About the romance “in the moonlight the snow turns silver.” Evgeny Yuryev, romance "in the moonlight" Who wrote in the moonlight


Maria Olshanskaya

In the moonlight
the snow is silver...

(continuation of the history of Russian romance)



Ding-ding-ding (“Bell”)

In the moonlight the snow turns silver, along the road the troika rushes. Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding - The bell is ringing, This ringing, this ringing speaks of love. In the moonlight of early spring, I will remember my meetings with you, my friend. With your bell, your young voice rang, this ringing, this ringing, sang sweetly about love. The guests will be remembered as a noisy crowd, a sweet face with a white veil. Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding - The clinking of glasses is noisy, My rival is standing with his young wife. In the moonlight the snow turns silver, along the road the troika rushes. Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding - The bell is ringing, This ringing, this ringing speaks of love.


In mid-December it started snowing in Kharkov. Could not sleep. In the middle of the night I got up and went to the window... “In the moonlight, the snow turns silver...” Now it seems to me that I even sang this line in the rhythm of a waltz, which arose out of nothing, if you do not take into account the beauty of the snow-covered square outside the window. But God sees! I have never heard these poems and this melody in the last 20-odd years, and in the last two years I had no time for romances at all.

And how many people before me came to the window in the middle of the night and looked at the snow. Maybe they also had poems in their heads in the rhythm of a waltz? Did the mysterious Evgeny Yuryev, the author, as they say, of poetry and music, even exist in this world? Wasn’t someone playing a prank on their acquaintances by slipping them a stylization of a coachman’s romance at the beginning of the 20th century? But here is the information on the website of the Russian State Archive of Literature and Art: Yuriev Evgeniy Dmitrievich (1882-1911).

Phantoms do not have archive cells. However, the author’s performance of the romance “In the Moonlight” (also called “Bell” and “Ding-ding-ding”) causes mistrust among listeners. It reeks of stylization a mile away.

And if you consider how many films and performances about different times were accompanied by this melody and poetry performed by a variety of singers...


Maria Olshanskaya



“Ding, ding, ding” (Yuryev’s romance)
HELL. Vyaltseva, mezzo-soprano

You can view the release data of the record and listen to the romance performed by Anastasia Vyaltseva (recorded in 1912) on the World of Russian Recordings website.

Laureate of the International Competition,
head of the creative group "Blagovest"
singer Lyudmila Borisovna Zhogoleva:

“At the beginning of the twentieth century, this name spoke a lot to the Russian heart. Her popularity was incredible! She was from the peasant class. She died in 1913, lived only 42 years, and achieved so much in art! She managed to tour the whole country. She became one of the richest women in Russia. For tours, she even had a special carriage, which was attached to various trains. There was a dressing room, library, and kitchen equipped there. Then the singer’s carriage passed to Admiral Kolchak... Vyaltseva, as a matter of principle, did not go on tours abroad. She performed only in front of Russian audiences.

She came out to sing as an encore twenty times. Her concerts lasted up to four hours. They shouted to her: “Seagull! Seagull!..” And she tirelessly returned to the stage... Anastasia Dmitrievna was called “The Seagull of the Russian stage.” Her romance “In the Moonlight the Snow Silvers” was incredibly popular at the beginning of the last century. At the Tsar's court, the singer Plevitskaya was more appreciated, but this romance performed by Vyaltseva was well known and loved by Emperor Nicholas II. The popularity of the romance was so great that it even made him an involuntary witness to a very dark page in our history. At that time, the first gramophone records with Vyaltseva’s romances appeared (they are preserved in the Bakhrushin Museum). And in December 1916, as participants in this fateful event later recalled, a friend of the Royal Family, Grigory Efimovich Rasputin, was treacherously lured into the palace of Prince Yusupov and killed there. The killers, in order to hide their plans, so that the screams and noise of the struggle could not be heard on the street, turned on the gramophone at full volume with this particular romance by Anastasia Vyaltseva. To this wonderful music, to her wondrous voice, the prayer book for the Tsar died...

Recently the film “Rasputin” by French director Jose Dayan was released with Gerard Depardieu in the title role. I have no complaints about the artist. He was deeply imbued with this bright Russian image (which was then intricately refracted in his subsequent personal fate). And yet the film with a “Russian plot” is unsuccessful; it was shot with cold, fearless hands. But it is no coincidence that this particular romance is heard several times in the film...

