A younger contemporary of Scriabin and Rachmaninov, Nikolai Medtner, a
Russian of distant German descent, studied under Pabst, Sapelnikov and
Safonov at the Moscow Conservatoire, graduating in 1900 with the coveted
Anton Rubinstein Prize. Admired as a pianist of particularly formidable
attainment and inventive imagination, he held important teaching
appointments at the Conservatoire (1909/10, 1914/21) before eventually
leaving Russia for periods of domicile in Germany, the USA and Paris. In
the winter of 1935/36 he settled in England, making his home in the
Golders Green area of north London. Befriended by the Royal Philharmonic
Society and made an Honorary Member of the Royal Academy of Music, it
was here that he died in November 1951, from a heart attack—leaving the
world, his devoted wife was to write later, ‘in a serene and grateful
spirit’. As a pianist, Medtner was much sought after. He toured Europe
in 1901/02 and again in l921, returned to his homeland for a series of
historic concerts in 1927 and visited North America twice, in 1924/25
and 1929/30. In l944 ill-health forced him to retire from the
platform—but not from the recording studio: in his last years, under the
patronage of Sir Jaya Chamaraja Wadiyar, the Maharajah of Mysore, he
taped a number of his more important works for HMV.
As a
composer, a recluse who shunned publicity and self-promotion, Medtner, a
noted Beethovenian no less than an ardent post-Schumannite, in
Glazunov’s opinion (Paris, 1934), ‘firm defender of the sacred laws of
eternal art’, was a musician steeped in Teutonic Tradition: the critic
Sabaneiev estimated him to be ‘the first real, actual Beethoven in
Russia—one who did not imitate but continued the master’s work’. Among
his own compatriots he was drawn to early Scriabin, but had a higher
regard for Tchaikovsky and Borodin. Chopin and Liszt, too, were happy
hunting grounds. Like Chopin, Medtner expressed himself almost
exclusively through the medium of the piano. Like Chopin, he knew how to
invest a miniature with large-scale tension, how to generate a grand
design. No salon soufflé journalist, his concern always was with the
massive—as three piano concertos, a piano quintet, three sonatas with
violin and over a dozen of imposing dimension for piano, plus a fine
heritage of songs (recorded in their time by both Slobodskaya and
Schwarzkopf) impressively testify. For sheer originality, his famous
Skazki or ‘Legends’ (‘Fairy Tales’)—mercurial, fantastical, Russianized
narratives of the soul, suggestive yet curiously private—are unlike
anything else in the repertoire.
‘By far the most interesting and
striking personality in modern Russian music is that of Nicolas
Medtner’, avowed Sorabji in Around Music (1932). ‘If only for his
absolute independence and aloofness from the Stravinsky group and its
satellites on the one hand, and his equally marked detachment from the
orthodox academics grouped around Glazunov and the inheritors of the
Tchaikovsky tradition on the other … like Sibelius, Medtner does not
flout current fashions, he does not even deliberately ignore them, but
so intent on going his own individual way is he that he is simply
unconscious of their very existence. In a word, he has made for himself,
by the sheer strength of his own personality, that impregnable inner
shrine and retreat that only the finest spirits either dare or can
inhabit.’ Among the most enigmatic figures of our century, Medtner was
an apostle of conscience. He placed a premium on baroque polyphony, on
classical structure, on a manner of thematic integration and cyclic
metamorphosis romantic in legacy. He celebrated, he developed, he
concentrated the sonata ideal. He was a resolute tonalist, a poetic
melodist of the old guard.
‘Everything [Medtner] wrote’, Gerald
Abraham remarks, ‘is perfectly fashioned, complete in every sense of the
word … his music ‘wears’ extremely well … subjective lyrical emotion:
that is the essence of Medtner’s art. He sometimes gives his pieces
suggestive titles, but they are never programmatic in the usual sense of
the word … titles are the merest hints to guide the listener’s
fantasy.’ Ernest Newman believed that Medtner was ‘one of those
composers who are classics in their lifetime. He does what every notable
composer has done—takes the current language of music, impresses his
own personality on it, extends its vocabulary, and modifies its grammar
to suit his own ends, and then gets on with the simple business of
saying what he thinks in the clearest terms possible … his music is not
always easy to follow at a first hearing, but not because of any
extravagance of thought or confusion of technique, it is simply because
this music really does go on thinking from bar to bar, evolving
logically from its premises. Perhaps the technical secret of its
vitality is its rhythm … each work is an individual self-evolving
organic unity.’ Another contemporary, the philosopher Ivan Ilyin,
perceived that in Medtner we have an example of a musician attuned to
the primordial. ‘Medtner’s music astonishes and delights’, he says, ‘not
only by the wealth and breadth of its melodies that seem to be living
and breathing, but also by their inexpressible primariness. This may
lead to actual mistakes and illusions: you may fancy that you have heard
this melody before … but where, when, from whom, in childhood, in a
dream, in delirium? You will puzzle your head and strain your memory in
vain: you have not heard it anywhere: in human ears it sounds for the
first time … and yet it is as though you had long been waiting for
it—waiting because you ‘knew’ it, not in sound, but in spirit. For the
spiritual content of the melody is universal and primordial … it is as
though age-long desires and strivings of our forebears were singing in
us; or, as though the eternal melodies we had heard in heaven and
preserved in this life as ‘strange and lovely yearnings’, were
remembered at last and sung again—chaste and simple.’
