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

Sergey Prokofiev (Composer), Valery Gergiev (Conductor), St. Petersburhg Kirov Chorus and Orchestra (Orchestra), Alexandr Morozov (Performer), Anna Netrebko (Performer), Evgeny Akimov (Performer), Fyodor Kuznetsov (Performer), Grigory Karasev (Performer), Konstantin Pluzhnikov (Performer), Larissa Diadkova (Performer), Larissa Shevchenko (Performer), Mikhail Kit (Performer), Olga Korzhenskaya (Performer), Vassily Gerello (Performer), Vladimir Vaneev (Performer), Yuri Zhikalov (Performer), Zlata Bulycheva (Performer)
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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 4:06$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 1 - Bedniy sïn!Mikhail Kit 5:05$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 1 - Igrï? Spektakli?Konstantin Pluzhnikov 3:30$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 2 - Mag Cheliy!Larissa Shevchenko 4:01$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 3 - Moi zhelaniya vstrechayut prepyatstviyaLarissa Diadkova 3:44$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 1. Scene 3 - Kto etot chelovek?Larissa Diadkova 6:25$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 1 - Smeshno?Konstantin Pluzhnikov 6:42$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Divertisment nomer pervïy!Larissa Shevchenko 2:37$0.99 Buy Track
listen  9. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Divertisment nomer vtoroy!Larissa Shevchenko 2:56$0.99 Buy Track
listen10. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Kha-kha...Kha-kha-kha...Evgeny Akimov 1:46$0.45 Buy Track
listen11. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Varvar! Slushay!Larissa Shevchenko 2:55$0.99 Buy Track
listen12. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Tri apelsina...tri apelsinaEvgeny Akimov 2:46$0.99 Buy Track
listen13. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 2. Scene 2 - Ti podnimayesh ruku na ottsa?Evgeny Akimov 3:32$0.99 Buy Track


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$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 1 - Veter stikhEvgeny Akimov 3:58$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 2 - Gde mï?Evgeny Akimov 1:53$0.45 Buy Track
listen  4. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 2 - Kto tut pishchit?Konstantin Pluzhnikov 6:01$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - Nu kak zhe nam idtiEvgeny Akimov 4:02$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - Ya Printsessa LinettaLia Shevtzova 3:10$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - E...Truffaldino...TruffaldinoEvgeny Akimov 3:04$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - Da, ya Printsessa Ninetta!Anna Netrebko 7:18Album Only
listen  9. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 3. Scene 3 - Smeraldina...s bulavkoy...Anna Netrebko 5:02$0.99 Buy Track
listen10. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 4. Scene 1 - Akh! Negodnaya vedmaLarissa Shevchenko 3:48$0.99 Buy Track
listen11. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 4. Scene 2 - Tron v poryadke?Larissa Diadkova 4:56$0.99 Buy Track
listen12. The love for three oranges. Op.33 - Act 4. Scene 2 - Strazha, veryovku!Larissa Shevchenko 3:36$0.99 Buy Track


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Product Details

  • Performer: Alexandr Morozov, Anna Netrebko, Evgeny Akimov, Fyodor Kuznetsov, Grigory Karasev, et al.
  • Orchestra: St. Petersburhg Kirov Chorus and Orchestra
  • Conductor: Valery Gergiev
  • Composer: Sergey Prokofiev
  • Audio CD (February 13, 2001)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Philips
  • ASIN: B0000544G8
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #146,802 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com's Best of 2001

Sergei Prokofiev's most popular opera is a swift-moving romp through a flimsy fairy tale of a king cured by laughter who magically pursues three oranges, from one of which emerges the lovely Princess Ninetta. Evil plots and machinations run through the farce, all of which is set to brilliantly orchestrated music. Written in 1919, the opera is frankly iconoclastic; Prokofiev mocked traditional aria-laden operas and pursued a modernism whose shock value is muted today, but whose inventiveness continues to fascinate. The nature of his chosen idiom, though, means listeners shouldn't expect many hummable tunes beyond the popular march. Much of the opera's success lies in stagings that exploit the limitless possibilities of the fairy-tale setting. Beyond its glittery surface, the opera's irony and mockery of the pretentious have contemporary relevance. Valery Gergiev leads a zestful performance, brimming with sparkling wit. The key roles of the king and his newfound beloved are well sung by Akimov and Netrebko, and the chorus and orchestra are first-rate, though the singing of some of the lesser roles is variable. Recorded live, the performance has a spontaneity rarely caught in the studio. --Dan Davis

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
59 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The recording well-worth waiting, with exceptional music., March 11, 2001
By David A. Hollingsworth (Washington, DC USA) - See all my reviews
  
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 tongle. 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.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great set, January 26, 2009
By G.D. (Norway) - See all my reviews
  
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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