Now the romance “In the Moonlight” is sung by Evgenia Smolyaninova. It is also in my repertoire. I performed it on the stage of the Bakhrushin Museum, like other romances by Anastasia Vyaltseva. The concert was a great success with a packed hall. Performing works by a great artist, being in the atmosphere of that time, among antiques that could have belonged to her, records, books, to the sounds of a piano of that era (we worked in a theater museum!) is both a joy and a responsibility. The Bakhrushin Museum houses a large archive of The Seagulls of the Russian Stage.


"Ding-ding-ding", rum. Yuryeva,
performed by M.A. Karinskaya,
famous Spanish gyg. Romansov
(Moscow, X-63754, entry 11-7-1909)



* * *

"Eugene Onegin" by Rimas Tuminas at the Vakhtangov Theater

“Onegin” by Tuminas and set designer Adomas Jacovskis should be retold according to the mise-en-scène. Olga and Lensky (Maria Volkova and Vasily Simonov) are flying through the garden - tall, curly, shining with youth, shrouded in the song “In the moonlight, the snow turns silver...” Olga always has a children’s accordion hanging on her chest: in the scene of the Larins’ ball, Onegin will finger its frets ... And what a cry this “Troechka” will sound for the last time, when Olga walks down the aisle with a lancer (about the performance - ).




Over St. Petersburg the temple is silvered. Ksenia prays in the sleeping capital. Over the wide Neva, an Angel sings a song. In this temple, this wonderful temple calls everyone to the holiday. Ksenia wanders around early and might meet you. In difficult times, in sorrowful times, she says to everyone: “A king with a spear on a horse will save you from trouble.” The chapel is quiet, the candles are flickering. Mother Ksenia receives everyone. Pray for the whole world, Mati Ksenia, again, So that our hearts will be sanctified by love. Over St. Petersburg, the temple shines silver. Ksenia prays in the sleeping capital...

Song "Ding-ding-ding".

“In the Moonlight” (other names are “Bell” and “Ding-ding-ding”) is a romance related to the so-called coachman songs by the poet and musician Evgeny Dmitrievich Yuryev.
Evgeny Dmitrievich Yuryev (1882-1911) - Russian poet and composer, author of several romances, including: “Bell”, “Hey, coachman, drive to the Yar”, “Why love, why suffer”, etc.
More than fifteen romances by E. D. Yuryev are known, composed by him in the period 1894-1906 to his own words and music, as well as eleven romances and songs, including “gypsy” (that is, similar to a gypsy romance) based on his words to music by other composers, including A. N. Chernyavsky... Information about the biography of E. D. Yuryev is almost not preserved.

Unfortunately, I don’t know the performer of the song on this video. On the Internet, this video indicates that the song is performed by the author, that is, E. Yuryev. But I doubt this, because I saw another video with this performer, and it says that this is Yuri Borisov... Which also raises doubts...
Soon after the October Revolution, the new government declared romance a “bourgeois relic” that interfered with building a bright future. And in Russian culture he was forgotten for several decades.
Only in the second half of the 1950s was romance as a genre “rehabilitated” and gradually began to return to Soviet listeners. The romance “In the Moonlight” continues the coachman theme in Russian song culture, begun by the romance “Here is a daring troika rushing...” in 1828, when Alexei Nikolaevich Verstovsky set to music an excerpt about a coachman from a poem by Fyodor Glinka. Nothing is known at all about the history of the creation of the romance; it was just composed and that’s all. For some time, singer Anastasia Vyaltseva (1871-1913) performed with him.


Anastasia Vyaltseva

As often happens in such cases, when a song enters the structure of folk culture, there are several close variants of text and music.

In the moonlight the snow turns silver,


The bell is ringing
This ringing, this ringing
He talks about love.
In the moonlight in early spring
I remember meetings, my friend, with you.
Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding -
The bell rang
This ringing, this ringing
He sang sweetly about love.
I remember the guests as a noisy crowd,
Sweet face with a white veil.
Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding -
The clinking of glasses makes noise,
With a young wife
My opponent is standing.
In the moonlight the snow turns silver,
A threesome is racing along the road.
Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding -
The bell is ringing
This ringing, this ringing
He talks about love.

