 When one considers the life of Nikolai Karlovich Medtner it is 
impossible not to be amazed by his strange, tragic and yet marvellous 
destiny. He was recognized in Russia at the beginning of the twentieth 
century as one of the most important composers and was, with Scriabin 
and Rachmaninov, an extremely influential, almost ‘cult’ figure for a 
whole generation of the Russian intellectual élite. He was also a great 
pianist and an outstanding musical thinker. His personality was 
completely divorced from everyday life, but the depth and power of his 
intellect, entirely absorbed in music, philosophy and the history of 
culture, were deeply respected by such contemporaries as Nikisch, 
Rachmaninov, Furtwängler, Koussevitsky, Glazunov and Prokofiev. There is
 thus something of a paradox in the fact that for the last thirty years 
of his life, when he lived in the West, he remained practically unknown 
to the general public and spent most of his life in abject poverty.
When one considers the life of Nikolai Karlovich Medtner it is 
impossible not to be amazed by his strange, tragic and yet marvellous 
destiny. He was recognized in Russia at the beginning of the twentieth 
century as one of the most important composers and was, with Scriabin 
and Rachmaninov, an extremely influential, almost ‘cult’ figure for a 
whole generation of the Russian intellectual élite. He was also a great 
pianist and an outstanding musical thinker. His personality was 
completely divorced from everyday life, but the depth and power of his 
intellect, entirely absorbed in music, philosophy and the history of 
culture, were deeply respected by such contemporaries as Nikisch, 
Rachmaninov, Furtwängler, Koussevitsky, Glazunov and Prokofiev. There is
 thus something of a paradox in the fact that for the last thirty years 
of his life, when he lived in the West, he remained practically unknown 
to the general public and spent most of his life in abject poverty.
His
 music is the subject of a similar paradox. More than half a century of 
composing saw his style change remarkably little; critical reaction, 
however, differed wildly. Some thought of him as an innovator where 
others considered him an arch-conservative. Some felt he was the heir to
 the great Germanic tradition, while others spoke of his Russian soul 
and his ability to capture in his music the atmosphere of Russia at the 
turn of the century. It would seem, then, that neither the composer’s 
personality nor his musical style can be analysed within the limits of a
 single tradition, be this even the rich tradition of a Russia or 
Germany. This ambivalence stems from Medtner’s own origins. Since Peter 
the Great had, in the words of Pushkin, ‘opened a window into Europe’, 
thousands of foreigners had been living in Russia. This strange 
community, which juxtaposed European roots with the changing environment
 of Russia, formed a unique part of Russian life and produced many 
remarkable figures—men of art, science and politics.
Medtner’s 
ancestors probably left Germany in the eighteenth century, and he was 
born in Moscow. Both his personality and his music evince a combination 
of Germanic tendency to weighty philosophizing and typically Moscovite 
spirit. The beginning of Medtner’s artistic activity came at a time 
which many consider to have been one of the high points in the history 
of Russian culture. This era is known as the Silver Age, or the Russian 
Renaissance. At the turn of the century the arts, music and philosophy 
were flourishing in Russia; the revolution of 1917 brought this unique 
period to an end. Like Scriabin and Rachmaninov, Medtner expressed the 
raw nerve of this momentous time: his contemporaries noted the 
‘psychologically intense, demonic’ character of his music. Yet the 
composer used the ‘eternal laws of music’ alongside these more elusive, 
transient and indefinable principles. Much later, in 1930, in his book 
Muse and Mode he analysed with scientific precision the basic elements 
of the language of music (melody, harmony, rhythm), interpreting them in
 the spirit of the classical tradition of the nineteenth century and 
repudiating the whole development of modern music. Thus Medtner’s music 
is not easy to understand because of its complicated combination of 
entirely different elements: the fusion of German roots and Russian 
spirit, the quest for new musical expression and dedicated conservatism,
 a rare intelligence and almost childlike naïvety.
What was the 
genesis of Medtner’s style? He considered himself a follower of 
Beethoven and the best of his work reflects the great polyphonic skill, 
the detailed development of short compact motifs, and the severe spirit 
and concentrated depth of the late Beethoven sonatas. No less important 
for Medtner was German Romanticism in general and Schumann’s legacy in 
particular. Goethe (with whom Medtner’s great-grandfather was 
acquainted) was a permanent source of inspiration for him. Medtner was 
often compared with Brahms and there are indeed comparisons to be made: 
the deep seriousness of his music, some of the special harmonic 
features, the interest in intricate cross-rhythms, and piano-writing. 
Nevertheless, it would be a great mistake to consider him neo-Brahmsian.
 Medtner never imitated anybody and was, moreover, not noted for his 
interest in Brahms’s music. The similarities are rather the result of 
their independent development of the commonly inherited Romantic 
tradition.
