Tchaikovsky: Dances and Overtures
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Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Dances and Overtures Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky retains his position as the most popular of all Russian composers. His...
Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)
Dances and Overtures
Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky retains his position as the
most popular of all Russian composers. His music
offers obvious charms in its winning melodies and vivid
orchestral colours. At the same time his achievement is
deeper than this, however tempting it may be for the
few to despise what so many people enjoy.
Born in Kamsko-Votkinsk in 1840, the second son
of a mining engineer, Tchaikovsky had his early
education, in music as in everything else, at home,
under the care of his mother and of a beloved governess.
From the age of ten he was a pupil at the School of
Jurisprudence in St Petersburg, completing his studies
there in 1859, to take employment in the Ministry of
Justice. During these years he developed his abilities as
a musician and it must have seemed probable that, like
his near contemporaries Mussorgsky, Cui, Rimsky-
Korsakov and Borodin, he would keep music as a
secondary occupation, while following his official
career.
For Tchaikovsky matters turned out differently. The
foundation of the new Conservatory of Music in St
Petersburg under Anton Rubinstein enabled him to
study there as a full-time student from 1863. In 1865 he
moved to Moscow as a member of the staff of the new
Conservatory established there by Anton Rubinstein's
brother Nikolay. For over ten years he continued in
Moscow, before financial assistance from a rich widow,
Nadezhda von Meck, enabled him to leave the
Conservatory and devote himself entirely to
composition. The same period in his life brought an
unfortunate marriage to a self-proclaimed admirer of his
work, a woman who showed early signs of mental
instability and could only add further to Tchaikovsky's
own problems of character and inclination. His
homosexuality was a torment to him, while his morbid
sensitivity and diffidence, coupled with physical
revulsion for the woman he had married, led to a severe
nervous breakdown.
Separation from his wife, which was immediate,
still left practical and personal problems to be solved.
Tchaikovsky's relationship with Nadezhda von Meck,
however, provided not only the money that at first was
necessary for his career, but also the understanding and
support of a woman who, so far from making physical
demands of him, never even met him face to face. This
curiously remote liaison and patronage only came to an
end in 1890, when, on the false plea of bankruptcy, she
discontinued an allowance that was no longer of
importance and a correspondence on which he had
come to depend.
Tchaikovsky's sudden death in St Petersburg in
1893 gave rise to contemporary speculation and has
given rise to further posthumous rumours. It has been
suggested that he committed suicide as the result of
pressure from a court of honour of former students of
the School of Jurisprudence, when an allegedly erotic
liaison with a young nobleman seemed likely to cause
an open scandal even in court circles. Officially his
death was attributed to cholera, contracted after
drinking undistilled water. Whether the victim of
cholera, of his own carelessness or reckless despair or
of death deliberately courted, Tchaikovsky was widely
mourned.
Tchaikovsky wrote some twelve operas, from The
Voyevoda, completed in 1868 and subsequently
destroyed by the composer, to the final Iolanta, staged
in St Petersburg in 1892. Two of his operas have found
an established place in international repertoire, Eugene
Onegin and The Queen of Spades. The second of these,
with a libretto by the composer and his brother Modest,
based on Pushkin, was first staged in St Petersburg in
1890. The plot traces the gradual decline of Hermann
into madness and suicide, as he seeks from the old
Countess, whose death he causes, the secret of the three
cards that must win, the third card, the Ace, replaced, as
he gambles, by the Queen of Spades, in which he sees
the face of the dead Countess. The short Prelude with
which the work opens includes themes associated with
Fate, with Hermann's love for Lisa, granddaughter of
the Countess, and the three cards.
The symphonic poem Fatum, Op. 77, was written
late in 1868 and first performed in Moscow the
following February in a Russian Music Society concert.
Nikolay Rubinstein had suggested a more obviously
explanatory title, but the lines used, from Konstantin
Batyushkov, did little to enlighten the audience.
Tchaikovsky was at first very pleased with the piece. He
had made use of a free form, its two introductory
passages followed by an A flat major section that won
praise from an otherwise critical Herman Laroche and
even from Balakirev, before establishing C minor as the
prevailing tonality. These materials are modified and
explored, before the return of the opening. Balakirev
conducted Fatum in St Petersburg, and was not sparing
in his criticism of the work, while Cesar Cui, a fellowmember
of the Mighty Handful, could only find praise
for the orchestration. Tchaikovsky destroyed the score
the following year and it was only re-assembled after
his death.