Now the romance has become one of the most popular and is included in the repertoire of many performers and is very often used in plays and films.

Evgenia Smolyaninova - In the moonlight (1988; music and art by E. D. Yuryev)

In the moonlight - O. Pogudin

Dmitry Ryakhin - In the moonlight (Ding, ding, ding)

"Seventh Water" - "Bell"

Then the past becomes what pulls you out of the energy hole. Then you want to return to it, touch it, be filled. Then it looks like a yellow-white reel of an old, forgotten film, which you pull out of storage only when you want the real, imperishable one.

But I need a key that will open the entrance to this world of bright sadness. This time the golden key was the romance “In the Moonlight...”




The bell is ringing
This ringing, this ringing
He talks about love.

In the moonlight in early spring
I remember meetings, my friend, with you.
Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding -
The bell rang
This ringing, this ringing
He sang sweetly about love.

I remember the guests as a noisy crowd,
Sweet face with a white veil.
Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding -
The clinking of glasses makes noise,
With a young wife
My opponent is standing.

In the moonlight the snow turns silver,
A threesome is racing along the road.
Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding -
The bell is ringing
This ringing, this ringing
Talks about love

I remember the author: Yuriev Evgeniy Dmitrievich - Russian poet, composer of the late nineteenth and early twentieth - silver - centuries... Nothing is known about him, except that he lived for twenty-nine years, of which twelve (from the age of seventeen) he wrote poetry and romances.

One can only wonder how a seventeen-year-old boy could feel this way and convey it in music and poetry. And even a twenty-nine-year-old - how could he? Poetry? About thirty, but apart from “In the Moonlight...” and a couple of romances, you won’t find anything. Maybe somewhere in some archives...

The romance is so simple and brilliant that any desire to show off, to decorate it with your own intonations and direction, deprives the most important thing - the inner meaning and soul of the romance.

Dispassionate, quiet, unhurried, detached from everything except the internal memory of the heart, the performance of the romance attributed to the author of the poems seems to be the best of all the numerous performers who want to try themselves in this masterpiece. Then romance becomes a manifestation of something completely different - a lack of heart.

Excessive artistry, and not excessive either, unnecessary complication of its performance with an emphasis on one’s vocal abilities, and not on the author’s mood, deprives the romance of its own intonation and charm.

“In the Moonlight...” is brilliant and requires nothing more than heart and soul. And with this, most performers especially have tension. Romance is rightfully considered the calling card of Oleg Pogudin, who managed to find what is considered the main thing in Russian romance - the emotional nerve.

“In the moonlight the snow turns silver” - begins the simplest and most beloved Russian romance. Perhaps the words are naive, perhaps the melody is ingenuous, but why does the soul freeze, the first sounds are barely heard, why does it rejoice and cry, why is this simplicity dearest and most beautiful to her, like the first flower, plucked like a child without a stem, like a juicy apple from a branch? , like snow melting in the palm of your hand, like a mother’s caress, like a burning candle in your hand that you can’t breathe on?…

Evgenia Smolyaninova, Russian singer, performer of Russian folk songs, romances and art songs, composer, Honored Artist of the Russian Federation.

An unusually soulful, pure, enchanting manner of performance, flowing like a fontanel. Evgenia Valerievna Smolyaninova became famous thanks to cinema. In the TV movie “The Life of Klim Samgin” (1987) she sang a popular romance like that “In the Moonlight” , how no one could sing it either before or after her.

Evgenia Valerievna was born February 28, 1964 in a family of teachers in Novokuznetsk, then the family moved to Kemerovo. Evgenia entered the St. Petersburg Music School in the piano department, and one of the remarkable aspects of Evgenia’s endeavors was her interest in the musical archives of St. Petersburg, thanks to which she first discovered and then gave a second life to a number of forgotten city romances and songs of the 19th and early XX centuries. In 1982 In the same year, her first performance as a singer took place at the Vyacheslav Polunin Theater in the play “Pictures at an Exhibition” to the music of M. Mussorgsky and in the play “Mumu” ​​at the Maly Drama Theater. During summer trips with classmates on folklore expeditions, I collected Russian folklore from the northern regions of Russia.

