Mili Alexeyevich Balakirev (1837 -1910) Symphony No.1 in C Major Islamey (orch. Liapunov) Balakirev occupies an important if equivocal position in the...
Mili Alexeyevich Balakirev (1837 -1910)
Symphony No.1 in C Major
Islamey (orch. Liapunov)
Balakirev occupies an important if equivocal position in the history of
Russian music of the later part of the nineteenth century. He was born in
Nizhny-Novgorod in 1837 and had his first piano lessons from his mother, who
later arranged some lessons for him with Alexander Dubuque, a pupil of John
Field. Through a later teacher, the German Karl Eisrich, he was introduced to
the circle of Alexander Ulībīshev, an enthusiastic amateur, author of books on
Mozart and Beethoven and owner of a useful music library. At Ulībīshev's house
he was able to hear chamber music and occasionally orchestral works, the
inspiration for his own early compositions. It was through the agency of this
patron that Balakirev was able in 1855 to travel to St. Petersburg, where he
met Glinka and other well known musicians and made his own debut as a pianist
and composer.
Supporting himself with difficulty by giving piano lessons and private
performances, Balakirev managed to survive in St. Petersburg, where he met two
young army officers, Cesar Cui and Modest Mussorgsky, both keen amateur
composers, over whom he began to exercise some influence. He had, at the same
time, formed a friendship with Dmitry and Vladimir Stasov, the latter an
important figure in the intellectual support of Russian musical nationalism. In
1861 he met Rimsky-Korsakov and the following year Borodin, completing the
group of five Russian nationalists described by Vladimir Stasov as the Mighty
Handful, the Five who would follow Glinka's example in the creation of a
distinctively Russian musical tradition. At the same time Balakirev had
increasing involvement with the Free School of Music in St. Petersburg, set up
in opposition to the 'German' Conservatory established by Anton Rubinstein,
with the encouragement of the Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, who did her best to
remove Balakirev from the conductorship of the Russian Music Society concerts,
which were under her patronage. Balakirev's own character, obstinate and
tactless, did much to increase the division between the Conservatory and his
own followers, castigated by Anton Rubinstein as amateurs, a charge that could
never have been levelled at him. Balakirev's later relationship with Nikolai
Rubinstein and the Moscow Conservatory, where Tchaikovsky taught, was more
satisfactory, and it was Nikolai Rubinstein who introduced the oriental fantasy
for piano, Islamey, to the St. Petersburg public in 1869.
Religious conversion led to a brief retirement from musical life and
from familiar society between 1871 and 1874, but gradually thereafter Balakirev
resumed something of his old activities, particularly, in 1881, the direction
of the Free School, which he had surrendered to Rimsky-Korsakov in 1874. In
1883 his friends found for him a position as director of the Imperial Court
Chapel, where he was assisted by Rimsky-Korsakov. A breach with the latter came
in 1890, as Belyayev, an important patron and publisher of Russian music,
gradually seemed to usurp his place as leader of the Russian nationalist
composers. A measure of friendship was restored, to be destroyed completely and
finally by Rimsky-Korsakov's behaviour at the first performance of Balakirev's
First Symphony at a Free School Concert in 1898. Balakirev had retired from the
Imperial Chapel in 1895 and thereafter had devoted himself more fully to
composition, to his continuing task of editing the music of Glinka and to the
encouragement of a new group of young Russian composers, including his always
loyal disciple Sergei Liapunov, who later orchestrated Islamey. Freedom from
other activity allowed the completion of a symphony he had started many years
before and the completion of a second in 1908. In this final period of his life
he attracted little attention from the musical public and expressed some
bitterness at the neglect of his work. Russian music, nevertheless, owed him a
considerable debt. Combative by temperament, he had fought for his own
conception of truly Russian music, which found future expression in a synthesis
of the technique of the Conservatories and the spirit that he had engendered
and nurtured.
Balakirev started his first symphony in 1864, a year after his first
appearance as a conductor. According to Rimsky-Korsakov, by 1866 Balakirev had
written down a third of the first movement, with sketches for a scherzo and a
finale on Russian themes, the songs Sharlatarla from Partarla and We sowed the
millet. The sketches for the scherzo were later used in the second symphony.
Balakirev resumed work on the first symphony in the 1890s, finishing it in
December 1897. An arrangement for piano duet was played by the composer and
Liapunov to a few invited guests, including Rimsky-Korsakov, Glazunov and the Stasovs,
and was received on that occasion without enthusiasm. It has since won a warmer
welcome.
