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Highlights of Bulgarian musical culture

Once Upon a Time: A fairy-tale opera by Bulgaria's master composer, Parashkev Hadjiev

Parashkev Hadjiev (1912–1992)
Photo: ubc-bg.com

Often described as “the Bulgarian Verdi” or “the Bulgarian Puccini,” composer Parashkev Hadjiev (1912–1992) has long been recognised as a central figure in Bulgaria’s operatic tradition. The country’s most prolific creator of musical-stage works, he left behind 21 operas, six operettas, three musicals, and one ballet. His works have been staged more than 150 times across Bulgaria, as well as in at least ten other European countries, including Russia, Romania, Poland, the Czech Republic, Germany and Belgium.

The celebrated musicologist Lyubomir Sagaev described Hadjiev as “an artist of talent, rich imagination, immense culture, and remarkable working discipline”. His contribution to Bulgarian musical culture is indeed considerable. Many of his most popular operas are based on classic Bulgarian literary works, such as Lud Gidiya (The Daredevil) by Pencho Slaveykov, Albena by Yordan Yovkov, and Maystori (The Master Carvers) by Racho Stoyanov. His musical language is clear and accessible; the dramatic action is vivid and dynamic; and, above all, his melodic writing is flexible, expressive and uniquely beautiful, revealing a profound understanding of the human voice.

On 11 April 1957, the Sofia Musical Theatre premiered his first opera, Once Upon a Time (also known as From Nine Villages Away), with a comic-fairytale libretto by Pavel Spasov. This came five years after his earlier operetta Delyana was harshly criticised and pulled from the repertoire after twelve performances - all of them sold-out. It wasn’t Hadjiev’s music that caused the trouble, but the libretto (by Vera Damyanova) and political manoeuvring at the highest levels of government. The official newspaper Rabotnichesko Delo published a scathing editorial entitled 'A Harmful Work', which doomed the operetta.

Three years later, his second operetta, the lyrical Aika, was staged at the Musical Theatre to great acclaim. Encouraged by this success, Hadjiev went on to create his first opera. It was appealing and accessible, and it quickly gained popularity. Over the next two decades, it was performed on every major Bulgarian stage, including those in Sofia, Plovdiv, Varna, Ruse, Stara Zagora, Sliven, Burgas, Pazardzhik and Veliko Tarnovo. On 30 October 1960, the opera premiered at the Friedrich Wolf Theatre (now the Landestheater Neustrelitz) in Neustrelitz, in a production created entirely by a German team.

Hadjiev at work with the cast during a rehearsal.

Once Upon a Time tells the story of Kalina, a beautiful maiden who is courted by Radoyko, a man who lives 'beyond nine villages and into the tenth'. Although her father consents to the match, her mother is opposed and swears Kalina to silence for a full nine years, even from her husband. After the wedding, Radoyko, deeply in love with his wife, tries in vain to 'cure' her with the help of folk healers, sorceresses, and even a fantastical Gypsy ritual.


It is not until the fourth act that the legendary folkloric duo Hitar Petar and Nasreddin Hodja arrive in the village. They bet on who can solve the problem of the 'silent' Kalina. When the Hodja’s spells fail, Hitar Petar (literally 'Wily Peter'), the legendary Bulgarian trickster, declares that the only solution is for Radoyko to take another wife. He selects a local girl for Radoyko. Only then, terrified at the thought of losing her beloved, does Kalina break her mother's vow and speak.


One of the most beautiful arias in the opera is Kalina's aria at the end of the second act, following the failed attempts of various folk healers. The young woman pours out her grief: she needs no spells or folk remedies. 'Kalina wishes to speak' — yet she remains bound by her mother's oath. The aria is a true tour de force, showcasing a composer intimately familiar with the capabilities of the coloratura soprano (not surprisingly, Hadjiev’s mother was a leading coloratura at the Sofia Opera).


Its vivid melodies, infused with Bulgarian folk spirit, masterful construction, striking orchestration, and dazzling virtuosic passages have made Kalina’s aria a favourite concert piece for many Bulgarian sopranos. Perhaps the most acclaimed interpretation is that of Sofia Opera soloist Elena Stoyanova, accompanied by the Bulgarian National Radio Symphony Orchestra under conductor Ruslan Raychev — a recording from 1988.



Editor: Elena Karkalanova
Posted in English by E. RAdkova
Photos: ubc-bg.com, P. Hadjiev family archive, parashkevhadjiev.eu


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