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Полная версияTchaikovsky Hamlet Incidental Music RNO Pletnev concert version - YouTube
December 3, 2009, Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory. Russian National Orchestra and Mikhail Pletnev.P.I.Tchaikovsky, Hamlet - Incidental Music for Shakespeare's tragedy, Op. 67a (1891).1. Overture2. Act I Scene 4: Fanfare: A Flourish of Trumpets;2a. Act I Scene 5: Melodrame: The Ghost tells Hamlet of his father's murder3. Act II: Entr'acte: Prelude to Scene 1 and first appearance in the play of Ophelia4. Act I Scene 1: Melodrame: First appearance of Ghost5. Act III: Entr'acte: Prelude to Scene 1 which features Hamlet's soliloquy6. Act III Scene 2: Melodrame: The Players enact the Scene of the Poisoning7. Act IV: Entr'acte: Prelude to Scene 1 - A Room in the Castle8. Act V: Entr'acte: Prelude to Scene 1 - A Churchyard (Marche)9. Act V Scene 2: Fanfare: Trumpets sound10. Act V Scene 2: Marche finaleLucien Guitry again asked Tchaikovsky to write incidental music for Hamlet. This time, it was for a benefit production on 21 February 1891 at the Mikhaylovsky Theatre in Saint Petersburg, and it was to be Guitry's farewell performance. Tchaikovsky started work on the incidental music on 13 January, but found it difficult. He was exhausted from completing The Queen of Spades, which had premiered to a triumph in December 1890. Also that month, his patroness Nadezhda von Meck had severed her connection with him. He was also suffering an affliction of the right hand. For these reasons he had cancelled his conducting engagements in Mainz, Budapest and Frankfurt, and retired for rest and recuperation to Frolovskoye. For the overture, he used the earlier stand-alone Hamlet overture-fantasia Op. 67, but in a shortened form. In the 16 other numbers, as well as writing some new music, he also used material from the incidental music to The Snow Maiden, Op. 12 (1873), from the alla tedesca movement of the Third Symphony (1875), and from the Elegy for Ivan Samarin (1884). The writing was finished by 3 February. Tchaikovsky travelled from Moscow to attend the performance in Saint Petersburg. He enjoyed the performance for the acting, but he never thought much of the music he had produced, and refused permission for it to be used in a later production in Warsaw. /Wikipedia/3 декабря 2009 года, Большой зал Московской государственной консерватории. Михаил Плетнев и Российский Национальный оркестр. Петр Ильич Чайковский - Музыка к трагедии Уильяма Шекспира "Гамлет" Op. 67a (1891). Концертная версия.1. Увертюра2. Фанфары и Мелодрама3. Антракт ко II акту4. Мелодрама5. Антракт к III акту6. Мелодрама7. Элегия8. Траурный марш, Фанфары, Финальный марш