Anton Rubinstein (1829-1894)
Symphony No. 1 in F Major, Op. 40
Ivan the Terrible, Op. 79
It was Gustav Mahler who described himself as three times
homeless: a
Bohemian in Austria; an Austrian among Germans; a Jew
throughout the whole world. The nineteenth century provided chances for Jewish
assimilation into a Gentile world. The Jewish poet Heine described baptism as a
ticket into European culture, and it was a course chosen by some, such as the
Mendelssohn family and in Russia by the Rubinsteins. Nevertheless, as Jewish
fortunes prospered, anti-Semitism became more overt. There is no doubt that
Anton Rubinstein's reputation suffered because of his racial origins, much as
it suffered among Russian nationalists as a result of his obviously
cosmopolitan or German musical proclivities.
Anton Rubinstein was born at Vikhvatinets in the Podolsk
district of the Russian Empire, on the borders of Moldavia, in 1829. A few
years later his family moved to Moscow, and after early instruction on the
piano from his mother he took lessons from a teacher there, a certain Villoing,
later to be the teacher of his brother Nikolay. He gave his first public
concert in Moscow at the age of ten. There followed four years of touring as a
child virtuoso, years that took him to Paris, to Scandinavia, Austria and
Germany, and to London, where he played for Queen Victoria. In 1844 the family
settled in Berlin, where Rubinstein took lessons in harmony and counterpoint
from Glinka's former teacher, the Prussian royal music librarian Siegfried Dehn.
In 1846 Rubinstein's father died and the rest of the family
returned to Russia, while he remained abroad in Vienna and in Pressburg (the
modern Bratislava), earning a living as he could by teaching and cynical about
the support that the ever-generous Liszt had seemed to offer, which took the
form of a visit to his garret, with his entourage of disciples. As a pianist Rubinstein
was to rival Liszt in fame, and the latter speaks of him with grudging respect
as a composer and player, a clever fellow, but unduly influenced by the
classicism of Mendelssohn, adding a less charitable description of him as the
pseudo-Musician of the future on the occasion of a visit to Weimar in 1854 for
the first performance of his opera The Siberian Huntsman.
Rubinstein's fortunes had changed as a result of a meeting
with members of the Russian Imperial family during the course of an earlier
visit to Paris. On his return to Russia in the winter of 1848 he found support
from the Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, a German princess and sister-in-law of
the Tsar, and with her active encouragement he established in 1859 the Russian
Musical Society and three years later the St. Petersburg Conservatory. His
brother Nikolay, whose childhood prowess as a pianist had had similar exposure,
founded similar organisations in Moscow. Tchaikovsky was to be among the first
pupils at the St. Petersburg Conservatory and among the first teachers on the
staff of its humbler counterpart in Moscow.
The new Conservatory aroused immediate enmity, in particular
from the nationalist group of composers, bullied into collaboration by the
eccentric Balakirev. Rubinstein had opened battle by attacking the whole notion
of national opera, pointing to the alleged failure of Glinka's work. Balakirev,
self-taught as a composer, objected to formal German musical training, and it
was left to following generations to benefit from a profitable synthesis of the
primitive nationalism of the Five and the cosmopolitan sophistication of the
Conservatories. Rubinstein, however, coupled technical assurance with a less
overtly Russian approach, although by the time of his death in 1894 he had come
to a better understanding of Russian nationalism in music, while a younger
generation had come to understand the necessity of professional musical
training.
Rubinstein remained director of the St. Petersburg
Conservatory until 1867, when he also gave up the directorship of the Russian
Music Society concerts, which now fell to Balakirev. He returned to direct the
Conservatory once more in 1887, towards the end of a career that had
established him as one of the greatest contemporary pianists and as a conductor
of significant ability. As a composer he was prolific, leading his younger
brother Nikolay, when asked about his own compositions, to reply that Anton had
written enough for both of them. By the end of his life, however, he had lost
the respect of the younger generation, so that his name had become synonymous
with kitsch - 'c'est du Rubinstein' had become a familiar jibe. It is only now,
with hindsight, that we can begin to reassess his very remarkable and
substantial achievement in opera, orchestral and chamber music, and in his
writing for the piano, so long remembered invidiously only by the notorious
Melody in F.
