Tag: Modest Mussorgsky

  • Midsummer Music for St John’s Eve Festival

    Midsummer Music for St John’s Eve Festival

    Celebrate Midsummer with music for St. John’s Eve.

    The Feast Day of St. John the Baptist (June 24) is like Christmas, in that it coincides with solstice time. But St. John’s Eve is more like Halloween. It’s a time for the lighting of bonfires against evil spirits – when witches are believed to rendezvous with powerful forces, such as the demon Chernobog, who emerges from the Bald Mountain – as the sun again pursues a southerly course.

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll surrender to Midsummer madness, with Modest Mussorgsky’s “St. John’s Night” from his opera “Sorochinsky Fair,” Alfred Schnittke’s puckish “(K)ein Sommernachtsdraum” (“NOT a Midsummer Night’s Dream”), and selections from Gunnar de Frumerie’s ballet “St. John’s Eve.”

    Leaping over a bonfire at this time is seen as a surety of prosperity and good luck. Tuning in to “The Lost Chord” doubly so. Keep an ear out for “Midsummer Night’s Fiends,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EDT/8:00 AM PDT

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    PAINTING: “Midsummer Night” (1926), by Nikolai Astrup

  • Gogol St. John’s Eve Summer Reading

    Gogol St. John’s Eve Summer Reading

    So Saturday was the first day of summer?

    The calendar I’m using this year doesn’t have any holidays printed on it, which I suppose is only appropriate for life in Coronaworld, where every day runs into another.

    Be that as it may, the seasons are not governed by the calendar, and like a creature of the wild, I know it’s summer when my blood pressure begins to rise with the sun. Surely, this is something the ancients also felt, which is why we have St. John’s Eve.

    It was the Romans who marked the summer solstice as June 24th. This meant the night of the 23rd was yet another excuse for a great big toga party. Pagans throughout the empire lit bonfires against evil spirits, and even dragons, and folk traditions sprang up related to prognostication and fertility.

    Later, the Church coopted the 24th for its observance of the Feast Day of St. John. This worked out very nicely, since St. Luke suggested that the birthday of John the Baptist fell six months before that of Jesus. As with Hallowe’en, a pagan festival was hitched to a holy one (in that case, All Saints Day). Sometimes diverting a stream is easier than outright dam(n)ing it.

    As a classical music lover, for years I have been curious about “Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka,” as the title is usually translated. Nikolai Gogol’s collection of tales, steeped in Ukrainian folklore, are overstuffed with devils, witches, water nymphs, and roistering Cossacks. The stories formed the basis for operas by Modest Mussorgsky (“Sorochinsky Fair”), Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (“May Night” and “Christmas Eve”), and Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky (“Cherevichki”).

    Well, this year I finally got around to reading it, and it wasn’t quite what I expected. Amusingly, the supernatural elements, which are plenty, are offset by frequent satirical observations and earthy farce. There’s a lot of drinking and a lot of hiding from husbands in coal sacks. Even lusty devils receive their comeuppance. All the same, there are one or two shockingly gruesome moments.

    Gogol can be wry. He can certainly be garrulous. But he is also very much a poet, as evidenced by his lyrical observations on the Dnieper and soft Ukrainian summer nights. That said, one of the stories takes place on Christmas Eve. At least two are set on St. John’s Eve.

    It wasn’t easy to find an affordable copy of this Oxford paperback (pictured), which has gone out of print. I’ve been fond of these World’s Classics editions since reading Oxford’s “The Count of Monte Cristo,” “The Three Musketeers,” and “Queen Margot,” which were full of helpful notes. (Oxford’s “The Pickwick Papers,” I must say, was much more slovenly notated.) In this instance, there’s not really a lot you need to know that isn’t on the page. I don’t read Russian, it’s true, but the translation “sounds” very well, and it seems idiomatic.

    The Oxford edition also includes the collection “Mirgorod,” which I have yet to tackle. Its most famous tale is “Taras Bulba,” which became the basis for the orchestral rhapsody by Leoš Janáček.

    I should probably also mention that while there is nothing in “Dikanka” that is outright antisemitic, Gogol never misses an opportunity to single out Jews – to be fair, by way of his admittedly rustic characters. And while there is nothing openly derogatory in their treatment, it is evident that they are regarded as outsiders. They are always referred to as “a Jew” or “the Jew.” This is, after all, the world of the Cossacks. But, remarkably, there appears to be no disdain. Certainly, the Poles and the Tatars come in for a lot worse!

