THE GREAT SERGEI
LEMESHEV
BY
NATALIA A. BUKANOVA
It
is a great pleasure for me to present another in our series of guest writers.
Natalia Bukanova, my young and brilliant friend, known to many of you by her
Youtube Channel name "younglemeshevist," is especially qualified to
write on Sergei Lemeshev. Natalie was among the first to begin to spread his
recordings on Youtube, along with those of Antonina Nezhdanova. All lovers of
great singing owe her a debt of gratitude for this effort, as these two superb
Soviet artists were unknown to many opera lovers in the United States at that
time. Natalie is also to be praised for composing this piece in English—with
less than a full year’s English in school, and a little work with yours truly,
Natalia has attained a level of English language proficiency that can only be
called extraordinary; she is now a professional illustrator of children’s literature and a
teacher in the prestigious Moscow Art Institute, one of the most famous such institutions
in the world. Natalie has her own website on Lemeshev, which I hasten to point
out to you. It is both exhaustive and
erudite! Here you can take a quick glance at her introductory page and then return back here.
Edmund
St. Austell
First, I would like to thank Professor
St. Austell for inviting me to write this piece on my favorite tenor.
In Russia, Sergei Yakovlevich Lemeshev
(1902-1977) is—along with Feodor Chaliapin— perhaps the most beloved opera
singer in recent history. He was born into a very poor peasant family, in a
small village, and sang from his early childhood. He was always surrounded by
good singers, including his parents and other villagers, as peasant Russia was
a “singing country” in those days. His father died when Sergei was 10, and
after four years in a parish school he started to learn shoemaking, since there
was no other chance for the family to escape from poverty. In 1918 he became
acquainted with architect and opera lover Nikolai Kvashnin, who, along with the
rest of his family, persuaded Sergei to study voice seriously. Those were the
years of the Bolshevik revolution and the Civil war, and Lemeshev was required
to become a cadet in the Red Army Cavalry School. However, it was actually the
Revolution that helped him make his dream of an operatic career come true,
since the Bolsheviks gave the poorest peasants and proletarians a preferential
right to free education. Sergei was assigned to study at the Moscow Conservatory
where, after surviving a rigorous competition, he was accepted. (This
determined his political views, for as he said many times, “the Soviets gave me
everything".)
His teachers
were tenor N. Raisky (a pupil of G. Nuvelli), N. Kardyan, and L. Zvyagina (a leading
contralto of the Bolshoi.) In 1926, Lemeshev made his debut as Lensky in K.
Stanislavsky’s Opera Studio, and beginning in 1927, he performed at theaters in
Sverdlovsk, Harbin (Manchuria) and Tbilisi. In 1931, he became a leading tenor
of the Bolshoi, where he sang for the next 34 years, winning great acclaim. His
audience grew, along with his fame, and he soon gained a veritable army of
fans, called "lemeshevists. His repertoire included the Duke of Mantua,
Lensky, Alfredo, Tsar Berendei (from The Snowmaiden), the Indian Guest (Sadko),
Faust, Ziebel, Almaviva, The Simpleton (Boris Godunov ), Rodolfo (La Bohème)
The Astrologer (The Golden Cockerel), Nadir, Des Greiux (Manon), Gerald
(Lakme), Romeo (Gounod’s (Romeo and Juliette), Fra Diavolo, and Werther.
His vocal
and artistic qualities, evident to every listener, are beauty of timbre,
musicality, effortlessness of vocal production, expressiveness, and very clear
diction, qualities perhaps most commonly found in bel canto singers. These
qualities can be seen is his 1940 recording of “Parmi veder le Lagrime"
(in Russian). I would call attention to the extraordinarily high note at the
end, a Db above high C:
An
interesting comment on Lemeshev’s singing was made by the Bolshoi tenor A.
