Mikhail Matinsky


Mikhail Alexeyevich Matinsky was a Russian scientist, dramatist, librettist and opera composer.

Biography

Matinsky originated from the serfs of Count Sergey Yaguzhinsky and was born in Pavlovskoe. He studied in the gymnasium for the "raznochintsy" at Moscow University and also in Italy. Later he taught mathematics at the Smolny Institute of Noble Maidens in Saint Petersburg.
His first literary work was a Russian translation of the German book, 'The Republic of Learned People, or an Allegorical and Critical Description of the Arts and Sciences,' by the Argentine statesman Cornelio Saavedra. Later, he worked on translating the fairytales of Christian Fürchtegott Gellert.
He published several books, The Description of Measures and Weights of Different Countries, The Fundamentals of Geometry, and The Concise Universal Geography. He also translated the comedy The Churchwoman by Christian Fürchtegott Gellert, and the same author's Fables and Tales, as well as The Republic of the Scientists by S. Fayard.
He died in Saint Petersburg in 1820.

Operas

His creative output also included comedies, opera librettos, and even music set to them. His operas Regeneration, and Saint-Petersburg's Trade Stalls had considerable success.
The second one, a scathing satire to the government officials and their thievish behaviour, is one of the first examples of Russian comic opera. It was staged on December 26, 1779 at the Knipper Theatre in St Petersburg and was repeated 16 times. Later the music was rewritten by a composer Vasily Pashkevich in 1882 and 1792. In a new version the opera was also staged at the Court Theatre.

Pashkevich’s Operas to Matinsky’s librettos

  • Saint-Petersburg's Trade Stalls
  • The Pasha of Tunis
  • As you live, so you will be judged — revision of ''Saint-Petersburg's Trade Stalls''