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- <text id=93TT0367>
- <title>
- Oct. 11, 1993: Opera's Siberian Express
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 11, 1993 How Life Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 78
- Opera's Siberian Express
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Baritone Dmitri Hvorostovsky is on track for stardom
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL WALSH--With reporting by Daniel S.Levy/New York
- </p>
- <p> Opera singers often hail from unlikely places. Leontyne Price
- emerged from tiny Laurel, Mississippi; tenor Jon Vickers from
- Prince Albert on the plains of Saskatchewan. But it is hard
- to recall a leading man or lady from a place more remote and
- exotic than central Siberia. And yet the singer who seems destined
- to be the next big star of the lyric stage is the pride of Krasnoyarsk:
- a strapping, darkly handsome baritone named Dmitri Hvorostovsky.
- </p>
- <p> The opera world has been buzzing about Hvorostovsky (give the
- H a slight rasp and add vor-stov-ski) ever since his triumph
- at the 1989 BBC Cardiff Singer of the World competition. The
- following year a don't-miss-it debut recital in Alice Tully
- Hall in New York City confirmed the advance word: this was a
- galvanic new personality and a voice of uncommon refinement,
- flexibility and musical intelligence.
- </p>
- <p> Now, making his American opera debut as Germont in La Traviata
- with the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Hvorostovsky, 31, has proved
- he can put across a performance with interpretive sympathy and
- burnished vocal splendor. His baritone is lighter than most
- Slavic male voices, more Latin in color and inflection; if the
- top of his register needs to open a bit more, the rest of the
- voice is rich and resonant.
- </p>
- <p> "I was nervous, yes," he admits of his Chicago outing. "You
- try to think of it as just another performance, but it was somehow
- special. Even so, that was not the most memorable performance
- I have ever given." Oh? "I was giving a recital in a bread factory,
- a great big place in Siberia. The piano was terrible. I had
- to get undressed behind the door. Then I went out and sang Tchaikovsky
- and Rachmaninoff songs. And you know what? When I looked up
- I could see that everybody was crying. Nothing could ever top
- that."
- </p>
- <p> Except, perhaps, the career that lies ahead. Opera managers
- have already snapped up the brown-eyed idol for a string of
- major debuts: the dashing title role in Tchaikovsky's Eugene
- Onegin at Covent Garden in London this month, Riccardo in Bellini's
- I Puritani at the Vienna State Opera next year, Prince Yeletsky
- in Tchaikovsky's Pique Dame at New York's Metropolitan Opera
- in 1995. This month Philips is issuing a new Traviata with Hvorostovsky
- as Germont.
- </p>
- <p> Hvorostovsky is not only ready for stardom, he can scarcely
- remember a time when he wasn't preparing for it. His mother
- was a doctor, his father a chemical engineer and amateur singer
- and pianist who loved Bach, Chopin and Liszt. Young Dima's formal
- training began at age seven and concluded at the local conservatory,
- where he studied piano and conducting as well as voice. Music,
- however, had to compete for his affections with soccer, boxing
- and, later, girls. He frankly admits that for much of his young
- life, thoughts of women and music have occupied most of his
- waking hours. Married in 1987, he lives today in Moscow with
- his ballerina wife, Svetlana, and her 11-year-old daughter by
- a previous marriage.
- </p>
- <p> But it was one woman in particular who deeply influenced him:
- his teacher Ekaterina Yofel. She convinced him that he was a
- natural high baritone, not a tenor; she also taught him to free
- his imagination while he was singing, "to make the voice open
- up like a bouquet of flowers." Accordingly, he blossomed in
- his first contest. He went on to conquer the International Singing
- Competition of Toulouse in France in 1988 and capped it with
- his victory at Cardiff the next year. "I won every contest I
- entered," he says, without boasting. Soon, in Hvorostovsky's
- realm, there may be no contest at all.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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