Aram
Il'yich
Khachaturian (1903 - 1978)
Spartacus: Suite No.4
Bacchante's Melancholy Dance
Spartacus' Procession
Death of the Gladiator
Call to Anns: Spartacus'
Uprising
Masquerade: Suite
Waltz
Nocturne
Mazurka
Romance
Galop
Circus: Ballet Music
Dance Suite
Trans-Caucasian Dance
Annenian Dance
Uzbek Dance Tune
Uzbek March
Lezghinka
The Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian
was born in Thlisi in 1903 and had his musical training at the Gnesin Music Academy in Moscow, entering in 1929 the Moscow Conservatory,
where he was a pupil of Prokofiev's friend and mentor, Miaskovsky. He
established himself as a composer during the 1930s and held official positions
in the Union of Soviet Composers, although he was included in the condemnation
of fonnalism, together with Shostakovich and Prokofiev, in 1948. Nevertheless
his style of composition, with the use of regional elements from Armenia and
elsewhere in the southern areas of the Soviet Union, in the end ensured his
continuing reputation, enhanced once more, after the death of Stalin in 1953,
by his ballet Spartacus, a work that combined spectacle in its crowd
scenes and attention to individual virtuosity in its solos, with a plot that
could not but satisfy the ideals of the regime. Writing in a tonal idiom with
richly coloured orchestration, Khachaturian was opposed to modem experiment in
composition and in spite of the condemnation of 1948 held publicly that Soviet
composers enjoyed a creative freedom impossible in the West, with its modemising
fashions, to which subservience was obligatory. During his life-time he
received ll1any honours, including in 1954 the title People's Artist. He died
in 1978.
The ballet Spartacus, the score
of which was completed in 1954, deals with the slave rebellion led by the hero
of that name against Roman domination. The historical Spartacus himself was
Thracian by birth, a shepherd who became a robber. He was taken prisoner and
sold to a trainer of gladiators in Capua, but in 73 BC he escaped, with other prisoners, and led a rebellion
during the course of which he defeated the Roman armies and caused devastation
throughout Italy. He was
eventually defeated by Crassus, a general well known for his wealth, and put to
death by crucifixion, together with his followers. It should be added that to
Karl Marx Spartacus was the first great proletarian hero, a champion of the
people, while the ultimate fate of Crassus, killed in 53 BC during the course
of a campaign that had taken him to Armena, might have had a particular
significance for Khachaturian.
Spartacus
was first produced at the Kirov Theatre in Leningrad in 1956, with choreography by Leonid Jacobson, and was re-staged at
the Bolshoy in Moscow two years
later, with choreography by Igor Moiseyev. The relative failure of these productions
was followed by what must be seen as the definitive version at the Bolshoy in
1968, with choreography and a revised libretto by Yury Grigorovich, Vladimir Vasilyev
as Spartacus and Ekaterina Maximova as Phrygia.
The ballet opens in Rome, where Crassus is buying Thracian
prisoners, including Spartacus and his wife Phrygia. Spartacus will not accept his fate. In the second scene the slaves
are sold, below the walls of the Capitol, and Phrygia, separated now from her husband, laments her uncertain fate. She
has been bought by Crassus and in his villa his mistress Aegina mocks her fears: she herself cares
only for power, money and dissolute living. In an orgy two blindfold slaves
trained as gladiators are brought in and made to fight each other to the death.
One of them wins and reveals himself as Spartacus, dismayed now at having
killed a fellow-slave. He wonders what his fate will be. The scene changes to
the barracks of the gladiators, where Spartacus urges his fellow-slaves to
fight for freedom. They swear to follow him.
The second of the three acts of the
final version opens with a shepherd dance. Runaway slaves arrive and urge them
to join the revolt, with Spartacus as their leader. He resolves to find and set
free his wife Phrygia. Crassus
celebrates his triumph and Spartacus now learns of Phrygia's fate. During a banquet given by Crassus, Spartacus escapes with Phrygia. Aegina does her best to gain her ends by dominating Crassus, who himself
has grandiose political ambitions: he uses force and she uses her wits, but
both have similar aims. At his villa the guests of Crassus celebrate, but news
is brought that Spartacus and his men have surrounded the place. Crassus, Aegina and the nobles make their escape,
leaving the slaves in charge of the villa. Spartacus realises that Roman
strength lies in its armies and in the subservience of the people: in fact the
Romans are cowards. In the fourth scene of the act Crassus is defeated and
brought before
Spartacus, who insists on single combat,
rather than putting his enemy to death. Crassus loses, but is spared by
Spartacus, who sends him contemptuously away.