Tchaikovsky's first opera The Voyevoda was given
an ill-prepared staging in Moscow in 1869, receiving
five performances, after which it was withdrawn, and
later destroyed by the composer, who drew from it
material for later works. Much of it has since been
reconstructed from the surviving orchestral parts. Based
on an extended play by Ostrovsky, the opera contains
Russian themes, proclaiming its national identity in the
Overture.
The Maid of Orleans, based on Schiller and other
sources, was first staged in St Petersburg in 1881, and
marks Tchaikovsky's attempt to vie with the
contemporary opera of Western Europe. The Entr'acte,
between the first two acts, echoes Joan of Arc's hymn
from the first act, leading to the court of Charles VII,
where the French King is entertained by gypsies, and
then by dwarfs and clowns, to be rewarded
extravagantly, although the treasury is empty.
Tchaikovsky's only comic opera, Cherevichki (The
Slippers), based on a story by Gogol, was first given the
title Vakula the Smith and so staged in 1876. It was
revised in 1885, unter the present title, and staged first
in Moscow in 1887. Sometimes known as Les caprices
d'Oxane and described as a comic-fantastic opera, it
deals with the village activities of the Devil and the
witch Solokha, and the coquetry of Oxana, who
demands that her lover Vakula bring her the boots of the
Tsaritsa. The Russian and Cossack dances form part of
the third scene of the third act, where the chief minister
is entertained by dancers, before the Devil returns to fly
back with Vakula to the village.
Mounted at the Mariinsky Theatre in St Petersburg
in 1887, The Enchantress, with a libretto written for
Tchaikovsky by Ippolit Shpazhinsky, failed to grip the
public. The plot largely revolves around the widow
Nastasya, known as Kuma, hostess of an inn, where she
charms Prince Nikita, in spite of the court Malvolio
Mamïrov, exciting the jealousy of the Princess. Their
son Yury plans to elope with Kuma, but she is poisoned
by the Princess, aided by a wizard, who makes an
opportune appearance, while the Prince kills his son, his
rival in love, before going out of his mind. The
Introduction leads to an opening scene of celebration at
Kuma's inn, and she later offers the Prince the
entertainment of a tumblers' dance.
Based on a poem by Pushkin, the opera Mazeppa
was first staged in Moscow in 1884 and centres on the
activities of the Ukrainian hetman of the title,
entertained by a Gopak in the house of Kochubey, a
cossack judge, later put to death by Mazeppa after his
attempt to reveal to the Tsar the latter's plans for
secession from Russia.
The Oprichnik was first seen in St Petersburg in
1874, its title indicating the calling of the hero Andrey
Morozhov, who becomes a mercenary in the service of
the Tsar in an attempt to find justice for his mother and
himself against his oppressor Prince Zhemchuznïy, with
whose daughter Natalya he is in love, although she is
promised to another. The machinations of Andrey's
enemies lead to his breaking his vows of renunciation as
an oprichnik and his execution, after his supposed
release from his oath and the celebration, with dances,
of his wedding to Natalya.
Keith Anderson
The Queen of Spades, Op. 68 (more info)
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Pique Dame (The Queen of Spades), Op. 68, Act I: Overture - 3:58
Fate, Op. 77 (more info)
-
Fatum (Fate), Op. 77 - 15:28
Voyevoda (The Provincial Governor), Op. 3 (more info)
-
Voyevoda (The Provincial Governor), Op. 3, Act I: Overture - 9:21
The Maid of Orleans (more info)
-
Act I: Entr'acte Act II - 3:22
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Act II: Danse des Bohemiens - 3:44
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Act II: Danse des Polichinelles et des Histrions - 4:21
Cherevichki (more info)
-
Danse russe - 3:52
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Danse des Cosaques - 3:26
The Enchantress (more info)
-
Introduction - 5:31
-
Danse des Histrions - 3:56
Mazeppa (more info)
-
Mazeppa, Act I: Gopak - 4:21
The Oprichnik (more info)
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Oprichnik (The Guardsman), Act IV: Danses - 5:47