Russian Festival Aram Il'yich Khachaturian (1903 - 1978) Sabre Dance from Gayane Alexander Porfir'yevich Borodin (1833 - 1887) Overture to Prince Igor...
Russian Festival
Aram Il'yich Khachaturian (1903 - 1978)
Sabre Dance from Gayane
Alexander Porfir'yevich Borodin (1833 - 1887)
Overture to Prince Igor
Reyngol'd Moritsevich Gliere (1875 - 1956)
Russian Sailors' Dance
Mikhail lvanovich Glinka (1804 - 1857)
Overture to Ruslan & Ludmilla
Overture to A Life for the Tsar
Fantasie: Kamarinskaya
Nikolay Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov (1844 -1908)
Flight of the Bumblebee
Russian Easter Overture
It was during the course of the nineteenth century that Russian
national consciousness developed, a change in attitude evident in literature,
with the great novelists and poets of the period, in the visual arts, which
have travelled abroad less satisfactorily, and, above all, in music. Under
Peter the Great in the early eighteenth century, Russia had looked to the West,
a fact that the geographical choice of capital, St. Petersburg, and the
cultural and political life of the time illustrates well enough. In the
nineteenth century there were again those who looked West to Germany for a
musical model to follow, while others, in particular the so-called Mighty
Handful grouped around Balakirev, chose a very different course. The
cosmopolitan tendency is clearly seen in the case of Anton Rubinstein, founder
of the St. Petersburg Conservatory, an institution that earned the initial
hostility of the nationalists, with their inspired amateurism.
The Mighty Handful, Balakirev, Cesar Cui, Borodin, Musorgsky and
Rimsky-Korsakov, the most Russian of the Russian composers, were inspired by
the example of Glinka to attempt the composition of music of national
inspiration. Glinka had had some professional training in Germany and Balakirev
too was a professional musician. The other later members of the group, however,
had, at first, other careers. Cesar Cui remained a professor of military
fortification, Borodin was a noted chemist, teaching at the Medico-Surgical
Academy, Musorgsky was an army officer and later an alcoholically incompetent
civil servant, while Rimsky-Korsakov started his career as a naval officer.
These preoccupations seem to justify Rubinstein's description of the
nationalist composers as amateurs, while the enthusiasm of the Five for things
Russian seemed to them to justify their criticism of Rubinstein and the
Conservatory as in some way un-Russian, a jibe not without anti-semitic
implications.
During the course of the century the conservatories established in St.
Petersburg and Moscow did provide Russian musicians with the kind of technical
proficiency that they needed, enabling later generations to combine sound
technical competence with nationalist ideals. Tchaikovsky was among the first
students in St. Petersburg, and was later to teach for some ten years at the
parallel institution in Moscow. The amateur pioneers, much of whose work was
left unfinished, had provided an example and an inspiration. It was left to
Rimsky-Korsakov and his young pupil Glazunov to edit and complete compositions
undertaken by Borodin and Musorgsky, while Cui, who lived until 1918, turned
his attention to miniatures, after years spent as a part-time critic,
castigating the works of those he regarded as failing the Russian ideal,
including some of the music of Tchaikovsky and most of that of Rubinstein.
Glinka, the oldest of the composers represented in the present Russian
festival, was born on his family's estate near Smolensk and brought up at first
by his grandmother. His schooling in St. Petersburg brought him into wider
contact with Western music and his later career, initially with a government
sinecure in the Ministry of Communications, allowed him to pursue a somewhat
irregular course of musical activity as a composer and as a drawing-room
performer. Travel to Italy and later to Germany gave him an opportunity to
broaden his experience still further, and to acquire, through lessons with
Siegfried Dehn in Berlin, some technical competence as a composer.
In 1834, on the death of his father, Glinka returned to Russia, already
entertaining thoughts of composing really Russian music. By 1836 he had
completed an opera that he had at first called Ivan Susanin, later to be known
as A Life for the Tsar. The work,
based on historical events of 1612, when the Russian Susanin was instrumental
in saving the new Romanov Tsar from the Polish army, established Glinka's
reputation as the leading Russian composer of the time. Promoted to the
position of Kapellmeister to the Tsar, he proceeded to write a second opera,
Ruslan and Ludmilla, based on a poem by Pushkin, a Persian fairy-tale in which
the heroine, Ludmilla, is abducted by a wicked dwarf, but is finally rescued by
her beloved Ruslan. At its first performance in 1842 the work was not well
received, but grew in favour as time went on. The brilliant overture remains a
popular concert item.
