Rediscovering Nikolai Myaskovsky

25 февраля 2021
25 февраля, 2021
Фестивали

On the year of Nikolai Myaskovsky's 140th anniversary, the Sverdlovsk Philharmonic presents Myaskovsky. Dialogues Project dedicated to one of the greatest symphonists of the 20th century. From March 9 to March 13 Myaskovski's symphonic, cantata-oratorio, chamber instrumental and vocal works will be presented on the stage of the Grand Hall of Sverdlovsk Philharmonic.

The scale of Nikolai Myaskovsky's creative personality puts him on a par with Sergei Prokofiev and Dmitry Shostakovich, but today his name is much less known, both in Russia and abroad.

Myaskovsky was destined to combine two epochs – those of Imperial and Soviet Russia. A hereditary nobleman, brought up on the ideals of Russian culture of the 19th century, at the age of 36 he found himself in the realities of the Soviet era and was adopted by the new rule. He was a member of major art councils, a professor at the Moscow Conservatory, who trained more than 80 talented students. His political independence, and loyalty to his inner voice annoyed many, but his standing in the professional community was unshakable. However, in the late 1940s, Myaskovsky, along with other authors, was accused of formalism, his works blacklisted and labeled ‘anti-repertoire’. For years his music would be considered "... alien to the Soviet people and their artistic tastes, preaching dissonance and disharmony, reflecting the dead end of musical art" (from the decree of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, 10.02.1948).

2021 marks the 140th anniversary of birth of Nikolai Myaskovsky. The Festival aims to tell the listeners about him, to acquaint them with the legacy of one of the foremost Russian composers of the 20th century, and recall the Philharmonic’s own history associated with the name of Myaskovsky.

The three concerts of Myaskovsky. Dialogues project will be live streamed at Sverdlovsk Philharmonic’s Digital Concert Hall.

• March 9: Dialogue with the Epoch

The Project will open with the presentation of Myaskovsky-Quartet ensemble. The name of the composer will be assigned to the String Quartet of Sverdlovsk Philharmonic, for which this historic event is associated with the revival of the performing traditions of the Ural string school. The ensemble will perform one of the last Myaskovsky's pieces, the String Quartet no. 13.

The Ural Youth Symphony Orchestra conducted by Alexander Rudin will present Myaskovsky's Seventeenth Symphony and join forces with Yekaterinburg Philharmonic Choir to perform one of the author's previously forbidden works - Kremlin by Night Cantata-Nocturne.

• March 11: A Life-Long Dialogue. Myaskovsky and Prokofiev

The heartland of the Project is this literary and musical performance featuring musical works by Nikolai Myaskovsky and Sergei Prokofiev, intermittent with their letters to each other. Their friendly and professional dialogue, which was going on for 43 years, will be continued in the 21st century by soprano Maria Ostroukhova, pianists Yuri Favorin and Konstantin Tyulkin, elocutionists Alexander Borisov and Ildar Garifullin, and the author of the programme -music critic Olga Rusanova.

• March 13: Dialogue with Fate

The Project will conclude with the epochal and tragic Sixth Symphony by Myaskovsky performed by the Ural Philharmonic Orchestra under Dmitry Liss, and the composer's late masterpiece Cello Concerto with Alexander Ramm as soloist.

Myaskovsky’s Sixth Symphony has a special significance for the Ural Philharmonic Orchestra. Fifteen years ago the Orchestra recorded it for Warner Classics, and in 2007 presented it at the Second Festival of World Symphony Orchestras in Moscow. This work was performed in the Sverdlovsk Philharmonic Concert Hall much earlier too – during the first seasons of the Orchestra, directed by its first conductors Mark Paverman and Alexander Friedlander, who were trained under Myaskovsky’s close colleagues Konstantin Saradzhev and Alexander Gauk.

FULL PROGRAMME:

MARCH 9 AT 3 PM CET
Ural Youth Symphony Orchestra
Alexander Rudin - conductor
Yekaterinburg Philharmonic Choir
Alexander Trofimov (tenor)
String Quartet of Sverdlovsk Philharmonic

Programme:
Myaskovsky. Quartet No. 13 in A minor for Strings, Op. 86 (1949)
Myaskovsky. Kremlin by Night, Cantata-Nocturne, Op. 75 (1947)
Myaskovsky. Symphony No. 17 in G sharp minor, Op. 41 (1937)

MARCH 11 AT 3 PM CET
Myaskovsky and Prokofiev: 43 Years of Friendship. Correspondence and chamber works
Maria Ostroukhova (soprano)
Yuri Favorin (piano)
Konstantin Tyulkin (piano)
Nikolay Rotov (elocution)
Boris Zyryanov (elocution)

Programme:
Prokofiev S. 4 Etudes, Op. 2, Nos. 1 & 2 (1909)
Myaskovsky. Eccentricities, Op. 25, No.1 (1917-1922)
Myaskovsky. Madrigal, Op. 7 (1908-09)
Prokofiev S. 5 Poems, Op. 27 (1917)
Prokofiev S. Sonata No. 7, Op. 83 (III) (1939-1942)
Myaskovsky. 6 Poems by Alexander Blok, Op. 20, Nos. 1 & 2 (1921)
Myaskovsky. Piano Sonata No.3, Op. 19 (1920)

MARCH 13 AT 2 PM CET
Ural Philharmonic Orchestra
Chief Conductor - Dmitry Liss
Yekaterinburg Philharmonic Choir
Alexander Ramm (cello)

Programme:
Myaskovsky. Cello Concerto in C minor, Op. 66 (1944-45)
Myaskovsky. Symphony No. 6 in E-flat minor, Op. 23 (1923)

 

 

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Источник: Classical:NEXT

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