By George Hall

Published: Friday, 22 March 2024 at 05:00 AM


For all the ups and downs of his career thus far, at the time of the premiere of Tchaikovsky‘s Queen of Spades the 50-year-old composer enjoyed both significant respect and no little celebrity. Championed by Tsar Alexander III, he used his standing to promote Russian music at home and abroad, where he was increasingly in demand.

Though the perpetually hard-to-please critics were sniffy about his Fifth Symphony at its premiere in August 1888, the public largely gave it a warmer reception. Five years later, in October 1993, the enthusiastically greeted premiere of Tchaikovsky’s Sixth Symphony would precede his death by just nine days.

Here, we tell the story of how Tchaikovsky’s Queen of Spades came to be. Plus, we list some of the best – and worst – recordings of the opera. We also suggest a few operas you might want to listen to if this is a work you enjoy.

How Tchaikovsky came to write The Queen of Spades

Following his death in a duel at just 37 years old in 1837, Alexander Pushkin quickly became – and has remained – a cornerstone of Russian literature. Among the various composers subsequently inspired by his poems, plays and novels was Tchaikovsky. He went on to base three operas on Pushkin’s works. These included Evgeny Onegin (1879), Mazeppa (1884) and The Queen of Spades (1890).

Tchaikovsky’s Queen of Spades is based on a short story which tells a haunted and haunting tale. It was published in 1834 and came in at just 10,000 words long.

The story of Tchaikovsky’s Queen of Spades and the novel it’s based on

The Queen of Spades tells the story of young outsider army officer Hermann, who becomes obsessed by the rumour that an elderly Countess holds the secret to winning at cards. He gains admittance to the old lady’s bedroom through a half-hearted interest in her lonely granddaughter Lisa. In doing so, he frightens the Countess to death. When she reluctantly appears to him as a ghost, she gives him – on condition that he marry Lisa – the secret formula: three, seven, ace. Unfortunately, Hermann abandons Lisa. The last of the three cards ruins him by turning out to be… the Queen of Spades.

In making their adaptation, Tchaikovsky and his librettist brother Modest understood as cultured Russians that Pushkin’s original was already a literary classic. Their version is accordingly broadly faithful to this respected source. They nevertheless expanded the original as well as altering the ending. In Pushkin’s version, Hermann is consigned to a mental hospital. In the opera, meanwhile, he stabs himself to death. They also added to the narrative Prince Yeletsky, Lisa’s wealthy (though ultimately rejected) fiancé.

Portrait of the poet Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin (credit: Getty Images)

Tchaikovsky went abroad – in this case to Florence – to compose this major piece for St Petersburg’s Mariinsky Theatre, a task which took him just 44 days between 30 January and 14 March 1890 in what must have been an overwhelming burst of concentrated inspiration and sheer hard work; the orchestration followed, to be completed in June. Both during the creative process and afterwards, Tchaikovsky regarded the result as his greatest single achievement.