King corrected by fate, fortune, destiny and the architecture of the tale that turns the usurpers into escapees that will escape but to be trapped in hell. This is a metaphor of all political processes divided between power and counter-power, white magic and black magic, entertainment end seriousness, etc. The music can be considered as very good. It is also typical of Prokofiev's style. No over-skilled climbing up and down scales spread over-generously on vowels that never end being uttered and articulated. Hence a simple singing of clear words and syllables. The innovation comes from the use of one important trait. Prokofiev wants to wake up his audience, or at least to keep them awake and keep their attention on full alert for what is happening and what is being said. He uses then some very surprising intervals from one note to another, either very small, one or half a tone, if possible minor, or very big without reaching a full scale, working again on minor intervals of five notes, ending like in the previous case on a note that is not part of a chord and hence sounds awkward and attracts attention. This is very modern indeed. But is used for dramatic purposes by Prokofiev, and that is very important. It is in no way an embellishment like all the vocalizing of the old days. It is an emphasizer, a plot-thickener. Stravinsky seems to have used the same means but more for aesthetic reasons. Thus Prokofiev would not use a tritone for the only pleasure of using a discordant tritone, but to put some salt in the score, some taste in the opera. That too is the result of a complex evolution that is artistic with the desire to get out of syrupy and sticky harmonious songs, and that is more existential with the desire to transpose the horror of the first world war into the arts in general, music itself in particular. Our vision and audition of things became then forever different. After the four years of constant heavy shelling percussions could not sound the same any more.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris Dauphine, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

64 of 67 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The recording well-worth waiting, with exceptional music., 11 Mar 2001
By David Anthony Hollingsworth - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges (Audio CD)
As far as I can tell, this is the first recording of wide circulation of Prokofiev's "Love for Three Oranges" (in prologue and five acts) performed exclusively by Russian artists under the Russian tongue. Before this recording, Virgin Classics recorded the complete version of the work by 1989, with Kent Nagano leading the chorus and orchestra of Lyon Opera. That highly successful recording, which is still available, is sung in French, something Prokofiev translated from the original Russian. The opera's success in the former Soviet Russia led me to belief that Melodiya recorded the complete edition of the work (probably more than once), though its chronic distribution troubles left us nothing but wondering.

Kabalevsky's "Colas Breugnon" comes to mind when hearing this theatrical masterpiece. Both works are extremely vivid and virtuosic. The spirits are high and the invention is admirable throughout. Kabalevsky's opera (of 1937, in the height of socialist realism) is more formal and traditional (not deplorable at all, please don't get me wrong) while Prokofiev's (of 1920, when the avant garde movement was taking shape) avoided the conventions of an opera, especially in regards to the chorus. The infamous march has its own shape, melodic appeal, and rhythm. However, the themes of the work comes and goes, with no development bestowed upon them at all while dramatically, the plot is unorthodox, affected by the intervention of various groups of spectators (the Comicals, Tragicals, Lyricals, Empty-Heads, and the Eccentrics). If that isn't enough, each of the groups have their own issues and agendas (towards the comic, the tragic, the philosophy, and the fun). Overall, the Kabalevsky is comical, mixed in with some dramatic intensity (especially of Act II, Scene III where people scattered in fright once the bubonic plague hit the city of Clamency, 16th Century). The Prokofiev is satirical, fill with irony and fantasy, all admirably manifested in the Prologue and is something even Carl Nielsen would have greatly admired (his Maskarade is equally inventive, original, and witty).

Vsevolod Meyerhold, among the most eminent of directors in Soviet Russia, was the main instigator of the this operatic project. In searching for ways to revitize Russian theatre, Meyerhold grabbed hold of Carlo Gozzi's "L'amore delle tre melarance", a play of satire, surrealism, and full with conflicting fantasies. Apollinaire, the French poet introduced the plays of Gozzi to Meyerhold, including this one, and along with Vogak and Solovev, Meyerhold used this play in introducting ways of expanding the theories of the theatrics beyond the traditions, in a journal entitled "Love for Three Oranges." Four years later, in 1918, Meyerhold, fully aware of Prokofiev's leaning towards experimentation (and ultimately towards the avant garde movement in the 1920s), handed him the first issue of the journal and suggested that he use his own adaptation of Gozzi's play for an opera. It was in Prokofiev's suitcase when he left Russia for Chicago during that same year.

Meyerhold was right! Prokofiev was attracted to the amount of scenic and textual freedom the play allows and Cleofonte Campanini, the Director of the Chicago Opera Company, realized the potential of the operatic treatment of the play and commissioned it (the production of the Love for Three Oranges was scheduled for the 1919-1920 season). Originally, the Gambler was to be produced, but the score remained in Petrograd. Campanini died suddenly during the stage preparations of the opera and its production was prosponed until December 31st, 1921, thanks to the Opera Company's newly appointed director, Mary Garden, a huge fan of modern music. A day after the premiere, conducted by Prokofiev himself, the critics torn it apart, but the audience of Chicago admired it warmly and the success of the work as assured in Europe and Russia after 1925. Astonishingly, Paris (arguably the center of the avant garde movement) waited until 1956 to stage the work.

Needless to say, the performance altogether is flawless. Valery Gergiev brings out the sparkle and the wit of the score effectively and his rendition is with zest and finese, responded admirably by the Kirov Orchestra and Chorus. The singers were extremely well cast, with the characters portrayed anything other than one-dimensionals. Evgeny Akimov as the Prince is humorous with something of a defiance while even his whining never cease to amuse. Mikhail Kit as the King of Clubs is likewise fresh and strong while Larissa Dyadkova is lyrical and strong, not as tender and vulnerable as Lia Shevtsova in Ninetta.

I would hesitate to say that this issue surpassed the Virgin Classic recording of the work, with Kent Nagano every bit as creative and imaginative as Gergiev and with fine-tuned orchestra at his disposal. Having said that though, Gergiev's Prokofiev series is worthy of everlasting cherish and this issue is at a pinnacle of Gergiev's tireless efforts in promoting his operas. I now sense something of a revival of this work in the vein similar to the Fiery Angel and War & Peace.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great set, 26 Jan 2009
By G.D. - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges (Audio CD)
This might be the best available recording of Prokofiev's most popular (at least most often performed) opera. I am not sure it is the best of his operas (The Fiery Angel is a strong contender), but the combination of the slightly absurd and sometimes genuinely amusing absurdist plot combined with Prokofiev's masterly handling of the orchestra, makes it a very satisfying work. There are no real arias or set numbers here, yet there are several instantly memorable instrumental parts (not least the famous march); the whole thing is hugely inventive and unconventional, yet immediately appealing and full of atmosphere.

Gergiev, opting for the Russian version, predictably takes a rather fierce view of the work; with lots of - indeed perhaps a little too much - urgency. But he draws some marvelous playing from the Concertgebouw and usually doesn't miss out on the subtle details of the score. The chorus is great - indeed, the chorus is one of the consistent strengths of the Gergiev Russian opera series, and they surely do not disappoint here. The singers are also generally excellent, including the minor roles, and special praise should go to Akimov, who gives an impressively varied characterization as the prince and is able to get the most out of this character with light, effective and humorous singing. Very strongly recommended.
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