Utushka lugovaya
"Utushka lugovaya" (Russian: Утушка луговая, lit. A Little Meadow Duck) is an ancient Russian folk song.
"Утушка луговая" | |
---|---|
Song | |
Language | Russian |
English title | "A Little Meadow Duck" |
Written | Before 1791[1] |
Genre | Folk |
Songwriter(s) | Unknown |
Synopsis
A young woman or maiden, also called utushka lugovaya, spends a night in the wood (or in the meadow[1]), near a willow. Several young men pass by and make several gudocheks – each makes one for himself. The maiden asks the gudocheks not to tinkle, not to wake her (however, in some versions, her father[1][2]) up.
Commentary
Historical background
According to Alexander Tereshchenko, ″Utushka lugovaya″ could be performed during traditional Russian marriage celebrations.[3] Pavel Svinyin wrote that the Don Cossacks used the song in matchmaking.[4]
Some researchers consider that image ("Utushka lugovaya"/ "Young duck") as a traditional image of the young woman or bride.[5][6]
Genre characteristics
A number of sources mention the song as a plyasovaya[7][3] or a khorovodnaya.[8] Alexander Potebnja regards it – for its time signature – as an example of the so-called summer or spring songs.[7]
Settings and performance
Before 1792, Vasily Pashkevich created for his third opera a theme based on the song.[9][10] In the following two centuries, many composers (such as P. I. Tchaikovsky,[11] Nikolai Rimsky‑Korsakov,[12] Anatoly Lyadov,[13] Alexander Ivanov‑Kramskoi[12]) arranged "Utushka lugovaya".
The song appeared in the repertoires of Lidia Ruslanova,[14] Lyudmila Zykina,[15] Alexandra Strelchenko,[16] and other famous Russian folk singers.
References
- Иванъ Прачъ, ed. (1790). Собранiе Народныхъ Рускихъ Пѣсенъ съ ихъ Голосами на Музыку положилъ Иванъ Прачъ (in Russian). Типографiя Горнаго училища. p. 83.
- Николай Римскiй-Корсаковъ, ed. (1877). Сборникъ русскихъ народныхъ пѣсенъ, составленный Н. А. Римскимъ-Корсаковымъ (in Russian). Imprimerie de musique de W. Bessel et Cie à St.-Petersbourg. pp. 54–55.
- Терещенко, Александр (20 February 2015). Быт русского народа (in Russian). II (Свадьбы). ISBN 9781772463576.
- Свиньинъ, Павелъ (1839). Картины Россіи и бытъ разноплеменныхъ ея народовъ… (in Russian). p. 253.
- Червинский, П. П. (1989). Т. В. Цивьян (ed.). Семантический язык фольклорной традиции (in Russian). Ростов-на-Дону. p. 13.
- Зуева, Т. В. (2002). Русский фольклор: Словарь-справочник (in Russian). М.: Просвещение. ISBN 9785090111348.
- Потебня, А. А. (1883). Объясненiя малорусских и сродных народных пѣсень (in Russian). Варшава. pp. 234–236.
- Лопатин, Н. М.; Прокунин, В. П, eds. (1956). Русские народные лирические песни (in Russian). М.: Государственное музыкальное издательство.
- Чешихинъ, Всеволодъ (1905). Исторiя русской оперы (съ 1674 по 1903 г.) (in Russian). С.-Петербургъ. p. 54. ISBN 9785458368087.
- Финдейзен, Н. Ф. (1928). Очерки по истории музыки в России с древнейших времён до конца XVIII века (in Russian). II (issue 5). М.-Л. p. 110. ISBN 9785446038084.
- Нотная летопись (in Russian). 1996.
- Нотные издания в фондах Государственной библиотеки СССР имени В. И. Ленина (in Russian). 1978.
- Иванов, Г. К. (1966). Русская поэзия в отечественной музыке (до 1917 года): справочник (in Russian). I. Музыка.
- Сафошкин В.Д.; Сафошкина Л.В, eds. (2000). Сердце, тебе не хочется покоя (in Russian). М.: Диадема-Пресс. ISBN 5-9256-0106-8.
- Уварова Е. Д, ed. (2004). Эстрада России. XX век. Энциклопедия (in Russian). Олма-Пресс. p. 243. ISBN 5-224-04462-6.
- Савченко, Борис (1997). Московская эстрада в лицах (in Russian). М.: Ассоциация авторов и издателей «Тандем». (see sn. 1, sn. 2)
External links
- "Utushka lugovaya by L. Ruslanova". www.russian-records.com (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2018-02-02. Retrieved 2018-02-02.
- Pavlov, Sergey. "Translation of the song". Archived from the original on 2018-02-13. Retrieved 2018-02-13.