Comparison of Medtner and Rachmaninov is more 
justifiable. They were great friends for most of their lives and they 
influenced each other in many ways. Medtner was enchanted by the beauty 
of Rachmaninov’s melodies and Rachmaninov was highly impressed by 
Medtner’s quest for new harmonies and rhythms. It is significant that 
Rachmaninov dedicated to Medtner his Fourth Piano Concerto, the most 
explicit instance of this mutual inspiration.
The best of 
Medtner’s music represents something very special, and it is 
unmistakable: the melodies and harmonies are inimitable in the way they 
are drawn from the piano, an instrument cherished by Medtner as much as 
by Chopin. Today, forty years after Medtner’s death, we see that the 
heroic, self-sacrificing work to which he devoted his whole life was not
 in vain. His music, imbued with the strength of his powerful spirit and
 the beauty he believed in, is discovering a new life.
Of the 
three Medtner piano concertos the first is remarkable for its 
inspirational inner content, the beauty of its melodies and the grand 
scale of its structure. It is probably his most outstanding work. He 
began it in 1914 and the first performance took place in Moscow on 12 
May 1918, the composer as soloist under Koussevitsky.
The 
horrible events of the First World War are, perhaps unavoidably, 
reflected in the work. Russian and German cultures meant equally much to
 Medtner and the war between the two countries developed into a personal
 tragedy for him. The Concerto is a grandiose, one-movement 
construction, written in sonata form, where the extended development of 
each section compensates for the lack of the traditional division into 
movements. Slow and scherzo-like episodes sound almost like the middle 
movement of a symphony and the coda, which is thematically and 
dynamically rich, serves as a finale. The originality of the Concerto’s 
form is increased by the interfusion of two structural principles: the 
sonata form gives the work its general contours while the variation form
 imparts diversity, contrast and a more fragmentary structure.
The
 work opens with four introductory exclamations anticipating the 
appearance of the main theme, full of heroic yet tragic pathos. The 
thematic concentration of the Concerto’s musical material is remarkable:
 the main theme serves as the source for the two lyrical subjects, as 
well as for every other important section. The development is very 
unusual: it consists of a theme and a cycle of variations. Here the 
composer develops fragments of all the main themes of the Concerto with 
considerable polyphonic skill. The short recapitulation is extremely 
dynamic, and the coda presents the last climax of the Concerto. Medtner 
somewhat delays the outcome by leading the themes through a number of 
odd modulations and unusual harmonies: only at the very end do we hear a
 triumphant hymn in C major, followed by three final bell-like ringing 
strokes on the piano.
The Piano Quintet has a very special place 
among Medtner’s works. The composer himself regarded it as the synthesis
 or summary of all his work and, indeed, worked on it throughout his 
life. The first sketches date back to 1903/4 and it was only completed 
in 1949. This work, which was destined to be his last, combines 
freshness of inspiration with great mastery of composition.
Again,
 the structure of the Quintet is unusual. The first movement expresses 
what can only be described as a theme of Hope and Faith. It opens with a
 large introduction in which the epic theme flows broadly and solemnly. 
The new subject in the central section reminds one of the famous 
medieval tune Dies irae. The next and final part, the Maestoso, is 
essential to the whole being of the Quintet: here the composer 
introduces a motif which has deep autobiographical meaning. It is 
written as if to the words of the Gospel passage ‘Blessed are you who 
are hungry now; you will have your fill. Blessed are you who weep now; 
you will laugh for joy’. A coda combines the two themes ‘Dies irae’ and 
‘Blessed’ in a manner reminiscent of bells.
The melody of the 
second movement is as beautiful and tragic as the words of the Psalm to 
which it was written (‘For your name’s sake, O Lord, you will pardon my 
guilt, great as it is’, and ‘Look toward me and have pity on me, for I 
am alone and afflicted’) and is deeply rooted in the ancient music of 
the Russian Orthodox Church. Gradually, the musical material in which 
fragments of the first movement can once more be heard flows into the 
‘Blessed’ leitmotif, now sharply harmonized and distorted.
The 
Finale, following attacca, is the synthesis which sums up elements of 
the whole work; it lasts as long as the first two movements together, 
and is written in extremely complicated sonata form. The main conflict 
can be seen in the contrasts not only between the first and second 
subjects, but also between the exposition and development sections, 
which turn into a battlefield of multiple polyphonic combinations. The 
coda revives the second theme which the composer himself called ‘the 
Hymn’: this is an amazingly simple melody, full of light and rejoicing. Hyperion
Nikolai Medtner (1880-1951)
    
Piano Concerto No 1 in C minor Op 33 [34'05]
Piano Quintet in C major Op posth. [24'34]
Conductor – Alexander Lazarev
Piano – Dmitri Alexeev
Leader [Orchestra] – Stephen Bryant
Orchestra – BBC Symphony Orchestra 
Performer – New Budapest Quartet 
 
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