Listen to the grandmaster sing 21.04.2007Last week Emil Sutovsky, Israeli grandmaster, just missed winning the European Championship by a hair. Weighing in at 2648 Elo points, Emil is also an accomplished bass-baritone singer. During the recent Poikovsky tournament he gave a small recital, which was filmed by a chess fan. We bring you Emil Sutovsky singing an aria from Mozart's Don Giovanni and a famous Russian folk song.
Emil tells us that the recital was very impromptu, and he didn't have any time
to practice with the local "Konzertmeister". He also feared that he
was a bit rusty, having only trained chess and not singing for many weeks. "Still
it was great fun," says Sutovsky.
The first song is quite famous and deals with the exploits of a 17th century
Russian hero. Stenka Timofeyevich Razin, born in 1630, died in 1671, was a Cossack
leader who headed a major uprising against the Tsarist bureaucracy in southern
Russia. He started off as a diplomat, a pilgrim and then a robber chief who
extracted fees from vessels passing up and down the Volga. He sailed into the
Caspian Sea, ravaged the Persian coasts and massacring the inhabitants.
Stenka Razin sailing in the Caspian Sea
(painting by Vasily Surikov in the Russian Museum, St Petersburg)
He established a Cossack republic along the whole length of the Volga, and
then advanced against Moscow. Razin was ultimately routed and fled down the
Volga. In 1671 he was captured and taken to Moscow, where, after torture, he
was quartered alive in the Red Square. The whole story reminds one of William
Wallace. Stand by for a new Mel Gibson extravaganza.
Common people were fascinated by the adventures of Stenka Razin. He became
the subject of a symphonic poem by Alexander Glazunov and a cantata by Shostakovich.
But most famously Stenka Razin is the hero of a popular Russian folk song, written
by Dmitri Sadovnikov.
GM Emil Sutovsky, 2648, sings Sten'ka Razin
Sten'ka Razin (Стéнька Разин)
Russian (transcription)
Iz-za ostrova na stryezhyen',
Na prostor ryechnoy volny,
Vyplyvayut raspisnyye,
Ostrogrudyye chyelny.
Na pyeryednyem Styen'ka Razin,
Obnyavshis' sidit s knyazhnoy,
Svad'bu novuyu spravlyayet,
On vyesyolyy i khmyel'noy.
Pozadi ikh slyshyen ropot:
"Nas na babu promyenyal,
Nochku s nyeyu provozilsya,
Sam na utro baboy stal."
Etot ropot i nasmyeshki
Slyshit groznyy ataman,
I on moshchnoyu rukoyu
Obnyal pyersiyanki stan.
If you enjoyed Sten'ka Razin you may want to listen to Emil singing an aria
"Notte e giorno faticar" from Act I, Scene I of the Italian opera,
Don Giovanni by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. It is sung by Leporello, a servant
of Don Giovanni, in the courtyard of the Commandatore's palace. Leporello complains
that he always has to do the boring work, while his master, Don Giovanni, gets
to dally with beautiful women.
Italian original
Notte e giorno faticar,
Per chi nulla sa gradir,
Piova e vento sopportar,
Mangiar male e mal dormir.
Voglio far il gentiluomo
E non voglio piu' servir...
Oh che caro galantuomo!
Vuol star dentro colla bella,
Ed io far la sentinella!
Voglio far il gentiluomo
E non voglio piu' servir...
Ma mi par che venga gente;
Non mi voglio far sentir.
Translation by Leonora McClernan
Day and night slaving away,
For someone who is never satisfied,
Rain and wind to put up with,
Eating badly and sleeping badly.
I want to be a gentleman
And I don't want to be a servant anymore...
Oh what a chivalrous gentleman!
He wants to stay inside with beautiful woman,
And I am the lookout!
I want to be a gentleman
And I don't want to be a servant anymore...
But it seems like someone's coming;
I don't want to let anyone know I'm here.
Lajos Portish is also a bass-baritone singer. At last year's European Championship
in Kusadasi, Turkey, he sang Santa Lucia for the closing ceremony audience –
and to the utter delight of the Playchess.com
visitors, who saw and heard it live on the chess server.
Former world champion Vasily Smyslov is also a baritone, who in his youth
auditioned in the Bolschoi Theater and, at the age of 75, produced
his first CD of Russian romances. In May 2001, exactly 50 years after the first
audition, Smyslov sang again in the Bolshoi Theatre – in celebration of Anatoli
Karpov's 50th birthday.
World
championship Mark Taimanov is an accomplished concert pianist who together
with his wife Lyubov Bruk played a series of concerts across the USSR
and in foreign countries. Their best performances have been released by
Philipps and are part of the prestigious collection that presents the
100 greatest pianists of the 20th century.
You can listen to the Taimanovs play Mozart's Concerto for two pianos
in E-flat, KV 365 Rondo Allegro, with the Leningrad Chamber Orchestra.
Click
here to replay the MP3 wav file.