Idk if the Tsjaikovski brothers are posted yet but they were both gay
Pyotr Tchaikovsky
Modest Tchaikovsky
Iosif Kotek - Had relationship with Pyotr
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Idk if the Tsjaikovski brothers are posted yet but they were both gay
Pyotr Tchaikovsky
Modest Tchaikovsky
Iosif Kotek - Had relationship with Pyotr
You had the misfortune to be born with the soul of an artist and you will always be drawn into that world of the highest spiritual joy, but since, in addition to this artistic sensitivity, you are endowed with no talent, for God's sake be on guard lest you yield to this temptation.
Tchaikovsky to his younger brother Modest, February 1869
Modest Tchaikovsky (deceased)
Gender: Male
Sexuality: Gay
DOB: 13 May 1850
RIP: 15 January 1916
Ethnicity: White - Russian
Occupation: Translator, tutor, writer, playwright
Note: Brother was composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky who was also gay
Y’all heard of Tchaikovsky’s little brother Modest?
If we ever get an actual full English translations of Modest Tchaikovsky's autobiography, I will probably leave this plane of existence. I will ascend into another life and no one will ever see me again. Alexander Poznansky needs to make sure that it happens. If he dies before that ever happens...uuuugh I can't. I need it so bad
So, 'Dubrovsky'. It actually turned out to be a very fine opera! Zero caveats. As a standalone thing a lot more harmonious than Tchaikovsky's 'Oprichnik' for instance: great melodies, superb choral scenes, nice pace with no lapces... I don't know about Napravnick's other 3 (though I'm forever interested in anything called 'Francesca da Rimini' - I love Paolo and Francesca story for operas and as far as I know we don't have an ultimate one yet! But I digress as usual) I'd love to hear this one again as a full fledged performance and not just as a concert! However that's the thing with the less popular Russian items - you're usually stuck with a couple (or in this case even one! albeit with Lemeshev in the main part) old recordings and maybe a black-and-white film made sometime after the war... Sigh. On today's performance, I can tell you it was good. Solidly, confidently good. Mariinsky's young blood did most of both heavy and light lifting) And they did a great job. My biggest kind of almost dissapointment today was bass Andrey Serov, who sang the old Dubrovsky-father - a small poignant role - he dies at the very beginning to provide a real push for the plot - and a lot of hollow rumble from the singer... Not cool. Though he does plenty of acting - even when he sings in a concert... I just wish they would discuss it and decide on a kind of a common aproach between all the soloists on stage. Because it's weird when one guy is like all in, while two guys next to him are both like 'nope - park and bark'! Also, they didn't have any surtitles tonight - neither in Russian nor in English - so the performers were really left alone with the text and their respective dictions, however good or bad. I was pleasantly surprised by the way - for the most part I didn't even had 'there should be surtitles' thought at the back of my mind. Second from worst was the main character - Vladimir Dubrovsky sung by Dmitriy Voropaev. Unfortunatelly, as he has some seriously nice music and a lot of it actually... Well, I love these consert performances - Mariinsky covers a lot of less well-known and obvious stuff this way, so I get Voropaev a lot as he does the main tenor parts in most of those with only occasional detours onto two main stages. I've probably heard him more than any other tenor and I respect and admire all the hard work he clearly puts into learning and performing all of this ginormous repertoire. But something's missing. Sigh. At times his voice today hasn't cut through the orchestra and it's a small hall - 300 something seats... and altogether the timbre is not 'wow please don't stop singing'. But once again lots of work evidently so I'm really torn. Everyone else was great - all other males -several basses and baritones - they had 12 soloists in the first half! I can't even tell who was the best - the smith Arkhip or the villain Troekurov (sung by Yaroslav Petrenyk) or maybe uriadnik... On the female side - I really liked Ekaterina Latusheva's Masha. It was my second time hearing her and she didn't dissapoint! Maybe a couple of not so good notes during the most dramatic bits but in lyrical ones she truly excelled! Both servant ladies were great as well - deep, rich but two very different voices! Ok, now I'm going to stop talking and if I've gotten anybody curious here is the above mentioned black-and-white movie:
P.S. Also another ‘Aida’ ahead. But Ekaterina Semenchuk is singing Amneris, so how could I say no?
Russian playwright, opera librettist and translator Modest Tchaikovsky. He was the younger brother of composer Pytor Ilyich Tchaikovsky, and originally graduated from the School of Jurisprudence with a degree in law. Eventually, he decided to go into music, and wrote plays, translated Shakespearean sonnets into Russian, and wrote his brother's opera libretti. He also wrote libretti for Eduard Nápravnik, Arseny Koreschenko, Anton Arensky and Sergei Rachmaninoff. May 13, 1850 - Jan. 15, 1916.