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LP record jacket — Bolshoi Theatre Violinists Ensemble (Ансамбль скрипачей Большого театра СССР), dir. Yuli Reyentovich (Melodiya)

Audio Recording

This compilation of performances by the Bolshoi Theatre Violinists Ensemble hosts ten pieces recorded in the Grand Hall of Moscow Conservatory between 1981 and 1982. Tracks 1-4 are on Side 1 and tracks 5-10 are on Side 2. Front of a printed paperboard LP jacket. A color photograph shows the ensemble — about twenty musicians in formal black, holding violins and bows — standing across a theater stage before tall draped curtains lit blue, with chandeliers. Title text appears top and bottom in two languages: English in white across the top ("BOLSHOI THEATRE VIOLINISTS ENSEMBLE / Artistic director Yuli Reyentovich") and Russian in blue/violet across the bottom ("АНСАМБЛЬ СКРИПАЧЕЙ БОЛЬШОГО ТЕАТРА СССР / Художественный руководитель Юлий Реентович"). The Melodiya logo and ministry line are at upper right.

2025.1.198

33 RPM Record

Instrumental

The Cabrera Arús family collection

Leopoldo Arús Gálvez collection

2025.1

Leopoldo Arús Gálvez

Yuli Reyentovich

Artistic Direction

Bolshoi Theatre Violinists Ensemble

Performer

George Karetnikov

Recording Engineer

Margarita Kozhukhova

Recording Engineer

Larissa Abelyan

Editor

S. Nelyubin

Designer

V. Pishchalnikov

Photographer

Irina Zaitseva

Pianist

Melodiya

Classical

circa 1983

Moscow

U.S.S.R.

Eastern Europe

Europe

The majority of pieces were recorded in 1981, although tracks 2 and 8 were recorded in 1982.

The front cover depicts 18 violinists standing on a grand stage with three chandeliers hanging from the ceiling. There are two candelabras behind the line of musicians. The album title and information is printed in English at the top in a white font; the same information in printed in Russian in purple ink at the bottom. The back cover provides the track information in both Russian and English.

Different sources provide different release dates for this album -- one cites that it was released in 1983 while another says it was released in 1987.

Passacaglia

George Frederic Handel

Composer

Grigory Zaborov

Orchestration

Poem for Violins and Violas, Op. 25

E. Ysaye

Composer

The Viola Group of the Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra

Performer

Evgeny Svetlanov

Conductor

Variations of Caprice No. 24

Niccolo Paganini

Composer

Arnold Roitman

Navarra

Pablo de Sarasate

Composer

A. Gurfinkel

Orchestration

Aleksei Ogorodnikov

Percussionist

G. Butov

Percussionist

Irina Zaitseva

Pianist

a Spanish dance

Cordoba

Isaac Albeniz

Composer

Grigory Zaborov

Orchestration

Irina Zaitseva

Pianist

Vera Dulova

Harpist

Aleksei Ogorodnikov

Percussionist

G. Butov

Percussionist

Procession from "Peter and the Wolf", an orchestral fairy tale

Sergei Prokofiev

Composer

L. Feigin

Orchestration

Irina Zaitseva

Pianist

Waltz from "The War and Peace" opera

Sergei Prokofiev

Composer

A. Birchansky

Orchestration

Irina Zaitseva

Pianist

Aria

Evgeny Svetlanov

Composer

Evgeny Svetlanov

Pianist

Maidens' Dance from "The Path of Thunder" ballet

K. Karaev

Composer

Grigory Zaborov

Orchestration

Irina Zaitseva

Pianist

Aleksei Ogorodnikov

Percussionist

G. Butov

Percussionist

Note

Back cover

Pen

Underlining in blue pen under first words of English liner notes

English title block (top) and Russian title block (bottom) as transcribed above; Melodiya logo (stylized "М") with the firm's name and "Министерство культуры СССР" (Ministry of Culture of the USSR) at upper right. No catalog number, date, or tracklist visible on the front.

31 cm

31 cm

album cover, plastic sleeve, vinyl

Good

Leopoldo Arús Gálvez

owner

Melodiya

producer

Bolshoi Theatre Violinists Ensemble

artists

Havana

Cuba

Caribbean

Central America

acquisition, use

U.S.S.R.

Eastern Europe

Europe

production

The Bolshoi Theatre Violinists Ensemble was a popular Melodiya act, issuing many light-classical and operatic-transcription programs. Yuli Reyentovich was the ensemble's longtime artistic director, from its founding in the mid-1950s until the early 1980s.