Pianist and composer, Mussorgsky was an innovator of Russian
music. He strove to achieve a uniquely Russian musical identity,
often in deliberate defiance of the established conventions
of Western music. Mussorgsky depicts in his music "the
insulted and the injured" with all their passion and pain.
Many of his major works were inspired by Russian folklore and
other nationalist themes, including the piano suite Pictures
at an Exhibition. However, while Mussorgsky's music can be vivid
and nationalistic, it does not glorify the powerful and is at
times antimilitaristic. For this reason, he were considered
dangerous extremists by the emperor and his court. For many
years Mussorgsky's works were mainly known in versions revised
or completed by other composers. Many of his most important
compositions have recently come into their own in their original
forms, and some of the original scores are now also available.
A Night on Bald Mountain:
Inspired by an ancient Russian legend according to which
on the night of S. Giovanni (June 23-24) a witch's sabbath ritually
occurs, Mussorgsky wrote a first orchestral version of the piece
in 1867 and another for chorus and orchestra in 1872. The opera
that we know today in the Ravel’s symphonic version is,
in reality, a posthumous re-elaboration by Rimskj Korsakov principally
based on the score of 1872 but without the chorus. Paolo Marzocchi
carried out his remarkable concert transcription basing it on
this apocryphal piece.
Pictures at an Exhibition
In 1873 death claimed the Russian painter – architect
Victor Hartmann. Mussorgsky and Hartmann had been close friends
and, after attending memorial exhibition of the artist’s
works, Mussorgsky was inspired to interpret 10 of the drawings
in a suite for piano (1874). The ten pieces are preceded by
a reoccurring theme that Mussorgsky entitled Promenade and that
must be intended as the author's movement among the drawings.
1) Promenade:
A richly harmonized pentatonic introduction, sonorous and radiant,
characterizes the first exhibition of this re-occurring theme.
The melody and rhythm resemble Russian folk songs.
2) Gnomus:
The piece describes a being whose grotesque appearance borders
on the demonic. Scattered with disonance and acid notes, the
score contains bursts of extreme vitality, laced with tension
charged pauses.
3) Promenade:
The theme is played by the left-hand, sweet and delicate and
it magnificently introduces the dreamy and melancholy atmosphere
of the next painting.
4) The Old Castle:
Two principal themes, one serious and the other more cantabile
flow
on an atemporal nostalgic sustained bass note. This piece is
based on Hartmann’s painting of a troubadour singing in
front of a castle.
5) Promenade Solemn and very martial, it breaks the spell of
the preceding piece in order to quickly project the listener
onto the next painting.
6) Tuileries:
In the famous Parisian gardens, a squabble among children is
represented after playing. A vivacious and light piece of a
spiteful spirit.
7) Bydlo:
The Polish cart drawn by ox is the symbol of hard work. The
obstinate here keeps the rhythm of the heavy, regular march,
at the peak of which rises spacious and robust singing.
8) Promenade:
It's the first time that the theme in a minor key is heard in
a refined harmonization that creates an enigmatic setting.
9) Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks:
A masterpiece of musical humour. The sound of the piano bends
in an almost onomatopoeic way in the search for the twittering
and chirping of the little chicks still closed inside their
eggshells.
10) Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle:
Two Polish Jews, one rich and the other poor, in a praiseworthy
psychological scene: the arrogance of the first, characterized
by a theme authentically Jewish that is executed in unison,
contrasts with the incessant supplication, the repeated notes
of the beggar.
11 Promenade:
It’s the twin of the first piece; Mussorgsky introduces
some small variations to give more dash to the musical discourse.
12 Limoges-the Market:
In this popular scene, from the irresistible liveliness, Mussorgsky
imagined a piece in a joking form that portrays the vivacious
women's gossip.
13 Catacombs (Sepulchrum romanum):
Notable harmonies and chords from the resonance of the organ
in a language that to a large extent anticipates some innovations
of music in the XX century.
14 Con mortuis in lingua morta:
A promenade through the catacombs: all of a sudden in transparency
underneath a wavering tremolo, the principle theme reappears
like a light that illuminates the underworld. Cum Mortuis in
Lingua Mortua meaning With the dead in a dead language.
15 Baba -Yaga:
Baba-Yaga is the witch of the Russian fairytales. She lives
in 'The Hut on Hen's Legs'. Hartman painted a design for a clock
based on the hut. This piece is one of the more demanding of
the set with a 64th note tremolo during the entire middle part.
16 The Great Gate of Kiev
It is based on sketches Hartmann made for a planned (but never
built) monumental gate for Tsar Alexander II. Mussorgsky’s
music is noble and richly colored, evoking a great procession
passing through the gate.