Irina Zhurina

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Irina Zhurina (

.

Biography

Zhurina was born in

Rigoletto
, etc.

Since 1975, she had been a soloist of the opera at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow. On this stage, she performed the leading opera parts composed for high soprano (lyrical coloratura soprano), such as Antonida (A Life for the Tsar), The Snow Maiden (Snegurochka), The Swan-Princess (The Tale of Tsar Saltan), Marfa (The Tsar's Bride), the Queen of Shemakha/Shemakhan Tsaritsa (The Golden Cockerel), Violetta (Verdi's La traviata) and Rosina (Il Barbiere di Siviglia).

She had taken part in the Bolshoi Opera tours in

Josef Brodsky
for soprano and piano, and the following year gave their first performance in the Soviet Union.

Irina Zhurina still has a very active concert life, with a repertoire of opera arias, Russian art songs, baroque music and works by contemporary composers, devoted to (or specially composed for) her. She is also a teacher of singing on the faculty of the Academic Junior Music College of the Moscow Conservatory.

Zhurina has recorded a number of CDs both in Russia and in Germany.

Recognitions and awards

Zhurina was made a

People's Artist of Russia by President Boris Yeltsin
in 1993.

Recorded works

Zhurina's recorded works included a number of artists.

The first record called Judith (Serov), which was recorded in 1991, included Andrey Chistyakov (conductor), Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra, Russian Academic Choir of the USSR, Irina Udalova (Judith), YElena Zaremba (Avra), Mikhayil Krutikov (Holofernes), Nikolay Vasilyev (Bagoas), Anatoly Babïkhin (Ozias), Vladimir Kudryachov (Achior), Stanislav Suleimanov (Asfaneses), Pyotr Gluboky (Eliachim), Maksim Mikhaylov (Charmis), Irina Zhurina, Marina Shutova (Odalisques) and Lev Kuznetsov (Hindu Song).

Rimsky-Korsakov (Kashchey the Deathless), which was also recorded in 1991, included Andrey Chistyakov (conductor), Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra, Yurlov Academic Choir, Aleksandr Arkhipov (Kastchey), Irina Zhurina (Tsarevna), Nina Terentyeva (Kashcheyevna), Vladislav Verestnikov (Ivan Korolevich) and Vladimir Matorin (Storm-Bogatïr).

References

General references

  • Academic Junior Music College (Moscow Conservatory), Faculty biography: Irina Zhurina (in Russian)
  • Dyer, Richard, "Extra Concert is a Poignant Addition",
    Boston Globe
    , 2 April 1988
  • Klimov, Pyotr Liner Notes: Boris Tchaikovsky – Song-Cycles and Chamber Music[permanent dead link], Toccata Classics (TOCC0046), May 2009
  • Kotliarskaia, Elena Moiseevna, Women in Society: Russia, Marshall Cavendish, 1994, p. 62.
  • Pugliaro, G., Opera '90. Annuario dell'opera lirica in Italia , EDT srl, 1990, p. 122.