Aram Il'yich Khachaturian (1903-1978) Gayane (Highlights) Spartacus (Highlights) Masquerade (Highlights) While exercising firm political control over the...
Aram Il'yich
Khachaturian (1903-1978)
Gayane (Highlights)
Spartacus (Highlights)
Masquerade
(Highlights)
While exercising firm
political control over the diverse regions of its vast empire, the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics also followed a policy of encouraging arts that had
their source in the culture of the people, harnessed to the ends of Socialist
Realism. In spite of occasional brushes with the authorities, the music of Aram
Khachaturian remained firmly rooted in the cultural traditions of Armenia and
of the Caucasus. Born in Tbilisi in 1903 and of Armenian extraction, he enjoyed
earlier study, from the age of nineteen, at the Gnesin Institute, followed,
seven years later, by entry to the Moscow Conservatory, where his composition
teacher was Miaskovsky in a protracted course of study that continued until
1937. He had by this time won very wide acclaim for his Piano Concerto and
a first symphony celebrating the fifteenth anniversary of the foundation of the
Soviet Armenian Republic. A specifically Armenian element remained of
importance in his work, although there were occasions when, under the pressure
of official condemnation, he excused perceived tendencies to formalism by
claiming that critics had urged him to avoid what might have appeared a national
limitation to his reputation and creativity. In 1948, together with
Shostakovich, Prokofiev and others, he was criticized for deviation from the
proper path for Soviet music. He had no need to take this official disapproval
too seriously. Essentially his music had proved satisfactory in its use of
Armenian material and in its popular appeal: formalism was not a charge that
could be proved against him.
The Great Patriotic
War had provided Khachaturian with an opportunity to prove his loyalty to the
principles of communism chiefly in his ballet Gayane and a second
symphony. It was the third symphony, a symphonic poem in garish celebration of
victory, that misfired, to earn Zhdanov's official censure. Thereafter
Khachaturian turned his immediate attention to film-scores, disregarding
Khrennikov's warning that this was not to be used as a means of escape from
justified Soviet criticism. After the death of Stalin in 1953, he was able to
speak openly in favour of greater freedom for artists. His plea was controversial,
condemning, as it did, the official direction of composition practised under
Stalin in recent years and the resulting mediocrity. It was in the years
immediately following that he won some success with his score for the ballet
Spartacus, based on the exploits of a hero who had appealed to Karl Marx as
representative of the proletariat of the ancient Roman world. The score was
awarded a Lenin Prize in 1959, but proved more generally acceptable on the
stage in a revised version of 1968.
Khachaturian's career
after the war was, after 1953, generally successful. He exploited his gifts as
a conductor, particularly of his own compositions, and continued to write music
that was imbued with the spirit of Armenia that he had inherited by birth, so that
this element in his work becomes more than mere superficial exoticism. Whatever
views he may have been compelled to express on "technicism" in the
Composers' Union meetings of 1948, he possessed a technical command of musical
resources, deft in orchestration and felicitous in melodic invention and in the
use of melodies of ethnic origin. He continued composing even into his final
years, during which he wrote unaccompanied sonatas for cello, for violin and
for viola, completing the last of these in 1977, the year before his death.
Gayane was conceived as a ballet in four acts and six
scenes. Based, in its original version, on a libretto by Konstantin Derzhavin,
it was first staged in December 1942 in Perm, where the Kirov Ballet had been
evacuated. Choreography was by
Anasimova and decor by
Natan Altman. It was restaged in Leningrad in 1945 by the Kirov and in 1957 in
another version by the Moscow Bolshoy. The composer was awarded the Stalin
Prize for his work in 1943. The ballet was based on an earlier work, Happiness,
first produced in Yerevan in 1939, and Khachaturian re-used this music for
his new score.
The action of Gayane
takes place on a collective farm near Kolkhoz in Southern Armenia in the
early days of the Great Patriotic War. Gayane, a cotton-picker, is married to
the disreputable Giko, a drunkard and a coward. She denounces him, but he sets
fire to bales of cotton and takes their child hostage. Gayane is injured by her
husband but saved from his further threats by the arrival of the Red Army Border
Patrol and its heroic leader. Giko is sent to imprisonment, leaving Gayane free
to marry the leader of the Border Patrol, with whom she has fallen in love.
Their marriage gives an opportunity for celebratory dances from Armenia,
Georgia and the Ukraine, with the famous Kurdish Sabre Dance. Other
characters in the story include Armen, Gayane's brother, and the girl with whom
he is in love, although both characters and events of the sub-plot differ in
the various versions of the ballet.
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 B.C. 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 B.C. during the course
of a campaign that had taken him to Armenia, 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 Yuri Grigorovich, Vladimir Vasiliev as Spartacus and Ekaterina
Maximova as Phrygia.
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
banned 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.