Songs of Old Russia
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Traditional
Label: Opus 111
Magazine Review Date: 3/1997
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 64
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: OPS30-164

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: On the Wild Steppes beyond the Baikal |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: See Our Peasants |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Nothing but the Steppe all Around |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Hymn of the Slav Peoples |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: My Little Birch Torch |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Behind the Clouds the Winds Have Arisen |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: I Cannot But Think Back |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Splendid Sea |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: The Separation |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Upstream on the Volga |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Glory be to You, Kuban Cossacks |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: The Fog is Coming Down |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: The Twelve Brigands |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: He Alone Deserves to Live |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Driving the Waves of the Volga |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Snow, the Time has Come |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Through the Thick, Mysterious Taiga |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Song of the Noble Regiment |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Songs of Old Russia, Movement: Monotonously Rings the Little Bell |
Traditional, Composer
Anatoly Grindenko, Conductor Moscow Male Voice Choir Traditional, Composer |
Author:
Anyone expecting unadulterated sentimentality from this disc (pace Anatoly Grindenko’s insert-note: “the songs most liked by Russians are the sad ones”) will be disappointed, for it includes some of the most vigorous, cleanly objective singing I have heard. And yet it does pull at the heart-strings.
The music, all sung in excellent a cappella arrangements, falls into three principal categories: firstly there are the stern military songs, of which the most impressive isGlory be to you, Kuban Cossacks. It is a strong, moving song, positively swimming in kvass and vodka, and some of the singing by the two soloists recalls Georgian folk music, as does the first track, Snow, the time has come. The second group is of ballads, some of which remind one of English Edwardian parlour songs (rather as one can sometimes be reminded of Stanford by early twentieth-century Russian sacred music). Amongst the most impressive are track 9 (beautifully harmonized, with a wonderful storm-in-a-teacup text) and the lovely track 4, Monotonously rings the little bell. Thirdly, two of the songs are a kind of miniature tone-poem: Behind the clouds and Upstream, on the Volga include highly effective musical representations of the wind and the waves respectively.
In a very personal (and very Russian) note, Vladimir Krupin observes that “the Russian folk-song is a miracle”, and “abroad, these songs would have reduced me to tears”. Indeed, but it is the technical precision and emotional restraint which Grindenko brings to these arrangements that best conveys their tremendous power.'
The music, all sung in excellent a cappella arrangements, falls into three principal categories: firstly there are the stern military songs, of which the most impressive is
In a very personal (and very Russian) note, Vladimir Krupin observes that “the Russian folk-song is a miracle”, and “abroad, these songs would have reduced me to tears”. Indeed, but it is the technical precision and emotional restraint which Grindenko brings to these arrangements that best conveys their tremendous power.'
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