There are moments in music that feel suspended in time — and “Déjà Vu”, performed by Dmitri Hvorostovsky and Aida Garifullina, is one of them. Two generations, two souls, two voices meeting somewhere between dream and memory. Hvorostovsky’s silvery baritone rises like smoke from another world — haunting, noble, eternal. Garifullina’s soprano answers with luminous grace, shimmering with tenderness and quiet fire.
Their duet is not just a performance; it’s a conversation between passion and nostalgia, between the living and the remembered. Every note carries the ache of recognition, that strange pull of something we’ve heard before — or felt before — in another lifetime.
When the final chord fades, silence falls heavy, reverent. What lingers is not applause but the echo of something sacred — the feeling that Déjà Vu was never merely sung, but relived.
