Bartok: The Miraculous Mandarin (Complete Ballet) / Hungarian Pictures / Dance Suite
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Bela Bartok (1881-1945) The Miraculous Mandarin Dance Suite Hungarian Pictures Stage music plays a relatively brief but crucial rôle in the work of Bela...
Bela Bartok (1881-1945)
The Miraculous Mandarin Dance Suite Hungarian Pictures
Stage music plays a relatively brief but crucial rôle in
the work of Bela Bartok. Having finished the one-act
opera Duke Bluebeard's Castle in 1911, he composed
little until the summer of 1914, when he embarked on
the ballet The Wooden Prince. Completed two years
later, its première at the Budapest Opera in 1917 was
one of the composer's few great successes in his
lifetime. The company proceeded to stage the opera the
following year, but it met with an equivocal reception
and was withdrawn after eight performances, not to be
heard again in Hungary for almost two decades.
An even worst fate awaited Bartok's last stagework,
the pantomime The Miraculous Mandarin. Begun
as the third part of an intended triple bill, it was drafted
in 1918-19 but only orchestrated five years later. Apart
from its composer's ongoing uncertainty as to musical
direction, the scenario by Menyhert Lengyel was
unlikely to pass muster with the Hungarian censor. The
work was finally given its first performance in Cologne
during 1926, but banned immediately on moral grounds
(by the then Mayor of the city Konrad Adenauer) and not
staged again in Bartok's lifetime. Although an orchestral
suite consisting of almost the first two-thirds of the work
quickly found a place in the modern orchestral
repertoire, the pantomime has only latterly come into its
own, and full stagings remain infrequent. As with
Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring, to which it is indebted in
certain particulars, The Miraculous Mandarin has a rapid
pace and density of musical incident which are difficult
to render visually, and indeed are probably best
appreciated by the 'mind's eye'.
As envisaged by Lengyel, a recipient of Freudian
psychoanalysis and Hungary's chief Expressionist
writer, the scenario is more concerned with mimed than
danced drama, hence the designation 'pantomime'
rather than 'ballet', and focuses on the irreconcilability
of intuitive nature and corrupt civilisation. The latter is
accorded graphic depiction in the Introduction, where
insistent rhythmic patterns and grinding dissonance
evoke the sound of traffic in a busy thoroughfare. The
curtain rises on an upstairs room in a shabby apartment,
occupied by three ruffians and a girl. Having no money,
the thugs coerce the girl into attracting 'passing trade'.
There follow three seduction sequences, each
introduced by a clarinet solo. The first sequence lures a
shabby old rake (denoted by trombone glissandi), who,
penniless, is summarily ejected by the gang. The second
sequence lures a shy young man (oboe and cor anglais),
whose waltz with the girl suddenly gains in ardour until,
also penniless, he is ejected. The third sequence lures
the mandarin, his exotic appearance vividly evoked by
brass.
There follows an extended sequence in which the
girl gradually overcomes her repugnance towards the
mandarin, embarking on a waltz which mounts in
urgency as the latter's responses become more
impulsive. A chase ensues (fugato in strings, woodwind,
then brass), building an unstoppable momentum and
curtailed only when the thugs pounce on the mandarin.
Robbing him of his possessions, they make three
attempts to kill him, a dramatic and musical parallel to
the three lurings: first they suffocate him under the
bedding, but to no avail; then they stab him, only for
him to break free and rush at the girl; finally, they hang
him from a light fitting, whereupon his body begins to
glow with 'greenish-blue' light (wordless chorus). Only
now does the girl realise what must happen. The
mandarin is duly taken down and his embrace
reciprocated; satiated, his wounds begin to bleed and,
with a series of shudders, he dies.
Before resuming work on The Miraculous
Mandarin, Bartok enjoyed considerable success with a
piece written ostensibly for 'official' purposes. The
Dance Suite was one of three commissions, along with
Kodaly's Psalmus Hungaricus and Dohnanyi's Festive
Overture, to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the union
of Buda and Pest as the Hungarian capital. First
performed in November 1923, its clear-cut manner must
have seemed out of keeping with Bartok's musical
thinking up to that time, but the fusing of a range of folk
characteristics was to have increasing significance in
the works that followed.
The suite opens with a Moderato dance, its
syncopated repetitions denoting a North African
influence. The bitter-sweet Hungarian ritornello that
follows is to reappear after each of the subsequent three
dances, binding the work together musically and
culturally. The Allegro molto second dance is largely
Magyar in origin, then the Allegro vivace third dance
vigorously alternates Hungarian and Romanian
influences. The sensuous Molto tranquillo fourth dance
is oriental - more specifically, Arabic - in origin, while
the brief Comodo fifth dance is designated of "primitive
peasant character". It remains for the Allegro finale to
impart overall unity by alluding to earlier dances and
traditions: after a final return of the ritornello, the work
concludes with a decisive confirmation of the
indivisibility of peoples and musics.
The folk inferences of Bartok's maturity were to be
deployed according to the nature of the work at hand.
Some of the most immediately attractive examples are
found in the numerous suites that he orchestrated from
earlier piano pieces. One such is the Hungarian
Pictures, assembled in 1931 from piano music
composed over two decades earlier, during the period,
in fact, of his first intensive involvement with folkmusic
research. The poignant An Evening with the
Szekely (as the Hungarian natives of Transylvania are
known) and energetic Bear Dance are both drawn from
the Ten Easy Pieces of 1908, while the plaintive Melody
that follows derives from the Four Dirges of 1910. The
appropriately titled Slightly Tipsy originally comes from
the Three Burlesques of 1911, then the dashing
Swineherd's Dance, drawn from the extensive four-part
collection For Children, completed in 1909, and the one
demonstrably authentic folk-song included here, brings
the sequence to a lively and engaging close.
Richard Whitehouse
A csodalatos mandarin (The Miraculous Mandarin), Op. 19, BB 82 (more info)
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Opening – The girl and three tramps - 3:18
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First seduction game: the shabby old rake - 3:41
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Second seduction game: the young student - 3:10
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Third seduction game - 1:39
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The Mandarin enters and remains immobile in the doorway - 2:31
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The girl begins a hesitant dance… - 5:48
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The Mandarin stumbles – the chase becomes even more passionate - 0:41
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The three tramps leap out, seize the Mandarin and tear him away from the girl - 2:52
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Suddenly the Mandarin’s head appears between the pillows and he looks longingly at the girl - 3:20
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The terrified tramps discuss how they are to get rid of the Mandarin - 1:56
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The body of the Mandarin begins to glow with a greenish blue light - 1:52
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She resists no longer – they embrace - 2:04
Dance Suite, BB 86b (more info)
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I. Moderato - 3:55
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II. Allegro molto - 2:21
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III. Allegro vivace - 3:10
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IV. Molto tranquillo - 2:52
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V. Comodo - Finale - 5:16
Magyar kepek (Hungarian Sketches), BB 103 (more info)
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An Evening in the Village - 3:04
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Bear Dance - 1:47
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Melody - 2:08
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Slightly Tipsy - 2:26
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Swineherd's Dance - 2:21