At once
Germanic, Frankish, Russian, a man defiantly resistant of labelling or
bracketing, Medtner’s credo is expressed in unequivocal terms in his
book The Muse and the Fashion (published in Paris in 1935, with the help
of his friend Rachmaninov): ‘I do not believe in my dicta on music, but
in music itself. I do not wish to communicate my thoughts on music, but
my faith in music … the Theme is above all in intuition (in German
‘einfall’). It is acquired, not invented. The intuition of a theme
constitutes a command. The fulfilment of this command is the principal
task of the artist, and in the fulfilment of this task all the powers of
the artist himself take part. The more faithful the artist has remained
to the theme that appeared to him by intuition, the more artistic is
this fulfilment and the more inspired his work … the theme is the most
simple and accesible part of the work, it unifies it, and holds within
itself the clue to all the subsequent complexity and variety of the work
… the theme is not always, and not only, a melody … it is capable of
turning into a continuous melody the most complex construction of form …
melody, as our favourite and most beautiful form of the ‘theme’, should
actually be viewed only as a form of the theme … form (the construction
of a musical work) is harmony … form without contents is nothing but a
dead scheme. Contents without form, raw material. Only contents plus
form is equal to a work of art … time (tempo) is the plane of music, but
this plane, in itself, is not rhythm … a neglect of rhythm makes
musical form the prose, and not the poetry, of sound … song, poetry and
dance are unthinkable without rhythm, which not only bring them into
close relation, but often unites music, poetry and dance into one art,
as it were … sonority (dynamics, colour, the quality of sounds) can
never become a theme. While the other elements appeal to our spirit,
soul, feeling, and thought, sonority in itself, being a duality of
sound, appeals to our auditory sensation, to the taste of our ear, which
in itself is capable merely of increasing, or weakening, our pleasure
in the qualities of the object, but can in no way determine its
substance or value … where thought and feeling confer with each other,
you will find the artistic conscience. Inspiration comes, where thought
is saturated in emotion, and emotion is imbued with sense …’
In
Moscow Medtner studied piano at the Conservatoire. As a composer, though
he had some lessons from Arensky and Taneyev, he was essentially
self-taught: Taneyev used to like to say he was born with the knowledge
of sonata-form within him—that was enough. In Richard Holt’s Medtner
memorial symposium (1955), a book well-known in Russia, Ilyin (echoing
the composer himself) suggests that he was in fact one who never
actually invented anything: rather, he listened, he was the vessel
through which music passed. His protagonist sonata themes, he argues,
‘stand in need of each other … they may intersect or destroy each other …
they may comfort, purify, enlighten each other, and work together for
common victory and reconciliation. They live in creative intercommunion
…’ Discussing the elements of Medtner’s music, ‘all his modulations’, he
says, ‘have the spiritual meaning of emotional ‘concession’, or of
‘stepping back in a dance’, or of comfort in sorrow, or of retreat into
the shadow and darkness, into the world beyond; not one of his
tonalities is accidental; his counterpoint expresses the spiritual
consonance, dissonance and assimilation of themes … fugue is used by him
to indicate that a given theme has been accepted on every plane of
musical reality; all his ritardandos and syncopations … all his demands
for legato or staccato, all his naturals are full of spiritual
significance …’ Medtner’s own definition of the sonata principle was as a
complex phenomenon ‘genetically tied to the simplicity of the
song-form; the song-form is tied to the construction of a period; the
period to a phrase; the phrase to the cadence; the cadence to the
construction of the mode; the mode to the tonic.’
The Second
Piano Concerto (1920/27) was first performed in Moscow, conducted by the
composer’s brother. Medtner inscribed it to Rachmaninov—who returned
the compliment by dedicating to him his own contemporaneous Fourth.
Intriguingly, the two works are like an exchange of ‘musical letters’.