Her repertoire includes Russian folk songs, classical romances, the rarest village romances, monastery songs, songs based on her own poems and poems by Nabokov, Blok, Akhmatova, the little-known poet of Russian emigration Nikolai Turoverov... And how songs from Vertinsky’s repertoire sound in her performance is hard to believe - Vysotsky and, finally, the Pskov peasant Olga Sergeeva! She not only arranges herself, but also writes music.

A talented performer and arranger, Evgenia Smolyaninova was awarded for her work the “National Treasure of Russia” award from the international charitable foundation “Patrons of the Century”, the Order of the Holy Princess Olga of the Russian Orthodox Church and the Order of the “Triumph of Orthodoxy” from the public foundation “People’s Award”.

In the moonlight... (music and art by E. Yuryev)

In the moonlight the snow turns silver,
A threesome is racing along the path.

Ding-ding-ding ding-ding-ding—
The bell is ringing.
This ringing, this ringing speaks of love.

In the moonlight in early spring
Do you remember the meetings, my friend, with you?

Words and music by Evgeny Yuryev.

In the moonlight
The snow turns silver;
Along the road
The troika is racing.


The bell is ringing...
This ringing, this sound
Tells me a lot.

In the moonlight
Early spring
I remember the meetings
My friend, with you...

Your bell
The young voice rang...
“Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding!” —
Sang sweetly about love...

I remembered the hall
With a noisy crowd
Sweet face
With a white veil...

“Ding-ding-ding, ding-ding-ding!” —
The clink of glasses sounds...
With a young wife
My opponent is standing!


Best performance. Evgenia Smolyaninova

The romance “Ding-ding-ding” (also known as “In the Moonlight” and “Bell”) belongs to the so-called coachman songs.

Written by a poet and musician Evgeny Dmitrievich Yuryev(1882—1911).

Oleg Pogudin sings

YURIEV EVGENY DMITRIEVICH -- Russian poet, composer,author of romances, including: “In the Moonlight”, “Hey, Coachman, Drive to the Yar”, “Why Love, Why Suffer”, etc.

More than fifteen romances by E. D. Yuryev from 1894 to 1906 are known, based on his own words and music, as well as eleven romances and songs, including “gypsy” songs, based on his words and performed by A. N. Chernyavsky.

Gennady Kamenny. The singer I like!

Information about the biography of E.D. Yuryev is almost not preserved.

The romance “In the Moonlight” (“Ding-ding-ding”, “Bell”) continues the coachman theme in Russian song culture, begun by the romance “Here the daring troika is rushing...” in 1828. Little is known about the history of the creation of the romance; it was just composed and that’s all.

A singer performed with him for a while Anastasia Vyaltseva (1871—1913).

Natalia Muravyova sings. I like this singer!

Now the romance has become one of the most popular and is included in the repertoire of many performers and is very often used in plays and films.


First recorded on gramophone record on July 11, 1909 Maria Alexandrovna Karinskaya(1884-1942), pop artist and performer of romances.

In May 1904, she performed for the first time on the capital's stage in an operetta by V. Kazansky. Newspapers spoke rather flatteringly about the debutante, writing about her effective appearance and strong, beautiful voice (mezzo-soprano). Soon Maria Karinskaya, having left the theater, began performing on stage singing romances.

Lilya Muromtseva sings well

In 1911, Karinskaya became the winner of a competition for the best performance of romances organized at the Passage Theater in St. Petersburg, she was awarded first prize and given the title “Queen of the Gypsy Romance.”

After this, the singer found herself at the top of the domestic pop Olympus. In 1913, Karinskaya began performing with Vyaltseva’s accompanist A. Taskin.

During the years of patriotic upsurge after the outbreak of the war with Germany, Karinskaya organized “Evenings of Russian Antiquity,” where she performed ancient folk songs and ballads in colorful Russian costumes, accompanied by an orchestra of folk instruments.
Even before the revolution, Maria Karinskaya married an English aristocrat who served as a diplomat in Russia, and left with her husband for England. It is not known what her future life was like.



Romance was also included in the repertoire of Anastasia Vyaltseva.