    For as entertaining as I found the collection, with its unexpected humor, the experience really underscored how much Mussorgsky, Rimsky, and Tchaikovsky fleshed out Gogol’s narratives with their music. All three composers managed to conjure the author’s poetic flights in a way no libretto possibly could.

    Interestingly, the most famous music connected to the book is “A Night on Bald Mountain,” a comparatively youthful work, written when Mussorgsky was 28 years-old. The composer completed the piece, about a witches’ sabbath on St. John’s Eve, ON St. John’s Eve in 1867. It then went through several versions, as it was inserted into the collaborative opera-ballet “Mlada” and then “Sorochinsky Fair,” inspired by the Gogol story. Sadly, despite his obvious affection for this music, Mussorgsky never heard it performed, in any of its incarnations, during his lifetime.

    Following the composer’s death, however, Rimsky-Korsakov further shaped the material, and arranged the well-known orchestral fantasy, employing as raw material Mussorgsky’s final version, as it appeared in “Sorochinsky Fair.” It is in Rimsky’s revision that it became Mussorgsky’s best-known music – at least until Leopold Stokowski got a hold of it and did his own arrangement for Disney’s “Fantasia.”

    This is a perfect example of just how effective music can be at conjuring a palpable atmosphere of menace, or even terror, as compared to words on a page. There’s not even a Bald Mountain in Gogol’s original, though the supernatural element that looms over the collection as a whole more than justifies Mussorgsky’s artistic license.

    All in all, it’s a book worth getting to know – with the shutters secured and a bucket of horilka at your side. Happy St. John’s Eve!

  • Night on Bald Mountain Halloween History

    Night on Bald Mountain Halloween History

    31 DAYS OF HALLOWEEN (DAY 15)

    On this date in 1886, Modest Mussorgsky’s “A Night on Bald Mountain” was given its posthumous debut. The premiere took place in St. Petersburg, with the Russian Symphony Orchestra conducted by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

    Mussorgsky’s rough-hewn textures, idiosyncratic harmony, slap-dash orchestration, and illogical modulations were often viewed as “mistakes” by his well-intentioned contemporaries. The composer was notoriously fond of alcohol, flamboyantly reckless, until a series of seizures sent him into a rapid decline. A week after his 42nd birthday, Modest Mussorgsky was dead.

    Understandably, many of the artistic choices of this raging bull of a man were regarded with skepticism and even pity.

    It is through the arrangements, revisions and completions of his friend, Rimsky-Korsakov, that “A Night on Bald Mountain,” “Boris Godunov,” and “Khovanschina” became world-famous. It is only in recent decades that Mussorgsky’s original thoughts have been reassessed. And you know what? The guy may have been a total slob, but he was brilliant.

    “A Night in Bald Mountain” exists in several incarnations, the first dating all the way back to 1867. It was a symphonic poem; it was outfitted with a chorus for a collaborative project by members of the Mighty Handful (the opera-ballet “Mlada”); and it was plugged into one of Mussorgsky’s own operas, “Sorochinsky Fair,” left incomplete at the time of the composer’s death.

    Some fifty years after “Bald Mountain’s” debut in the Rimsky edition, Leopold Stokowski made his own arrangement for the Walt Disney classic, “Fantasia.” And it’s been scaring the hell out of little kids ever since. Happy Hallowe’en!


    Behold, the demon Chernabog:

    “The Scary Origins of Disney’s Most Evil Character”

  • Midsummer Bonfires: Music for St. John’s Eve

    Midsummer Bonfires: Music for St. John’s Eve

    Why is it whenever man feels the urge to celebrate, his first impulse is to set things on fire? We see it today in the hot-dogging conflagrations that follow on the heels of championship sports victories. In the ancient world, bonfires were already a mainstay of any festive occasion.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we listen to music for St. John’s Eve. The Feast Day of St. John holds a place on the Christian calendar akin to that of Christmas, in that it coincides with solstice time. Midsummer was originally a pagan festival, which was absorbed by the Church for the observance of John the Baptist’s birth, which St. Luke implies took place six months before that of Jesus.

    Though the actual summer solstice may occur anytime between June 21 and June 25, it was designated that June 24 would be the Feast Day of St. John.

