Rimsky(中古品) (中古品)Rimsky////Rimsky/Amazonレビュー Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's The Legend of the Invisible City of Kitezh (and the Maiden Fevroniya) is very tuneful, very Slavic, and very, very convoluted and mystical in its plot. While there are some beautiful melodies here, offered up with Rimsky's colorful, well-crafted orchestration, Kitezh is not for everyone; it doesn't travel as well as, say, Boris Godunov or Eugene Onegin. Still, anyone drawn to Russian opera will want to own this score. Unfortunately, the
Rimsky(中古品) (中古品)Rimsky//Rimsky-Korsakov: artist; Gergiev: artist; Kirov Opera & Orch: artist; /Amazonレビュー Thanks to Valery Gergiev's efforts-including his accounts of The Tsar's Bride and Kashchey the Immortal-Rimsky-Korsakov operas are no longer a mystery, but that doesn't mean there is any clearer consensus on their quality. This opera suggests why. Rimsky no doubt sensed that he had the orchestral tone-painting ability to convincingly project the magical moment when the city of Kitezh, under siege by