The third act brings a conspiracy
against Spartacus. Crassus is urged by Aegina to seek revenge and raises an army for the purpose. Aegina has time to give vent to her hatred
of Spartacus and in the following scene enters the slave camp by night. Phrygia is uneasy and Spartacus tries to
calm her. A messenger brings news of the advance of the Roman legions, against
which Spartacus has a daring plan, to which his immediate supporters object. Aegina, meanwhile, with the help of the
traitor Harmodius, is still intent on revenge. This she accomplishes as the
slaves wait for their leader's battle signal. She now plies them with wine and
brings women to corrupt and weaken them, leading to their defeat by Crassus and
her own reward. Crassus is determined that they shall die. In a final battle
Spartacus is surrounded and captured, to be raised up on legionary spears. Phrygia comes to seek him, and is left
mourning over his dead body.
The first three suites from the ballet
were arranged by the composer between 1955 and 1957, with a fourth suite in
1967, before the revision of the score for the Bolshoy in 1968. Music in the
suites is taken from various scenes in the ballet, forming coherent musical
sequences that do not necessarily follow the order of dramatic events in the
original ballet.
The colourful incidental music for a
production in 1941 of Lermontov's Masquerade serves its purpose
admirably. The drama itself has, over the years, attracted a number of Russian
composers, from Kolesnikov in the 1890s to operas by Mosolov, Denbsky, Bunin, Zeidman,
Nersesov and Artamanov, a ballet by Lamputin and incidental music by Glazunov, Shebalin
and Khachaturian. Lermontov's hero, Evgeny Arbenin, is bored with the world,
despising the decadent society of St Petersburg in which he moves, moody and suspicious. In a plot that follows the
story of Othello, Arbenin is jealous of his wife, Nina, an innocent woman whom
he poisons. The play is bitter in its criticism of contemporary society and was
bam1ed for some thirty years. Its appeal to more recent audiences is clear
enough. Khachaturian's music for Masquerade, like Tchaikovsky's for some
of the scenes in his opera based on Pushkin's Evgeny Onyegin, gives a
glittering picture of social life, a contrast to the reality beneath.
The ballet music by Khachaturian for
Circus is characteristic in its energetic style, typical of a form of
composition which found particular favour with the contemporary musical
establishment, as did that of his nephew, Karen Khachaturian, whose ballet Cippolino
was awarded the Stalin Prize. It opens dramatically, proceeding with the brash
and vivid energy that might be expected from the composer of the famous Sabre
Dance, with a following series of episodes offering the necessary
degree of excitement and tension, at times even with a suggestion of
Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Nevertheless the general musical idiom
is firmly within the bounds of current official Soviet taste, aptly serving its
practical function and ending, as it began, in a cinematic triumph that would
not have disgraced Hollywood in its heyday.
Khachaturian's Dance Suite was his first major
work for full orchestra, written in 1933, while he was a student at Moscow
Conservatory in the composition class of Myaskovsky. He later explained how he
had made use of Uzbek and Armenian melodic material, treating these melodies
with some rhythmic freedom and adding motifs of his own. The first movement, Trans-Caucasian
Dance makes use of folk-songs popular in Armenia and in Azerbaijan, Chem-Chem
and Shalakho, while the second, the Armenian Dance, uses a well
known Armenian dance-tune. The Uzbek Dance Tune has, as its
second theme, the melody Kora soch, that Khachaturian also uses in the
finale of his Clarinet Trio, while the fourth movement, Uzbek March,
proclaims its source in its title. Khachaturian took particular pleasure in the
final Ukrainian Lezghinka, which he preferred to his later version of
the dance in the ballet Gayane. The first four movements enjoyed
additional popularity in arrangements for wind-band, in celebration of the
fifteenth anniversary of the Red Army.