    St. John’s Eve is a time for the harvesting of St. John’s Wort, with its miraculous healing powers. It’s a time to seek the fern flower, which can bring good fortune, wealth, and the ability to understand animal speech. It’s a time for the lighting of bonfires against evil spirits, and even dragons, which roam the earth, as the sun again pursues a southerly course. And it’s a time when witches are believed to rendezvous with powerful forces, such as the demon Chernobog, who emerges from the Bald Mountain on St. John’s Eve at the climax of Disney’s “Fantasia.”

    Leaping over a bonfire was seen as a surety of prosperity and good luck. Not to light a bonfire was seen as offering up one’s own house for destruction by fire. The bigger the fire, the further at bay were kept evil spirits. The further the evil spirits, the better the guarantee of a good harvest.

    We’ll have music inspired by some of these Midsummer customs, as we listen to Modest Mussorgsky’s “St. John’s Night,” an earlier, less-familiar incarnation of his popular musical picture “A Night on Bald Mountain,” as heard in his opera, “Sorochinsky Fair.”

    Also featured will be Alfred Schnittke’s impish rondo, “(K)ein Sommernachtstraum.” The root of the title is German for “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” but the postmodern inclusion of the “K” in parentheses modifies the meaning to “NOT a Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Indeed! Schnittke sets up the listener with a soothing notturno in the style of Mozart or Schubert, but very soon the atmosphere begins to shift.

    Finally, we’ll hear selections from the ballet, “St. John’s Eve,” by the Swedish composer Gunnar de Frumerie. Not surprisingly, after a long, hard winter, the Scandinavian countries are crazy for Midsummer. The allegorical ballet features appearances by John the Baptist, Salome, the Seven Deadly Sins, Angels, and the Devil, all tied up in Swedish Midsummer traditions.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Midsummer Night’s Fiends,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: St. John’s Eve celebration in Northern Ireland

  • St. John’s Eve Bonfires Music and Midsummer

    St. John’s Eve Bonfires Music and Midsummer

    Why is it whenever man feels the urge to celebrate, his first impulse is to set things on fire? We see it today in the hot-dogging conflagrations that follow on the heels of championship sports victories. In the ancient world, bonfires were already a mainstay of any festive occasion.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we listen to music for St. John’s Eve. St. John’s Day holds a place on the Christian calendar akin to that of Christmas, in that it coincides with solstice time. Midsummer was originally a pagan festival, which was absorbed by the Church for the observance of John the Baptist’s birth, which St. Luke implies took place six months before that of Jesus.

    Though the actual summer solstice may occur anytime between June 21 and June 25, it was designated that June 24 would be the Feast Day of St. John.

    St. John’s Eve is a time for the harvesting of St. John’s Wort, with its miraculous healing powers. It’s a time to seek the fern flower, which can bring good fortune, wealth, and the ability to understand animal speech. It’s a time for the lighting of bonfires against evil spirits, and even dragons, which roam the earth, as the sun again pursues a southerly course. And it’s a time when witches are believed to rendezvous with powerful forces, such as the demon Chernobog, who emerges from the Bald Mountain on St. John’s Eve at the climax of Disney’s “Fantasia.”

    Leaping over a bonfire was seen as a surety of prosperity and good luck. Not to light a bonfire was seen as offering up one’s own house for destruction by fire. The bigger the fire, the further at bay were kept evil spirits. The further the evil spirits, the better the guarantee of a good harvest.

    We’ll have music inspired by some of these Midsummer customs, as we listen to Modest Mussorgsky’s “St. John’s Night,” an earlier, less-familiar incarnation of his popular musical picture “A Night on Bald Mountain,” as heard in his opera, “Sorochinsky Fair.”

    Also featured will be Alfred Schnittke’s impish rondo, “(K)ein Sommernachtstraum.” The root of the title is German for “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” but the postmodern inclusion of the “K” in parentheses modifies the meaning to “NOT a Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Indeed! Schnittke sets up the listener with a soothing notturno in the style of Mozart or Schubert, but very soon the atmosphere begins to shift.

    Finally, we’ll hear selections from the ballet, “St. John’s Eve,” by the Swedish composer Gunnar de Frumerie. Not surprisingly, after a long, hard winter, the Scandinavian countries are crazy for Midsummer. The allegorical ballet features appearances by John the Baptist, Salome, the Seven Deadly Sins, Angels, and the Devil, all tied up in Swedish Midsummer traditions.

    Join me for “Midsummer Night’s Fiends,” tonight at 10 ET, with a repeat Thursday at 11, or catch the show as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

    PHOTO: St. John’s Eve celebration in Northern Ireland

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