Alexander Glazunov (1865 -1936)
The Kremlin, Op. 30
From the Middle Ages, Op. 79
Poeme Iyrique, Op. 12
Poeme epique, Op. posth.
Alexander Konstantinovich Glazunov has not fared
well at the hands of later critics. He enjoyed a remarkably successful career
in music, becoming Director of the St Petersburg Conservatory in 1905 in the
aftermath of the political disturbances of that year, and retaining the
position, latterly in absentia, for the next twenty-five years. His earlier
compositions were well received, but the very facility that had impressed Balakirev
and attracted the attention and friendship of his teacher Rimsky-Korsakov was
to be held against him. A Russian critic could praise him for the
reconciliation he had apparently effected between the Russian music of his time
and the music of Western Europe, but for a considerable time the Soviet
authorities regarded his music as bourgeois, while one of the most eminent of
writers in the West on Russian music, Gerald Abraham, considered that it had fallen
to Glazunov to lead what he described as the comfortable decline of Russian
music into ignominious mediocrity. Recent critics have occasionally taken a
more balanced view of Glazunov's achievement. Due respect is paid to his
success in bringing about a synthesis of Russian and Western European music,
the tradition of the Five and that of Rubinstein, founder of the St Petersburg
Conservatory and a system of professional training for musicians. Boris Schwarz
has summarised the composer's career neatly, allowing him to have been a
composer of imposing stature and a stabilising influence in a time of
transition and turmoil.
Born
in St
Petersburg
in 1865, the son of a publisher and bookseller, as a child Glazunov showed
considerable ability in music and in 1879 met Balakirev, who encouraged the boy
to broaden his general musical education, while taking lessons from
Rimsky-Korsakov. By the age of sixteen he had completed the first of his nine
symphonies, a work that was performed in 1882 under the direction of Balakirev,
and further compositions were welcomed by both factions in Russian musical
life, the nationalist and the so-called German.
Glazunov
continued his association with Rimsky-Korsakovuntil the latter's death in 1909.
It was in his company that he became a regular member of the circle of
musicians under the patronage of Belyayev, perceived by Balakirev as a rival to
his own influence. Belyayev introduced Glazunov to Liszt, whose support led to
the spread of the young composer's reputation abroad. The First Symphony was
performed in Weimar in 1884, the Second
directed by Glazunov at the 1889 Paris Exhibition. The Fourth and Fifth
Symphonies were introduced to the London public in 1897. In 1899 Glazunov joined the
staff of the Conservatory in St Petersburg and in 1905, when peace was restored to the
institution after student demonstrations, he became Director, a position he
held, nominally at least, unti11930.
In
1928 Glazunov left Russia to fulfil concert engagements abroad, finally, in 1932, making his
home in Paris, where he died four
years later. These last years took him to a number of countries, where he
conducted concerts of his own works. In England a reporter compared
his appearance to that of a prosperous retired tea-planter, with his gold watch-chain
spread across his starched white waistcoat, resembling, for all the world, a
well-to-do bank- manager. His views on modern music were often severe. He found
the Heldenleben of Richard Strauss disgusting and referred to the
composer as'' cet inf3me scribouilleur". Of Stravinsky he remarked that he
had irrefutable proof of the inadequacy of his ear. Nevertheless it was under
his direction that the Conservatory produced a number of very distinguished
musicians. While Prokofiev did little to endear himself to Glazunov,
Shostakovich, whose father secured a supply of vodka for his son's teacher,
received considerable encouragement and was unstinting in his admiration of the
older composer as a marked influence on all the students with whom he had
contact, to whom Glazunov was a living legend.
The
symphonic picture The Kremlin was written in 1890 and is fully in
the nationalist mood, as characterized by Glazunov's mentor Rimsky-Korsakov.
The picture is, in fact, thoroughly Russian in its thematic content, revealing
the heart of Russia in the great monuments of the Kremlin, its palaces and
cathedrals, in music that seems to reflect something of the music of the Five
and something of what was to come with the Russian ballets of Rimsky-
Korsakov's pupil Stravinsky. The first of the three movements shows the
grandeur of the Kremlin, against which is set a popular festival, before the
meditative and religious mood of the second movement, with the tolling of the
bell and the solemn traditional chant. The third movement brings a lightening
of atmosphere, with music of alternating energy and lyricism, ending in
exultant triumph, for the entry of the Prince.
There
is a further return to an older world in the suite Iz srednikh vekov (From
the Middle Ages), written in 1902. The opening Prelude, ominous in its
first bars, moves forward to something more lyrical and romantic in contour, as
young lovers lie together, oblivious of the stormy sea outside the castle. The
second movement Scherzo bursts in, with all its vigour, a street-actor's
Dance of Death, a demonstration again of Glazunov's mastery of instrumental
colour. This leads, without a perceptible break, to the third movement, Troubadour's
Serenade, with its harp accompaniment and gently extended melody that gradually
dies away to nothing. The suite ends with The Crusaders. A fanfare
introduces music of martial character, although there are again moments of
lyrical contrast, with a meditative element suggested by the nature of the
subject, ending in a hymn of triumph.
Glazunov's
poeme lyrique was written between 1884 and 1887, during the first years
of his connection with Belyayev. The work opens with a fine-spun melody of
essentially romantic dimension, Russian in its colouring, if less so in its
thematic content. The poeme epique was written in 1933 and 1934 during
the composer's final years in Paris, in honour of the Academie des Beaux Arts
de l'lnstitut de France. Any programme to this Russian epic bilina, with
finely crafted music, an example of Glazunov's continuing sureness of touch and
command of earlier idiom in what is by now a new age, is best left to the
imagination of the listener. Nevertheless, thematically, the work is based on
the letter-names A, C, A, D, E (mi) and E, although it is completely in the
earlier idiom of The Kremlin.