Vasily Sergeyevich Kalinnikov (1866-1901) Incidental Music to Alexey Tolstoy's Drama Bilina (Epic Poem): Overture Kedri i palma (The Cedar and the Palm)...
Vasily Sergeyevich Kalinnikov (1866-1901)
Incidental Music to Alexey Tolstoy's
Drama
Bilina (Epic Poem): Overture
Kedri i palma (The Cedar and the Palm)
Symphonic Picture after Heinrich Heine's
Poem
Nimfi (The Nymphs)
Symphonic Picture after Ivan Turgenev's
Poem in Prose
Vasily Sergeyevich Kalinnikov was born in
1866 in Voina, in the Oryol District, where Turgenev, Henry James's
"beautiful genius" had been born in 1818. The son of a police
official, he was allowed through the ecclesiastical connections of the family
to study at the seminary in Oryol, where he took charge of the choir at the age
of 14. In 1884 he went to Moscow as a student at the Philharmonic Society
School, taking lessons on the bassoon and in composition with Alexander Il'yinsky
and the self-taught Pavel Blaramberg, a statistician by profession. The poverty
of his family forced him to earn a living playing the bassoon, timpani or
violin in theatre orchestras and further weakened his health, already affected
by childhood privations.
In 1893 Kalinnikov's fortunes seemed
about to take a turn for the better, with his appointment as conductor at the
Italian Theatre in Moscow, but deteriorating health compelled him to resign in
order to seek in the relative warmth of the South Crimea a cure for the
tuberculosis from which he suffered. He was to remain in Yalta for the rest of
his life, completing there his two symphonies, and, among other orchestral
works, incidental music for the play Tsar Boris by Alexey Tolstoy, staged at
the Maliy Theatre in Moscow in 1899.
Towards the end of his life Kalinnikov
received some financial relief through the good offices of Sergey Rachmaninov,
who had visited him in Yalta and been appalled at the conditions in which he
found him living, The latter's intervention with the publisher Jurgenson
brought an immediate sum of 120 roubles for three songs and an offer to publish
the score, parts and piano-duet transcription of the Second Symphony,
which had had its first performance in Kiev in 1898, a year after the première
of the First, which had also been heard in Vienna and Berlin. Rachmaninov also
arranged payment for a piano arrangement of the earlier symphony, but
Kalinnikov did not live to benefit from his new agreement with Jurgenson, He
died early in January 1901, before his 35th birthday, His death induced
Jurgenson to offer Kalinnikov's widow an unexpectedly high sum for the rest of
her husband's manuscripts, with the remark that he paid because the composer's
death had multiplied the value of his works by ten, a sad reflection on
commercial reality.
Count Alexey Konstantinovich Tolstoy, a
courtier of Tsar Alexander II, until his retirement from official duties in
1861, won himself a considerable reputation as a poet and, with his poetic
trilogy on the Tsars Ivan the Terrible, Fedor Loannovich and Boris,
as a historical dramatist, In 1881 Tchaikovsky, who had set various poems by
Tolstoy, was invited to provide nine marches for the play Tsar Boris, but
rejected the proposal, which came at a difficult time in his career.
Kalinnikov's music for the play is among his most successful works, suggesting,
as Asafyev proposed, that had he lived he might have achieved a high position
among Russian nationalist composers of the time. An opening overture sets the
scene for the first act, its ominous introduction leading to music of
thoroughly Russian lyricism in melodic contour and in rhythm, It is followed by
a series of entr'actes which reflect obvious similarities with Borodin in
orchestral colour and the use of themes of clear Russian provenance, forming an
impressive suite. The Overture Bilina ('Epic Poem') was written in
Moscow in 1892. It opens with a melody of obviously Russian contour, an ominous
introduction to a more lyrical theme, followed by faster dance rhythms, mingled
with colourfully orchestrated music of strongly romantic feeling.
Kedr i palm
('The Cedar and the Palm'), based on a Russian version of Heine by
Apollon Maikov, was completed in 1898 and first published in 1901 .The original
poem, which also served as inspiration to Sibelius, contrasts the northern
pine-tree with the desert palm:
Ein Fichtenbaum steht einsam
Im Norden auf kahler Hoh'.
Ihn schlafert; mit weißer Decke
Umhüllen ihn Eis und Schnee.
Er traumt von einer Palme,
Die fern im Morgenland
Einsam und schweigend trauert
Auf brennender Felsenwand.
In the music of Kalinnikov it is
difficult to avoid association with Borodin, although this is not to suggest
that the composer was purely derivative in inspiration, but that the course he
was following was very much that pursued by earlier nationalist composers,
coupled with a high degree of technical competence in handling orchestral
colour and thematic materials of a very Russian cast, with inevitable
suggestions, at moments of climax, of ballet music, descending into rural
melancholy.
Kalinnikov felt a particular affinity
with the Russian novelist Ivan Turgenev, who had been born in Oryol, the
composer's home district, in 1818. He shared with the writer a similar aim,
that of evoking, in his case in purely musical terms, the feeling and
atmosphere of the Russian countryside. At the same time he carefully avoided
any detailed narrative programme to his music. The symphonic picture after
Turgenev, Nimfi ('The Nymphs), based on one of the late prose-poems, was
completed in 1889.