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  1. Boris Godunov (Russian: Борис Годунов, romanized: Borís Godunóvlisten ⓘ) is an opera by Modest Mussorgsky (1839–1881). The work was composed between 1868 and 1873 in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It is Mussorgsky's only completed opera and is considered his masterpiece.

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  2. Synopsis: Boris Godunov Select a language to ... Modest Mussorgsky. Sung In. Russian. Met titles In. English. German. Spanish {{synopsisController.castingDateText}}

  3. Jul 6, 2007 · Mussorgsky's sprawling drama Boris Godunov is actually an intimate, psychological portrait played out on an epic scale. It comes to us from the Vienna State Opera, with bass Ferruccio...

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  5. In opera: Russian opera. Mussorgskys greatest achievement is Boris Godunov (St. Petersburg, 1874; his own libretto, after Pushkin and Russian history). Boris, the guilty usurper of the throne, dominates this pageant in which the Russian people are present in forceful choral writing.

  6. Dec 9, 2003 · Boris Godunov. An Opera in Four Acts and a Prologue. Performance History. Composing to his own libretto after Pushkin's "comedy" on the same subject and after Karamzin's History of the Russian Empire, Mussogsky completed Boris Godunov in 1868/9. It contained these scenes: The courtyard of the Novodievichy monastery. A square in the Kremlin.

  7. Apr 18, 2016 · Work description. If only one opera were to symbolise Russia, it would surely be Boris Godunov .Not only does the score admirably summarise Modest Mussorgskys style, with his bells, his carillons, his orchestra with its wild variegations and his flamboyant choral scenes, it also draws its strength from the juxtaposition of two levels that ...

  8. Overview. Bass René Pape, the world’s reigning Boris, reprises his overwhelming portrayal of the tortured tsar caught between grasping ambition and crippling paranoia. Conductor Sebastian Weigle leads Mussorgskys masterwork, a pillar of the Russian repertoire, in its original 1869 version, which runs two-and-a-quarter hours with no intermission.

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