Mlada (Finale) (Borodin, Alexander Porfirevich)
Free public domain sheet music from IMSLP / Petrucci Music Library
Contents |
Music Files
complete full score
*#20924 - 2.64MB - 21 (scanned as facing #3-42) pages - Scan Quality: No ratings yet - V/V/V
Editor:
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908), orchestrator
Publisher Info.:
Leipzig: M.P. Belaieff, n.d.(1892), plate 439
Reissue - Frankfurt, 1972 (with fraudulent 1972 copyright notice)
Copyright:
Misc. Notes:
Add a file to this page
Add multiple files to this page
Upload from external sources: Sibley, FTP
Commercial Recordings
Amazon.com (what is this commercial link and why is it here?):
→ Search keyword (click for general results): "Mlada Finale, Borodin" (MP3 albums (US only), general composer works).
→ Search Amazons worldwide: Canada (.ca), France (.fr), Germany (.de), Japan (.co.jp), United Kingdom (.co.uk), United States (.com)
| Title | Artists |
|---|---|
| Russian Music and Revolution | Andrew Davis, André Kostelanetz, Emil Tchakarov, ... |
| The Great History of Russian Classical Music | Robert Titze, Alfred Scholz, Bystrik Rezucha, ... |
→ Search Amazons worldwide: Canada (.ca), France (.fr), Germany (.de), Japan (.co.jp), United Kingdom (.co.uk), United States (.com)
General Information
| Work Title | Млада |
|---|---|
| Alternative Title |
| Composer | Borodin, Alexander Porfirevich |
|---|---|
| Opus/Catalogue Number | N/A |
| Number of Movements/Sections | 1 |
| Year/Date of Composition | 1872 |
| Year of First Publication | 1892 (Leipzig, per Grove Music Online) |
| Librettist | N/A (originally composed to a libretto by A. Krylov) |
| Language | N/A |
| Genre | Other symphonic pieces |
| Piece Style | Romantic |
| Instrumentation | orchestra (originally with voices) |
| Discuss this piece |
Misc. Comments
This piece constitutes the finale ultimo of the collective opera-ballet Mlada of 1872, composed by Cui (Act 1), Musorgsky and Rimsky-Korsakov (each of whom had parts of Acts 2 and 3), and Borodin (Act 4), to a libretto by A. Krylov, based on a scenario by Gedeonov. This version was never staged, and most of the composers used their music in later works.


