This is still the only recording in the catalogues containing 
      all four of these cantatas by Rimsky-Korsakov. As such the disc is 
hors 
      concours. It has been extracted from Brilliant Classic’s compendious 
      box of the complete works of Rimsky-Korsakov issued last year, but has formerly 
      been available as an independent release on Chant du Monde, at which time 
      the booklet included complete translations of the texts in French and English. 
      These have now vanished (a review by James Altena in 
Fanfare of the 
      complete box complains bitterly about this). In the absence of the words 
      this reissue can only be recommended to Russian speakers or those who can 
      obtain the information elsewhere; neither the texts nor the scores - with 
      the exception of a vocal score of 
A page from Homer with German translation 
      - appear to be available online. The booklet gives a brief outline of the 
      plot of three of the cantatas (nothing about 
Aleksey) but this is 
      certainly insufficient to enable those unfamiliar with language to appreciate 
      Rimsky-Korsakov’s detailed setting of the texts. 
        
      This is a crying shame, because the performances themselves are very good 
      and the music deserves to be much better known. Only one of these cantatas, 
      
The Song of Oleg the Wise, has ever been available before, as a filler 
      for Boris Khaikin’s recording of the Rimsky-Korsakov First Symphony 
      on a Melodiya LP from the 1970s but which has long disappeared from the 
      catalogues. I cannot imagine that the old performance, presumably in fairly 
      execrable sound, could have bettered this one to any great extent. There 
      is also now a historical live performance conducted by Alexander Gauk, but 
      that is only available as part of ten CD set 
reviewed 
      on this site by Rob Barnett. There is also now a version of 
From Homer 
      included in Svetlanov’s six-CD box of Rimsky-Korsakov (reviewed 
here 
      by Jonathan Woolf) but that seems to have only emerged in 2007, so again 
      it post-dates the original release of this issue. The other two works here 
      have only ever been available in these performances. 
        
      The 
Poem about Alexey, the Man of God is drawn from a passage excised 
      by Rimsky from his opera 
The maid of Pskov during his revision of 
      the score, and it gets the disc off to a rousing start with some superb 
      singing from the chorus. In 
The Song of Oleg the Wise Nikolai Didenko 
      is a splendid soloist, although Dmitri Korchak shows some regrettable signs 
      of strain on his higher notes. There are some superbly dramatic effects 
      in the orchestra, and one regrets once again the lack of any information 
      which would explain the motivation for these. In this cantata the chorus 
      (men’s voices only) takes on the role of the narrator, and their singing 
      and the expressive playing of the orchestra are again excellent. 
        
      
From Homer is a more straightforward setting of the scene in the 
      
Odyssey when the hero is shipwrecked and found stranded on the beach 
      by Nausicaa and her maidens. It begins with an extended orchestral prelude 
      describing the tempest which takes up 16 pages in a vocal score which extends 
      only to 29 pages in total. The work is scored for women’s voices only, 
      three soloists and chorus. The orchestra have the lion’s share of 
      the music, and their stormy playing points up the Wagnerian influences - 
      both Donner and the Valkyries have left their stamp on the writing. When 
      the voices enter the Wagnerian tone continues, although it now the Flower 
      maidens whose sound is evoked in the gently drooping chromatic lines. The 
      singing is very good indeed - although we do not get the indicated trill 
      from Mitrakova in the unaccompanied passage at 9.40 - and there is no evidence 
      of Slavonic wobble from any of the sweetly blended soloists. By the way, 
      the title in French is given in the score as 
A page from Homer, although 
      no French translation is provided; in Russian and German it is simply 
From 
      Homer. 
        
      The Mermaid of Lake Switez reunites the male and female voices of 
      the chorus, but we are not given any indication about the plot of this dramatic 
      cantata other than that it is a version of the story familiar from 
Rusalka 
      which had been set by Dargomizhky in Russian before Dvořák got 
      his hands on the legend. Again there is plenty of dramatic writing for the 
      orchestra, which is clearly closely allied to the text, but no clue as to 
      what these relationships might be. Dmitri Korchak is no better here than 
      he was in 
Oleg, but Mitrakova is fine - at least I presume it is 
      her, since the details of who actually performs what in each cantata is 
      ambiguously given, and some of the singers are credited for appearing on 
      tracks where they clearly have no part. The choral singing with its dramatic 
      impetus reminded me somewhat of Elgar in 
King Olaf - yes, the music 
      is that good. 
        
      The lack of texts or translations seriously cripples these recordings except 
      for Russian linguists. I would imagine the diction is clear, and it certainly 
      sounds it. Potential purchasers may like to look around for a second-hand 
      copy of the original Chant du Monde issue, were it not for the fact that 
      it only appears to be obtainable on Amazon at a cost of over £120 
      (for one copy) or £230 (for others). Does anybody really buy these 
      exorbitantly priced offerings? So if you want these works - and they are 
      all very good - you really have no choice but to buy these recordings, either 
      as a single disc or as part of the complete Rimsky-Korsakov Edition - which 
      the review in 
Fanfare regarded as a decidedly mixed bag including 
      a number of “deplorable” performances. Then try and find elsewhere 
      the material which you need to enjoy this music properly. The vocal score 
      for 
A page from Homer is on the invaluable ISMLP 
site; 
      for the rest, I wish you luck. 
        
      
Paul Corfield Godfrey  
      
      The performances are very good and the music deserves to be much better 
      known.