Opening with a brilliant sonata-form Toccata (unusual for the substance
of its reprise taking the guise of an ambitiously scaled solo cadenza),
Medtner’s is overtly organized in the Rachmaninov manner: with similarly
breathed and elaborated melodies; an A flat tripartite slow movement
(Romance) enclosing a central agitato (à la the Rachmaninov C minor);
and a final Divertimento-Rondo in the major that indulges, on the one
hand, in the kind of architectural excesses found in Rachmaninov Three,
and, on the other, in references to one of Rachmaninov’s songs. In his
concerto (notably the finale), Rachmaninov pays homage specifically to
Medtner’s peculiarly individual rhythmic style. Essentially, it must be
stressed, however, that what these exchanges are about is tribute, not
pastiche. Medtner is no more poor man’s Rachmaninov than Rachmaninov is
rich man’s Medtner: each was possessed of a voice distinctively his own
(in Medtner’s case especially so in the developmenal aspects of his
Romance). During the thirties, following its first English performance
(under Landon Ronald at a Queen’s Hall Philharmonic Society concert, All
Saints Day, 1928), Sorabji placed a high value on the Second Concerto.
Offering ‘splendid opportunities to first class pianists, musically and
technically’, he thought its neglect ‘a scandal’. In 1948 Medtner
recorded it with the Philharmonia under Dobroven.
Premiered by
the composer and Sir Adrian Boult at the Royal Albert Hall, 19 February
1944, promoted by the PRS, the wartime Third Concerto, or
‘Concerto-Ballade’, is dedicated to the Maharajah of Mysore, ‘with deep
gratitude for the appreciation and furtherance of my work’. Begun in
London and completed in Warwickshire between circa 1940 and 1943, it is
in three movements played without a break—the first flexible in tempo,
the second an Interludium, ‘Allegro’ yet at the same time ‘molto
sostenuto e misterioso’, the third an ‘Allegro molto’ climaxing in a
coda more temporally fluid. Ending in E major but for much of the time
oscillating unpredictably between E minor and G major, the Third is like
a wonderfully free fantasia, a written-out improvisation with
orchestra. Manifestly, the first movement, in its surges of imagination
and turbulence is a person talking—at once considered yet free,
determined yet yielding, long in sentence, short in sentence, elastic in
phrasing and cadence. Calling it enchanted, it ‘moves in a kind of
dream world’, Holt says, ‘with occasional intrusions of human passion
and conflict’. Its structure defies ready explanation: concerned with
sensations of ebb and flow, it is so remarkably veiled and aurally
unapparent that to reveal it at all might only destroy it. Externally,
its most obvious feature is the presence of a resolute motto theme, an
idée fixe which, in best Berlioz-Tchaikovsky tradition, Medtner brings
back in the Interludium and finale to impart to the whole a unity
musically and psycho-dramatically important.
That Medtner’s music
is unknown is unjustifiable. An alloy of the intensest of emotions and
sounds, of the most subtly variegated rythmic life, it can, it’s true,
often overcome one’s ability to perceive at first hearing, it can
overload the circuitry of our mind. Medtner’s most complex work does not
clarify easily. But this should not deter us. Creatively the equal of
his two most famous emigré compatriots, Rachmaninov and Stravinsky,
metaphorically like an Arthurian knight of old impassioned by his lady,
Medtner was a man of righteous principle who lived for music: a quiet
man, ‘a gentle lion’ large of head and blue of eye, a private man whose
family was the hub of his existence. As a pianist, if asked, he would
play in concert (to be adored by the cognoscenti), he would broadcast
for the BBC; if he wasn’t, he wouldn’t (the competitive streak was
foreign to his temperament). His ‘Appassionata’ was famous. His
Beethoven Four, too, and his Rachmaninov and Schubert and
Bach—paradoxically, music often directly in conflict with the
quintessentially high Romantic melos of his own. At the piano, offering
in his performances an overview crystallized out of the wisdom of age
and the excitement of youth, his posture (very still, eyes shut) was
Michelangeli-like. Reminiscing forty years ago, Arthur Alexander
remembered how ‘… he possessed to an acute degree the rare power of
colouring melodically passages that in the hands of others remained mere
notes, and his subtleties of nuance and pedal were unforgettable. No
one (except perhaps Josef Hofmann) produced so much effect with so
little visible means …’ Medtner was an artist in love with the beauty of
his muse. He played for beauty’s sake—and he composed for beauty’s
sake.
Being a Russian is a duty. For Medtner, coming to England
did nothing to change that. The Moscow nights, the Russian springs, the
basilicas and bards of his young manhood: such was his heritage, a
chalice of dreams and memories to hold for always. Prince of truth, he
was one of Russia’s great sons. Hyperion
Nikolai Medtner (1880-1951)
Piano Concerto No 2 in C minor Op 50 [38'20]
Piano Concerto No 3 in E minor Op 60 [35'27]
Credits :
Conductor – Jerzy Maksymiuk
Leader – Geoffrey Trabichoff
Orchestra – BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Piano – Nikolai Demidenko
quinta-feira, 7 de março de 2024
MEDTNER : Piano Concerto No 2 In C Minor • Piano Concerto No 3 In E Minor (Nikolai Demidenko · BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra · Jerzy Maksymiuk) (1992) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 2 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
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