Boris Godunov 
                is a work that, with its long, continuous 
                scenes and monumental structure, does 
                not lend itself easily to a highlights 
                disc, especially if the intention is 
                to give a fair cross-section of the 
                opera. The producers of this compilation, 
                drawn from a complete recording originally 
                issued by Erato, wisely concentrate 
                the choice on a few substantial chunks, 
                covering most of Boris’s part. To this 
                they add a couple of snippets that can 
                stand on their own, out of context. 
                It is very much the same concept as 
                Chandos’s highlights disc in their "Opera 
                in English" series, although the 
                non-Boris excerpts differ from the ones 
                on this Warner disc. 
              
 
              
In effect the two discs 
                are artist portraits of John Tomlinson 
                and Ruggero Raimondi respectively, and 
                since both recordings are based on the 
                first version from 1868 in David Lloyd-Jones’ 
                edition (i.e. Mussorgsky’s "original" 
                without Rimsky-Korsakov’s tidying-ups) 
                they invite to illuminating comparisons. 
                First of all the two Borises are quite 
                different voice types. Tomlinson’s is 
                a true bass: dark, heavy, massive; Raimondi’s 
                is much more baritonal: lighter, more 
                nimble and smoother. 
              
 
              
These differences are 
                also, at least partly, mirrored in the 
                conductors’ interpretation of the score, 
                most of all in their choice of tempo 
                for the Boris scenes. Paul Daniel (Tomlinson) 
                is much slower; he needs 28 minutes 
                for the Apartments scene whereas Rostropovich 
                (Raimondi) takes only 25. There is a 
                similar difference in the Death scene: 
                Daniel 24½; Rostropovich 20. 
              
 
              
Of course tempo is 
                not everything and both versions offer 
                valid impersonations of the ill-fated 
                tsar, and while the ideal, as so often, 
                is somewhere in between - neither is 
                much off the mark. For listeners who 
                crave the original language, Tomlinson 
                is of course ruled out, although English 
                works surprisingly well as a substitute 
                for Russian, which I first discovered 
                more than twenty years ago when I actually 
                heard Tomlinson in this opera at the 
                ENO. 
              
 
              
Leaving the Chandos 
                at that and concentrating on the Apex, 
                it is apparent from the very first chords 
                of the coronation scene that this is 
                going to be a no-nonsense traversal 
                of this powerful score. The chiming 
                bells, the dark, threatening brass chords 
                and the really punchy choral singing 
                have you at once sitting up in your 
                chair. Rostropovich has always been 
                one of the most dynamic of musicians, 
                whether as cellist, pianist or conductor 
                and it is obvious that he relishes the 
                pungent harmonies of Mussorgsky’s original. 
                Tempos are, as I have already mentioned, 
                fastish – the polonaise (track 4) is 
                unusually lively – but "Slava" 
                is never rigid: he knows where to hold 
                back and as a whole, judging from these 
                excerpts (I haven’t heard the complete 
                recording) this is as good an interpretation 
                as any of this many-faceted score. 
              
 
              
Raimondi’s Boris is 
                lyrical and warm, very human – and very 
                beautiful. In many ways he reminds me 
                of Kim Borg, the great Finnish bass 
                of the 1950s and 1960s, who was also 
                a great Boris. I learnt Boris’s music 
                – or parts of it – from a DG recital 
                with Russian bass arias sung by Borg. 
                Hearing Raimondi I recognize much of 
                the timbre, the warmth and even a lot 
                of inflections from that Borg LP ... 
                high praise. His second act monologue, 
                "I stand supreme in power", 
                to use David Lloyd-Jones’ English translation 
                (halfway through track 2) is exquisitely 
                done. Later in the same act, the so 
                called ‘clock scene’, where Boris’s 
                bad conscience makes him see ghosts, 
                "Ugh! Give me air! I suffocate 
                in here ..." (end of track 3). 
                The terror, the desperation is depicted 
                with utmost intensity. Compared to the 
                legendary Chaliapin recording, Raimondi 
                is not so overwhelmingly larger than 
                life, but he expresses the same agony 
                just as movingly but with smaller means. 
              
 
              
The real highpoint 
                of this score, and a challenge to any 
                good singer-actor, is Boris’s death. 
                This long monologue is sung with great 
                restraint, softly and inwardly, until 
                the very end, where the agitation becomes 
                almost physically tangible – then a 
                whispered "Forgive me" and 
                then ... silence. An utterly moving 
                portrayal of the tsar! 
              
 
              
The other singers, 
                good as many of them are, become more 
                or less marginalized on a highlights 
                disc like this, but some of them are 
                worth a comment or two. Kenneth Riegel 
                is an incisive Shuisky in the coronation 
                scene and suitably oily in the second 
                act scene with Boris (track 3). It is 
                good to hear a "real" boy, 
                not a fruity mezzo-soprano, as Feodor. 
                Matthew Adam Fish sings very well in 
                the nursery scene (track 2) where both 
                Catherine Dubosc and Mira Zakai as Xenia 
                and the old nurse, are expressive. As 
                Marina we hear Rostropovich’s wife, 
                Galina Vishnevskaya, who sounds remarkably 
                fresh of voice, although it is obvious 
                that this is an old singer. She was 
                61 when the recording was made and had 
                retired from the opera stage several 
                years earlier. 
              
 
              
Vishnevskaya’s Dimitri 
                in the love duet (track 5) is Vyacheslav 
                Polozov, whose diamond-hard tenor is 
                more suitable for cutting glass than 
                expressing warmth in a love duet. It 
                would probably have been a better idea 
                to let Nicolai Gedda, who here in his 
                62nd year sings the Simpleton 
                (track 7) with the same beauty of tone 
                and intelligent phrasing as ever, take 
                on the role. It’s one he had already 
                recorded twice: first in 1952, the year 
                of his debut at the Royal Opera in Stockholm 
                and his very first complete recording, 
                and then again in 1977, the first recording 
                of the original score with Jerzy Semkow. 
                He retained his superb voice very long 
                indeed; in 1992, five years after this 
                recording was made, I heard him at the 
                Royal Opera in Stockholm, giving a full-length 
                recital to celebrate his 40th 
                year as an opera singer. He then sang 
                a number of demanding arias: Lenski’s 
                aria, the Pearl Fishers romance, the 
                Flower Song from Carmen, Nemorino’s 
                arias from L’Elisir d’amore. These were 
                all delivered with the same lustre, 
                the same power, the same beauty of voice 
                as we had been used to hear on his 20, 
                30 and even 40 years old recordings. 
                He still recorded as recently as 2002. 
                Close brackets. Let me just mention 
                that Paul Plishka is a strong Pimen 
                in the Death Scene (track 6) with good 
                feeling for the words but a little unsteady. 
              
 
              
At budget price this 
                disc is well worth having for Raimondi’s 
                beautifully sung and deeply felt Boris 
                and, as an extra bonus, for Gedda’s 
                Simpleton. No texts are provided of 
                course and the synopsis relates the 
                story of the opera (which is good) but 
                with no references to what is actually 
                sung (which is less good). The choruses 
                and the orchestra are excellent and 
                the sound quality everything one could 
                wish. 
              
Göran Forsling