Vladimir Dechevov
Vladimir Michailovich Dechevov, St.Petersburg 1889 – Leningrad 1955, studeerde aan het conservatorium van Petersburg bij o.a. Anatol Liadov en Maximilian Steinberg. 
Hij vervulde diverse functies op pedagogisch gebied. Componeren deed hij in een gematigd moderne stijl die verwantschap vertoonde met Prokofjev, Honegger en Poulenc. In de jaren twintig schreef hij enkele stukken waarin de dynamiek van zijn tijd, de tijd van de industrialisatie, tot uitdrukking kwam. Het pianostuk Rel’sy (Rails) is een duidelijk voorbeeld van zogenaamde ‘machine-muziek’. Zijn opera ‘IJs en Staal’ uit 1930, waarin het instrumentale voorspel van de tweede acte getiteld was ‘The Iron Foundry in Operation’, werd vergeleken met Sjostakovich’ ‘De Neus’. Na enkele succesvolle uitvoeringen raakte het dit werk volkomen in vergetelheid. In 2007 voerde het Saarländische Staatstheater het stuk weer op.
In zijn autobiografie ‘Notes without Music’ sprak Darius Milhaud zijn waardering uit voor het talent Dechevov. 
W.H.
Lit.: D.Shen : V.M.Dechevov, Leningrad 1961

 
Vladimir Deshevov - Ice and Steel (Orchestra and Chorus of the Saarland State Theater/Will Humburg)
 Classical - Opera | DVD9 | Audio: Russian | Subtitles : English, German,  French, Spanish, Japanese, Russian  | Run time: 96 mins | 7.51 GB
 PCM Stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS 5.1 | Anamorphic Widescreen | NTSC | Copy: Untouched
 In March 1921, Russian sailors, soldiers, workers, and other citizens  stood up to the Bolshevik government, then in disarray, in an uprising  known as the Kronstadt Rebellion, named for the island fortress outside  of Petrograd (St. Petersburg) where it began. The Rebellion was driven  by harsh economic conditions, and by dissatisfaction with Bolshevik  policies and practices, such as the seizure of land formerly belonging  to peasants. Factory strikes and general unrest were the result, and  demands were made of the Bolsheviks – demands that they found  unreasonable. It seems that the Rebellion even may have had a degree of  international support, although to what extent is unclear. Bolshevik  forces quickly put down the Rebellion, and the remaining rebels were  dealt with harshly. The loss of life, and the significance of the  Rebellion (and with the reluctance of many soldiers in the Red Army to  quell it) were not lost on Lenin, however, who moved to mitigate some of  the economic factors that had given rise to the Rebellion in the first  place.
 
 Ice and Steel (Eis und Stahl) is an almost forgotten opera based on the  Kronstadt Rebellion. Composed in 1929, it was intended to be a new kind  of "Soviet opera" – ideologically acceptable, yet modern enough to prove  that the Soviet Union was progressive. Deshevov, whose background was  in theater, succeeded in composing a forward-looking score, but was  (arguably) unable to hide, if not sympathy for the rebels, then at least  a certain amount of ambivalence towards the subject. As a result, Ice  and Steel did not have a long performance history in the Soviet Union.  This production from 2007, probably its first in more than seven  decades, goes even farther. Director Immo Karaman ends Ice and Steel not  with the ultimate triumph of the Bolsheviks, but with what appears to  be a representation of the end of the Soviet Union. It's too bad, in a  way, that our first look at Ice and Steel has to be to revisionist's  look, but the temptation to present the opera in this way must have been  overwhelming.
 
 Don't expect arias and love duets, and the other trappings of  traditional opera. Instead, expect 96 minutes of drama, as boldly and  starkly represented with music as the words on a propaganda poster. The  music is very effective, and, if you adjust your expectations, quite  enjoyable. Deshevov aimed for realism here, and he achieved it with  music that is gripping and current even though it is nearly eight  decades old. From the intrigue-filled (and intriguing) opening scene in  Kronstadt's black market to the patriotic ending (given a bitter, ironic  twist by director Karaman), the action sweeps along like a well-edited  piece of cinema.
 Similarly, don't expect opera stars standing in the footlights and  pouring out high notes. The huge cast has been chosen to put across the  flares and semaphores of Deshevov's score and Boris Lavrenjov's  libretto, and they do it well. Beautiful singing is not the point here.  The point is communication, so what we are given instead are large,  interesting voices in the possession of singers who can create a  character in two or three broad brush strokes.
 Karaman's production sometimes confuses, but it is visually effective,  and it has an appropriate "commando spirit," if you will. It seems to  have made the transition to my television screen well, thanks to the  fluid direction of Brooks Riley. The sound (in the three usual formats)  and the 16:9 visual format are impressive, and the subtitles – so  important in a work like this – are easy to read and seem idiomatic.
 
 Ice and Steel won't be for everyone, but for those with an interest in,  say, the young Shostakovich's more outré experiments, or in 20th-century  Soviet history, it is well worth exploring. 