In 1844 Glinka travelled abroad once again, meeting Berlioz in Paris,
where his music was greeted with some enthusiasm, and going on to Spain, where
he was able to collect useful melodic material for the later use of himself and
others at home. During the course of his stay abroad he wrote the famous
orchestral piece Kamarinskaya,
which makes use of the simplest of Russian melodies in a remarkably imaginative
way and with orchestra that was to serve as a model long after his death in
Berlin in 1856. By the next generation of Russian composers Glinka was to be
long respected both as a pioneer in Russian musical nationalism and, in any
case, for his lasting achievement as a composer.
Rimsky-Korsakov, once he had given up his career as a navel officer to
become an inspector of naval bands, became possibly the strongest of first
following the example of Glinka and later falling to some extent under the
Wagnerian spell, and taught for a number of years at the St. Petersburg
Conservatory, where his pupils were to include Stravinsky and Prokofiev. It was
left to him to tidy up the works left unfinished by Borodin and Musorgsky, both
of whom died relatively young, and it was with his pupil Glazunov that he dealt
with the former's unfinished opera Prince Igor. The overture, indeed, was once
said to have been written out from memory by Glazunov who had once heard
Borodin play it through on the piano.
According to his student Dmitry Shostakovich, Glazunov, in his cups,
was later to admit that the overture was not written out from memory at all,
but simply composed for Borodin, whose application to the task in hand had
often been slight.
Rimsky-Korsakov's own Russian Easter
Overture, written in 1886, avowedly orchestrated in the style of
Glinka, is based on liturgical themes, a description that does little justice
to the lyricism and excitement of the work, seen rather as a fantasy than a
formal overture. Tsar Alexander III, who had little taste for Russian music of
this kind, forbade any repetition of the piece in his hearing, after he had
heard its first performance. The programme of the work is explained by the
inclusion of quotations from Psalm LXVIII and from St. Mark's account of the
Passion in the score. The all too well known Flight of the Bumblebee, familiar
in many virtuoso arrangements for the most unlikely instruments, has its origin
in an interlude in the opera The Legend of Tsar Saltan. A prince, with the
magic help of a swan, turns into a bee & seizes the opportunity to sting
his two unpleasant and jealous aunts, who had plotted his death and that of his
mother, the Tsaritsa.
Gliere's ballet The Red Poppy,
dealing with an act of Communist heroism in China, where a dancer sacrifices
her life in the fight against capitalism. Staged by the Bolshoi theatre in
1927, the work, which includes the popular Russian Sailors' Dance, was later to
be known as The Red Flower, to avoid the obvious connotations of the poppy.
Aram Khachaturian, a composer from Soviet Armenia, enjoyed considerable
popular success at home and abroad, his particular mixture of nationally
inspired melodic material and relatively conventional harmony, has proved
particularly attractive. The famous Sabre
Dance from part of a final divertissement in the 1942 ballet Gayane, a story of love in a cotton
cooperative, in which the heroine is released from her marriage to a
politically unreliable husband and is able to marry the chairman of the
cooperative. The dance is part of their wedding celebration.
Czech Radio Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava)
The Czech 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.
Anthony Bramall
Anthony Bramall was born in London in 1957 and spent five years as a
chorister at Westminster Abbey, before continuing his musical education at the
Purcell School and at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. He attended
courses in conducting under Vilem Tausky and had varied experience as a conductor
in Britain, working with Northern Ireland Opera, Phoenix Opera and Spectrum
Opera, becoming, in 1981, Assistant to the General Music Director in the
Municipal Theatre in Pforzheim. In 1984 he won a special prize in the Hans
Swarowsky Conducting Competition and the following year was guest conductor
with the South German Chamber Orchestra. Since 1985 he has been Director of
Music at the Municipal Theatre in Augsburg.