Orfenov: "He developed a mixed voice of incomparable beauty, which made it
possible for him to take the highest notes with such beautiful richness that
even specialists could not explain how it was done technically….His high C’s …
sounded virile and full…His manner of lowering his larynx a bit on high notes
allowed him to perform the parts which we ordinary lyric tenors did not sing,
[roles such as] Rodolfo in La Bohème, Levko in May Night, Dubrovsky, Fra
Diavolo…”
Lemeshev’s
emotionality, acting skills and handsomeness very quickly made him a public
idol. Aside from the Duke of Mantua, which was his signature role before the
war, he brilliantly performed romantic, melancholy and tragic roles such as
Werther, Romeo, and Lensky. Here is his 1938 recording of " Pourquoi me
reveiller":
Unfortunately,
like every Soviet star in the 1930’s, he had problems securing permission to
make recordings of complete operas. Several roles in which he was very
successful were not recorded at all. His best early recordings of songs and
arias, made on shellac, are now available on Youtube. You may consult my
channel—"younglemeshevist," or that of petrof4056.
Lensky
finally became his most famous role, which he refined throughout his life. His
1955 recording of Eugene Onegin, with the renowned Galina Vishnevskaya , became
quite well known in the West. Here is a very good 1937 recording of Lensky’s
aria:
The best
years of his operatic career were 1931-1942. He was also an outstanding concert
singer and a brilliant performer of folk songs. In 1938, he became the first
artist to sing all 100 romances by Tchaikovsky in 5 concerts. Folk songs
broadcast on the radio made him a truly “national’ singer. Additionally, the
film “A Musical Story,” 1941, in which he played the main role, brought him the
Stalin prize and caused Lemeshev-mania all over the USSR. It must be said that
his personality was a significant part of his success. He is remembered as a
very friendly and cheerful person who was also a congenial colleague. He was
also quite a lady's man! Six marriages and numerous affairs focused the
attention of his fans on his personal life. Their day-and-night stalking and
scuffles with fans of other tenors are legendary.
The
beginning of the Great Patriotic War (WWII) was crucial for Lemeshev; during
one evacuation he caught a very bad cold which resulted in two attacks of
pneumonia, complicated by pleurisy and tuberculosis of the right lung. He was
treated with artificial pneumothorax, which is to say an induced therapeutic
collapse of one lung. Although singing was forbidden, he in fact continued to
sing with one lung from 1942 to 1948, when the other lung was also artificially
collapsed and re-inflated. During that period he recorded Lakme, The Snowmaiden,
Pearlfishers, and Mozart and Salieri. In addition to health problems, he
started to drink heavily after a divorce from his fifth wife, the soprano Irina
Maslennikova. By 1953, however, he had overcome his drinking problem and was
given the prestigious title "People’s Artist of the USSR." He was
also appointed Assistant Manager of the Bolshoi from 1957 to 1959. Toward the
end of his career, he mainly gave concerts of Russian classic romances and folk
songs, taught in the Moscow conservatory, and performed on the radio. Old fans
of his, who stalked him in the 1940's and 50's, are still faithful to him even
now, 33 years after his death. They collect his recordings and place flowers on
his grave every week.
First of all, I would like to thank Natalie for an absolutely excellent article on Sergei Lemeshev. Very few people know as much about the great tenor as Natalie does, and we are privileged indeed to be the beneficiaries of her extraordinary knowledge. Thank you very much, my dear friend, and I hope we may have the pleasure of hearing from you again soon. Edmund
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sir Edmund, for a fascinating article from the talented, well informed, and beautiful young Ms. Butanova. I have always been impressed by the power of Lemeshev's voice and the fact that his highest range seems almost effortless. It is sad that we in the West have known so little of the East all these years. I was in St. Petersburg a couple of years ago and saw how much more there is for us to learn. Keep up the good work! I hope Ms. Butanova will write for us again.
ReplyDeleteThank youi mr
ReplyDeleteThank you Mr. Hobbes.
always a pleasure to hear from you. You are certainly right
we can learn a great deal from an assiduous study of Russian culture, one of the great artistic cultures of the world, right up there with Mediterranean cultures
1
ReplyDeleteThank you Mr. Hobbes, as always. And you are right....we can learn a great deal from the mighty culture of our
Russian friends. Edmund
Thanks a lot, Edmund! Writing for your blog is an honor.
ReplyDeleten.a.
Thank you, Mr. Hobbes.
ReplyDeleten.a.