Rubinstein wrote his Symphony No. 1 in F Major, Opus 40, in
1850. The work is, therefore, a product of the time of productive study in St.
Petersburg as Chamber Virtuoso to the Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, a period
during which he had rejected overtly Russian influences, that were to make a
relatively mild appearance later in his life. The symphony opens in fine Mendelssohnian
mood, belying any suggestion of careless haste, a charge later levelled at him.
It was presumably among the forty or fifty compositions he showed to Liszt in
Weimar four years later. For Liszt the formal symphony must have seemed a
defunct genre, much as for Balakirev and his group a musical idiom of such
classical purity must have been anathema. The symphony is, in fact, pure
Mendelssohn, and written, it may be recalled, only three years after that
composer's early death. The second movement provides a contrast of mood,
inevitably recalling the work of the earlier master of the Scherzo, much as the
slow movement suggests from time to time the ominous marching progress of
pilgrims, whether Italian or not. Cheerful thematic material, with an
occasional touch of the Hebrides, brings the necessary happy ending to a
symphony that combines technical competence with considerable charm.
The musical portrait, Ivan the Terrible, is based on the
work of Lev Alexandrovich Mey, the literary source of four of Rimsky-Korsakov's
operas and of numerous songs by the Five and by Tchaikovsky. In particular
Rimsky-Korsakov's first opera, generally known as the Maid of Pskov, which
bears the alternative title Ivan the Terrible, is derived from a play by Mey
recounting the story of the Tsar's attack on Novgorod, leading to the death of Tucha
and his beloved Olga, the latter turning out to be the Tsar's daughter. Mey's
drama serves as the source of Rubinstein's musical portrait, written in 1869,
and arranged for piano duet by Tchaikovsky in the same year. Five years earlier
Rubinstein had written a musical portrait of Goethe's hero, Faust and in 1870
there followed his musical picture after Cervantes, Don Quixote. Here was some
concession, at least, to the extra-musical preoccupations espoused by Liszt in
his symphonic poems, copies of some of which he had sent to Rubinstein in 1856.
At the same time Ivan the Terrible does contain overtly Russian elements,
although it may lack the crude inspiration of the untutored nationalists.
CSSR State Philharmonic Orchestra (Košce)
The East Slovakian town of Košice boasts a long and
distinguished musical tradition, as part of a province that once provided
Vienna with musicians. The State Philharmonic Orchestra is of relatively recent
origin and was established in 1968 under the conductor Bystrik Rezucha.
Subsequent principal conductors have included Stanislav Macura and Ladislav Slovák,
the latter succeeded in 1985 by his pupil Richard Zimmer. The orchestra has
toured widely in Eastern and Western Europe and plays an important part in the Košice
Musical Spring and the Košice International Organ Festival.
Robert Stankovsky
Robert Stankovsky was born in Bratislava, the capital of
Slovakia, in 1964, and after a childhood spent in the study of the piano,
recorder, oboe and clarinet, turned his attention, at the age of fourteen, to
conducting, graduating in this and in piano at the Bratislava Conservatory with
the title of best graduate of the year. In spite of his youth Stankovsky has
had considerable experience as a conductor with the major orchestras of
Slovakia, including the Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra, the Capella Istropolitana,
the Bratislava Radio Symphony Orchestra, as well as the Central Bohemian
Symphony Orchestra, the Košice State Philharmonic Orchestra and others. He has
conducted in East and West Germany, in Hungary, Russia, Austria, the
Netherlands, Spain and in the United States of America and is at the moment
conductor of the Czechslovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Bratislava, and of the Košice
State Philharmonic Orchestra. He has made recordings with the Ukrainian Radio
Orchestra in Kiev and since November, 1988, has been permanent guest conductor
of the Leipzig Grosses Rundfunk Orchestra. Stankovsky is regarded as one of the
best conductors of the younger generation in Czechoslovakia.