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Ivan Mel'nikov (1832–1906)

Ivan Melnikov (1832–1906)

Ivan Melnikov

Russian singer (baritone) (b. 21 February/4 March 1832 in Saint Petersburg; d. 25 June/8 July 1906 in Saint Petersburg), born Ivan Aleksandrovich Melnikov (Иван Александрович Мельников).

After graduating from classes in business studies, Melnikov's involvement with his local church choir led him to take singing lessons with Gavriei Lomakin (1812–1885). Five years later, in 1866, he travelled to Italy for further training, and made his debut at the Mariinsky Theatre in Saint Petersburg in 1867 playing Ricardo in Bellini's Il Puritani. He remained one of the lead soloists at the Mariinsky until 1890, and premiered several roles in Tchaikovsky's operas—Viazminsky in The Oprichnik (1874), The Devil in Vakula the Smith (1876), Prince Nikita in The Enchantress (1877), and Tomsky in The Queen of Spades (1890). He also premiered the title roles in Musorgsky's Boris Godunov (1874) and Borodin's Prince Igor (1890).

From 1890 to 1892 Melnikov served as a director at the Mariinsky Theatre. In 1890, together with Fyodor Bekker, he founded "Free Choral Classes" in Saint Petersburg, for which he commissioned Tchaikovsky to write Three Choruses (1891).

Tchaikovsky's works dedicated to Ivan Melnikov:

  • I Never Spoke to Her—No. 5 of the Six Romances, Op. 25 (1875)
  • Three Choruses, TH 87 (1891) — dedicated to Ivan Melnikov's Free Choral Class.

This page was last updated on 14 February 2013