Oratorio by Levon Atovmyan (1961) ; Performance history Atovmyan's arrangement was premiered on 28 January 2012 at the
Royal Festival Hall, London.
Vladimir Jurowski conducted the
London Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus; the soloists were
Ewa Podleś and Andrey Breus. That same year, Jurowski also conducted the Russian premiere on 2 April at the Great Hall of the
Moscow Conservatory, with singers Elena Zaremba and Andrey Breus; and American premiere on 18 October at
Davies Symphony Hall. Zaremba and Breus were also the soloists at the latter performance. ;Numbers Atovmyan's oratorio is in 8 sections, some consisting of several numbers (or parts of numbers) from the film score—refer to 'Sequence' below: The performance duration is about 45 minutes. ;Scoring and instrumentation Atovmyan's oratorio is scored for contralto or mezzo-soprano (in 'Ocean-Sea' and 'Song about the Beaver') and baritone (in 'Song of the Oprichniki'), mixed (SATB) chorus, and the following instrumentation: •
Strings:
violins I & II,
violas,
cellos,
double basses •
Woodwinds: 2
piccolos, 2
flutes, 2
oboes,
english horn, 2
clarinets,
E-flat clarinet,
bass clarinet,
tenor saxophone, 2
bassoons,
contrabassoon •
Brass: 4
horns, 5
trumpets, 3
trombones,
tuba •
Percussion:
timpani, piccolo timpani,
bass drum,
snare drum,
triangle,
tambourine,
cymbals,
tam-tam,
bells,
xylophone,
wood block,
whip •
Other:
piano,
celesta, 2
harps
Oratorio by Abram Stasevich (1961) The following commentary, by composer and musicologist Thomas Korganov (1925-2015), was printed in the preface to Stasevich's vocal score in 1961: "Without adding material of his own or making changes to the composer's manuscript, A. Stasevich approached the music for the film in a creative manner turning it into an oratorio consisting of 20 numbers. By repeating certain episodes and sections, and by linking them in a variety of ways, Stasevich was able to turn the various parts of this substantial work into self-contained numbers. In order to comply with the dictates of musical logic, he did not always adhere strictly to the order of the musical episodes prescribed by the plot. Thus certain episodes were transformed into tripartite structures, and others expanded to become rather large movements. Certain changes were also made to the orchestration, and certain instrumental lines were reinforced ... Stasevich also added another formal determinant in the shape of a speaker." ;Performance history The premiere took place on 23 April 1961 in the Great Hall of the
Moscow Conservatory. Abram Stasevich conducted the Moscow State Philharmonic Orchestra. ;Publication history • 1962,
Ivan the Terrible, oratorio by Abram Stasevich, vocal score,
Sovetskiy Kompozitor, Moscow • 1972,
Ivan the Terrible, oratorio by Stasevich, full score,
Sovetskiy Kompozitor, Moscow ;Numbers Stasevich's oratorio is in 20 movements, some consisting of several numbers (or parts of numbers) from the film score—refer to 'Sequence' below: Performance duration is about 75 minutes. ;Scoring and instrumentation Stasevich's oratorio is scored for contralto (in 'Ocean-Sea' and 'Song about the Beaver') and baritone (in 'Song of the Oprichniki'), mixed (SATB) chorus, and the following instrumentation: •
Strings:
violins I & II,
violas,
cellos,
double basses •
Woodwinds: 3
flutes (including 2
piccolos), 3
oboes (including
english horn), 5
clarinets (including
E-flat clarinet &
bass clarinet),
alto saxophone,
baritone saxophone, 4
bassoons (including
contrabassoon) •
Brass: 4
horns, 5
trumpets, 3
trombones, 2
tubas •
Percussion:
timpani,
bass drum,
snare drum,
triangle,
tambourine,
cymbals,
tam-tam,
church bells,
glockenspiel,
xylophone,
wood block, metal bar,
whip •
Other:
piano, 2
gusli, 2
harps
Ballet by Mikhail Chulaki (1975) The ballet
Ivan the Terrible, arranged by
Mikhail Chulaki and choreographed by
Yuriy Grigorovich, debuted in February 1975 at the
Bolshoy Theatre with
Yuri Vladimirov in the title role. The two act (7 scenes) work consists of selections from Prokofiev's film score for
Ivan the Terrible supplemented with excerpts from his
Symphony No. 3 (1928),
Russian Overture (1936), and 'The Field of the Dead' from the film score for
Aleksandr Nevskiy (1938). ; Performance history The world premiere performance took place on 20 February 1975 at the Bolshoy Theatre. Algis Zhuraitis conducted. The cast included
Yuriy Vladimirov (Ivan),
Natalya Bessmertnova (Anastasiya), and Boris Akimov (Kurbskiy).
Oratorio by Michael Lankester (1988) ;Performance history The premiere took place on 4 May 1988. Michael Lankester conducted the Hartford Symphony Orchestra. ;Numbers This version of
Ivan the Terrible consists of 29 numbers. The performance duration is about 95 minutes.
Concert Scenario by Christopher Palmer (1991) Christopher Palmer discusses his
Ivan the Terrible concert scenario in the notes to a Chandos CD recording made a few days after the work's premiere: "...in 1962 Abram Stasevich (1906-1971), who had conducted
Ivan for the film soundtrack, published his
Ivan the Terrible 'oratorio' for speaker, soloists, chorus and orchestra which incorporated all the major musical sequences in the film plus a few that had been left out (notably 'Russian Sea'). It is in this form that the
Ivan music has been known outside the film ever since, and in this form that critics have tended to find it long and diffuse. The main problem is the speaker, introduced by Stasevich primarily because he had been unwise enough to try and incorporate a large number of short fragmentary episodes, and had to find a way of stitching them together. Unfortunately once the speaker was in, he seemed to take over the entire work—much to its detriment in terms of narrative intelligibility and tightness of structure. My new 'performing version' eliminates the speaker and shorter sections (most of which are pastiche Russian-liturgical music of minimal Prokofievian interest). It also restores a number of episodes to their original format, most importantly the assassination of the Pretender in Part II—the climax of the film and one of the most electrifying moments in film music. While retaining Stasevich's make-up of most of the larger movements, I have reverted largely to the film's original sequence of musical events." ; Performance history The concert scenario received its premiere on 28 February 1991 at the
Royal Festival Hall in London.
Neeme Järvi conducted the
Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus. ;Numbers The 'new' work is in 13 movements, some consisting of several numbers (or parts of numbers) from the film score—refer to 'Sequence' below: The performance duration is about 60 minutes. ==Recordings==