Alexander Porfir'yevich Borodin (1833 - 1887) Symphony No.1 in E flat major Symphony No.2 in B minor Symphony No.3 in A minor (completed & orchestrated...
Alexander Porfir'yevich Borodin (1833 - 1887)
Symphony No.1 in E flat major
Symphony No.2 in B minor
Symphony No.3 in A minor (completed & orchestrated by
Alexander Glazunov)
Alexander Porfir'yevich Borodin was born in 1833, the
illegitimate son of a Georgian prince, assuming, according to custom the surname and
patronymic of one of his father's serfs. His mother later married a retired army doctor
and he was brought up at home in cultured and privileged surroundings. Here he was able to
develop his early interests in music, in the course of a general education that won him
entry in 1850 to the Medico-Surgical Academy. His public career was as a scientist, from
1864 as a professor of chemistry at the Medico-Surgical Academy, and involved him in
teaching and in research. In common with a number of contemporaries, he was only able to
indulge his interest in music in his spare time, a fact that delayed his progress and
left, at his death in 1886, a number of incompleted projects, to be assembled and finished
by his friend Rimsky-Korsakov, who had resigned his commission in the navy to devote
himself entirely to music, and Rimsky-Korsakovs pupil Alexander Glazunov.
The nineteenth century saw the development of nationalism
throughout Europe. In Russia there was an intellectual reaction to the westernizing
tendencies initiated by Peter the Great a century before, and in all the arts a move
towards the creation of something specifically Russian. In music opinions were divided
between a group of nationalist composers, the so-called Five, led by Balakirev, who had
enjoyed a measure of professional training, and including, in addition to Borodin and
Rimsky-Korsakov, the expert on military fortification Cesar Cui and the alcoholic ex-army
officer turned civil servant Mussorgsky. These nationalist composers gloried in their own
relative amateurism, opposing strongly the establishment of professional conservatories in
St. Petersburg and Moscow by the Rubinstein brothers, whom they regarded as representative
of "German" music. The succeeding generation was able to provide a synthesis
between these two rival movements, joining the professional training of the conservatories
to Russian sources of inspiration.
Borodin attempted three symphonies, the last of which he never
finished. The first, in E flat, took him five years to complete, occupying his
intermittent attention from 1862 until 1867. It was given a poor trial performance under
Balakirev in March 1868, but was more successful when it was played in the first Russian
Music Society concert of 1869. Borodin had met Balakirev first in 1862 and fallen under
his influence, of which the First Symphony
was a more or less immediate result, his first sustained exercise in composition and
subjected to the often contradictory criticism of his new mentor at every step.
The E flat Symphony
opens with a slow introduction that contains the germ of the Allegro first subject. An E flat major second
movement scherzo shows a debt to
Mendelssohn, a favourite with Borodin, while the B
major trio has about it more the exotic world of Borodin's unfinished opera Prince Igor. The D
major slow movement is dominated by a melody originally intended for the cor
anglais, until the intervention of Rimsky-Korsakoy and Glazunov, who recommended the use
of the cello in its place. The symphony ends with an energetic finale which, in spite of
its characteristic second subject, owes much to German tradition and was described by
Gerald Abraham as second-hand Schumann, a judgment as harsh as the same writer's view of
the scherzo as second-hand Berlioz,
deficiencies for which he regarded the original first movement as ample compensation.
The Second Symphony
was started in 1869 and completed seven years later, the period of its composition
coinciding very largely with Borodin's intermittent attention to work on Prince Igor. The music is thoroughly Russian in mood
and the composer himself suggested in conversation with Stasov that the first movement
represented some gathering of Russian warriors, the slow movement a Bajan and the last a
crowd in festive mood. The opening movement is dominated by its forceful and ominous first
theme. The Scherzo, slightly altered in its
opening on the suggestion of Balakirev, who was always ready with advice, however
inconsistent, shifts a semi-tone higher, as the repeated note C on the horns serves as the
introduction of the new key of F major, much as the G flat chord that opens the Andante, with its moving horn solo, shifts the
tonality to D flat, changing to C sharp minor at the start of the colourful B major finale. The symphony, in fact, is remarkable
in its technical novelty, within the traditional symphonic framework, and constitutes an
orchestral counterpart of Prince Igor, Polovtsian Dances and all.
The Third Symphony,
of which only two movements exist, makes use as a second movement of a scherzo in a
characteristically uneven rhythm scored originally for string quartet, written in 1882,
and orchestrated, as Borodin had intended. For the Trio
Glazunov took music that the composer had written for the first act of Prince Igor but had later rejected. The first
movement, reconstructed by Glazunov from the composer's sketches and from his phenomenal
memory, had actually originally been intended as a string quartet, a fact that goes some
way to explaining its relatively spare texture and gentle mood.
Czechoslovak Radio Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava)
The Czechoslovak Radio Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava), the
oldest symphonic ensemble in Slovakia, was founded in 1929 at the instance of Milos
Ruppeldt and Oskar Nedbal, prominent personalities in the sphere of music. The orchestra
was first conducted by the Prague conductor Frantisek Dyk and in the course of the past
fifty years of its existence has worked under the batons of several prominent Czech and
Slovak conductors. Ondrej Lenard was appointed its conductor in 1970 and in 1977 its
conductor-in-chief. The orchestra has recently given a number of successful concerts both
at home and abroad, in West and East Germany, Russia, Bulgaria, Denmark, France, Spain,
Italy, and Great Britain.
Stephen Gunzenhauser
The American conductor Stephen Gunzenhauser was educated in New
York, continuing his studies at Oberlin, at the Salzburg Mozarteum, at the New England
Conservatory and at Cologne State Conservatory. His period at the last of these was the
result of a Fulbright Scholarship, followed by an award from the West German Government
and a first prize in the conducting competition held in the Spanish town of Santiago.
During the last two decades, Gunzenhauser has enjoyed a varied
and distinguished career, winning popularity in particular for his work with the Delaware
Symphony.
For the Marco Polo label Stephen Gunzenhauser has recorded
works by Bloch, Lachner, Taneyev, Liadov, Glière and Rubinstein, and for NAXOS
Tchaikovsky's Symphony No.5, Beethoven Overtures, the Saint-Saëns Organ Symphony, Orff's Carmina Burana and Rachmaninov's Second. He is currently engaged in recording all the
symphonies and symphonic poems of Dvorak, also for NAXOS.