Sergey Rachmaninov (1873-1943)
Variations on a theme by Frederic Chopin, Op. 22 Morceaux
de fantaisie, Op. 3
Piano Sonata No. 2 in B flat minor, Op. 36
Sergey Vasilyevich Rachmaninov was among those Russian
composers who chose exile, rather than remain in Russia after the Revolution of
1917, the consequent civil turmoil and, as it turned out, the years of despotic
oppression that followed. He was born at Semyonovo in 1873 into a family of
strong military traditions on his mother's side and more remotely on his
father's. A tendency to extravagance had depleted his father's fortunes, making
it necessary to sell off much of their land and dissipating his wife's dowry.
As a result of this, the childhood of Rachmaninov was largely spent at the one
remaining family estate at Oneg, near Novgorod. The reduction in family
circumstances had at least one happier result. When it became necessary to sell
this estate and move to St Petersburg, the expense of educating the boy for the
Imperial service proved too great. Rachmaninov could make use, instead, of his
musical gifts, entering St Petersburg Conservatory at the age of nine with a
scholarship. Showing no particular industry as a student and lacking the
attention he needed at home, in 1885 Rachmaninov failed all his general subject
examinations at the Conservatory and there were threats that his scholarship
would be withdrawn. His mother, now separated from her husband and responsible
for her son's welfare, arranged, on the advice of one of her relations, the
well known pianist Alexander Ziloti, that the boy should move to Moscow to
study with Zverev, a teacher known to impose the strictest discipline. In
Zverev's house, however uncongenial the rigorous routine, Rachmaninov acquired
much of his phenomenal ability as a pianist, while broadening his musical
understanding by attending concerts in the city. At the age of fifteen he
became a pupil of Zverev's former student Ziloti, a musician who had also
studied with Tchaikovsky, Nikolay Rubinstein and, thereafter, with Liszt.
Rachmaninov had lessons in harmony and counterpoint with Sergey Taneyev and
Arensky, and his growing interest in composition led to a quarrel with Zverev
and removal to the house of his relations, the Satins.
In 1891 Rachmaninov completed his piano studies at the
Conservatory and the composition of his first piano concerto. The following
year he graduated from the composition class and composed the notorious Prelude
in C sharp minor, a piece that was to haunt him by its excessive popularity.
His early career brought initial success as a composer, halted by the failure
of his first symphony at its first performance in 1897, when it was conducted
badly by Glazunov, apparently drunk at the time, and then reviewed in the
cruellest terms by Cesar Cui, who described it as a student attempt to depict
in music the seven plagues of Egypt. Rachmaninov busied himself as a conductor,
accepting an engagement in this capacity with Mamontov's Moscow Private Russian
Opera Company. He was only able to return to composition after a course of
treatment with Dr Nikolay Dahl, a believer in the efficacy of hypnotism. The
immediate result was the second of his four piano concertos, a work that has
proved to be one of the most immediately popular of all he wrote.
The years before the Russian revolution brought continued
successful activity as a composer and as a conductor. In 1902 Rachmaninov
married Natalya Satina and went on to pursue a career that was bringing him
increasing international fame. There were journeys abroad and a busy
professional life, from which summer holidays at the estate of Ivanovka, which
he finally acquired from the Satins in 1910, provided respite. During the war,
however depressing the circumstances, he continued his concert engagements, not
being required for military service, as he had anticipated. All this was
interrupted by the abdication of the Tsar in 1917 and the beginning of the
Revolution.
Rachmaninov left Russia in 1917. From then until his death
in Beverly Hills in 1943, he was obliged to rely largely on performance for a
living. Now there was, in consequence, much less time for composition, as he
undertook demanding concert-tours, during which he dazzled audiences in Europe
and America with his remarkable powers as a pianist. His house at Ivanovka was
destroyed in the Russian civil war and in 1931, the year of his Variations on a
Theme of Corelli, his music was banned in Russia, after he had added his
signature to a letter to The New York Times drawing attention to the atrocities
being committed by the then Russian government. The ban was withdrawn two years
later. He spent much time in America, where there were lucrative concert-tours,
but established a music publishing-house in Paris and built for himself a villa
near Lucerne, where he completed his Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini in 1934
and his Third Symphony a year later. In 1939 he left Europe, to spend his final
years in the United States.