The symphony is scored for three flutes, two oboes, cor anglais, three
clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, three
timpani, triangle, cymbals and bass drum, harp and strings. The first movement
opens with a slow introduction, the source of the rest of the movement, the
first subject is derived from the first two bars, while the second subject is
derived from a phrase played by flute and violas starting in the fifth bar.
There is, in an accompanying figure in the second violins, the suggestion of a
scene from Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov. The first subject is announced by the
full orchestra at the start of the Allegro vivo, a theme later augmented by the
brass, before the entry of the second subject, which is immediately developed.
Balakirev's technical competence is apparent in the subtle re-appearance of the
first subject, leading to a subsidiary second subject, before the central
section where further development continues, with here and in the third section
of the movement, considerable use of augmentation, the theme now played in
still longer note-values. The A minor Scherzo adds a Russian dimension to
Mendelssohn, with an expressively melancholy D minor Trio, the principal theme
of which appears again in the final coda to the movement. The whispered end of
the Scherzo leads to a D fiat major slow movement. Here the clarinet has the
principal theme, accompanied by strings and harp and leading the way to an E
major subsidiary theme in a prolonged exploration of the possibilities of
sonata-rondo form, unusual in a slow movement. The harp, in a series of scales,
prepares the necessary change of key for the C major Finale, which begins
without a break. Here cellos and double basses announce a Russian theme, the
first subject, followed by a D major second subject from the clarinet, in
compound rhythm, a theme that Balakirev had heard sung by a blind beggar. A
third, asymmetric theme is introduced by the cellos, adding to the thematic
material of a movement that ends in a vigorous Tempo di polacca.
The oriental fantasy Islamey was written in 1869 and revised in 1902.
It remains, in its original piano version, the best known of Balakirev's
compositions, the only one to bring profit to his publishers, its exoticism
matched in Liapunov's orchestral version. The fantasy is based on three themes,
the first known as Islamey and heard by the composer on a visit to the
Caucasus. The second theme is lively in rhythm, and these two themes lead to
the expressive third theme, which the composer had heard sung by the Armenian
baritone Konstantin de Lazari at Tchaikovsky's house in the summer of 1869.
This theme later emerges in more energetic guise, as the material is developed.
The symphonic poem Tamara is based on a poem by Lermontov. The evil and
beautiful Princess Tamara lives in a tower set in wild countryside, overlooking
the gorge of the Daryal and the river Terek. Lights from the tower, glowing
through the night mists, lure the traveller seeking shelter. Over him the
Princess casts a spell that cannot be broken. He is received by a black eunuch,
who shows him into the presence of the Princess, reclining on a luxurious
couch. The two meet in love, but strange sounds are heard, the sounds, as it
were, of young men and girls brought together on their wedding night to the
echoes of mourning. At dawn all is silence, but for the rushing of the river
below, bearing with it a corpse, to which a soft voice from the tower bids
farewell.
Balakirev completed Tamara in 1882, although the subject had fascinated
him for some fifteen years, with Islamey seemingly a preparatory sketch for the
symphonic poem, which follows closely enough the moods of Lermontov's poem.
Here is the gorge and rushing river, the mists, the mysterious tower, and then
the pagan seductiveness of Tamara's melody, introduced by flute and oboe in
sinuous unison, followed by a second more sensuous melody for clarinet. The
wild entertainment of the night ends in the death of the traveller, the
sinister farewell, as the river bears away its burden into the distance.
Russian State Symphony Orchestra
The Russian State Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1936 and was
initially under the direction of Alexander Gauk, succeeded in 1941 by Natan
Rahlin, followed, in 1945, by Konstantin Ivanov. Since 1965 the conductor has
been Evgeny Svetlanov, with Igor Golovchin as the present Assistant Conductor.
The orchestra has toured throughout the world, with a repertoire that includes
Russian classical and contemporary works, from Glinka to Shostakovich,
Khachaturian and Sviridov.
Igor Golovschin
The Russian conductor Igor Golovschin was born in Moscow in 1956 and
entered the piano class of the Special Music School at the age of six. In 1975
he joined the class of Kyril Kondrashin at the Moscow Conservatory and in 1981
joined the Irkutsk Symphony Orchestra, winning the Herbert von Karajan
Conductors' Competition in the following year, followed, in 1983, by victory in
the Moscow National Conductors' Competition. Five years later he was invited to
join the USSR State Symphony Orchestra, where he is assistant to Yevgeny
Svetlanov. With this orchestra he has toured throughout Europe and as far
afield as Japan.