Camillo Everardi’s Pedagogical Repertoire at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory (1870–1888)
Abstract
This article, drawing on archival sources, attempts to reconstruct the pedagogical career of Camillo Everardi (1825–1899) at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory, where he taught for 18 years — from 1870 to 1888. For a long time, the primary reasons for his dismissal were believed to be his adherence to the traditions of the Italian and French vocal schools and their respective repertoires, his alleged “discrimination” against Russian music, his emphasis on opera at the expense of concert and chamber works, and, consequently, the purportedly inadequate preparation of his students for professional performance. The study is based on sources that document Everardi’s teaching activities, specifically the inspector’s records preserved in the Central State Historical Archive of Saint Petersburg. The findings reveal that during his tenure, students from his class participated in over 100 public concerts, including performances with a symphony orchestra, and interpreted more than 200 vocal works spanning various genres composed by Italian, French, Russian, and German composers. Under his direction, scenes and entire acts from more than 25 operas were staged, including A Life for the Tsar and Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka, Rusalka by Alexander Dargomyzhsky, Rogneda by Alexander Serov, among others. A particularly noteworthy event occurred on April 22, 1883, when Everardi’s students performed the principal roles in Eugene Onegin by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky at a concert organized by the Musical and Dramatic Amateur Circle in Kononov Hall. Remarkably, this was one of the earliest performances of the opera in the capital, as it was staged on the imperial Russian stage in Saint Petersburg only in the following season, on October 19, 1884. The article further examines the criticisms directed at Everardi and proposes new hypotheses regarding the actual reasons behind his dismissal.
Keywords: Camillo Everardi, Saint Petersburg Conservatory, vocal repertoire, operatic exercises, Italian opera, French opera, Russian opera
For citation: Turintseva A. B. (2025). Camillo Everardi’s Pedagogical Repertoire at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory (1870–1888). Contemporary Musicology, (9)1, 105―129. https://doi.org/10.56620/2587-9731-2025-1-105-129References
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.56620/2587-9731-2025-1-105-129
Copyright (c) 2025 Alexandra B. Turintseva
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