Rachmaninov wrote his Variations on a Theme of Chopin, Op.
22, in 1902 and 1903. For his theme he took Chopin's Prelude, Op. 28, No. 20,
in C minor, adding a series of 22 variations well suited to his own style of
performance. While these include versions of the material of some elaboration
and rhythmic complexity, others, as in the case of the first variations of the
set, offer relatively simple textures.
The five Morceaux de Fantaisie, Op. 3, were written in the
autumn of 1892, when Rachmaninov was nineteen and had just completed his
studies in composition at Moscow Conservatory. He gave the first performance at
a concert in Kharkov towards the end of the same year. Two of the pieces,
including the famous Prelude, formed part of his programme in London in 1903,
when he conducted his orchestral work, The Rock. In 1940 he revised the Melodie
in E major and the Serenade in B flat minor. The mood of each piece is
generally described in the title, while the second seemed to many to epitomize
Rachmaninov's style in its drama and implicit feeling of melancholy.
In 1909 Rachmaninov undertook his first American
concert-tour, from which he returned early in the following year, now to assume
ownership of the estate at Ivanovka. There followed a further period of intense
activity as a performer, conductor and composer. It was in 1913, during a
holiday with his wife and children in Rome, that he started work on The Bells,
inspired by the poem of Edgar Allan Poe, to be completed at Ivanovka and first
performed that winter in Moscow. The same period saw the composition of the
second of his two piano sonatas and the first performance by the composer of
the sonata in Moscow in December. Rachmaninov revised the sonata in 1931,
cutting some 120 bars and rewriting and clarifying the texture of several
passages, notably in the development sections of the movements. The sonata was
dedicated to the pianist Matvey Presman, director of the Rostov Academy, and a
fellow-pupil with Rachmaninov in the house of Zverov. Presman's dismissal in
1912 had led Rachmaninov in turn to resign from his position as Vice-President
of the Russian Musical Society. It was to Presman that, as a boy, he had
dedicated his first attempt at composition.
The Piano Sonata in B flat minor, Op. 36, in its original
form makes heavier technical demands on a performer and includes extended
passages of virtuoso piano-writing. The first movement opens with a bold
assertion of the key of B flat minor and a descending fragment of melody which
will appear soon transformed into the major tonality. There is a transition
using characteristic dotted rhythms, followed, after a short cadenza, by the
second subject, a gentle D flat major theme in a dotted compound rhythm almost
suggesting a siciliano. It is in the development that Rachmaninov made the
principal changes of the second version, perhaps occasioned by his concern, in
1931, about the state of his fingers, which threatened to make further
performance difficult. The original development contains passages calling for considerable
virtuosity and leads to an emphatic return of the principal key and of the
descending melodic figure, soon to be followed by the return of the second
subject in G flat major. It is with the descending melodic figure of the first
subject that the movement ends. There is a tenderly descending modulation to
open the second movement, leading from D major to the E minor Lento, a tenderly
lilting theme based on a descending sequence. This leads to a romantic G major,
with a return to the E minor theme bringing a dynamic climax. A place is found,
in what follows, for reminiscences of the first movement, with the descending
melodic figure of its first subject and an allusion to the gentler secondary
theme. The movement ends with a return to the Non allegro with which it had
opened, modulating now from the E major of the final section of the Lento to C
major, and thence to the B flat major that starts the final Allegro molto.
Here, as in all three movements, the revised version of 1931 made cuts, with passages
sometimes completely rewritten. The opening thematic material is marked by a
descending rush of notes, followed by strongly marked chords. There is
typically romantic lyrical secondary material and both these elements are
developed, before a final recapitulation, the three sections at once
recognisable from the opening notes and marked chords with which they begin.
The sonata ends with an emphatic and positive B flat major chord.
Keith Anderson