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PHILHARMONICA. International Music Journal
Reference:

Prelude Op.3No.2 by S.V. Rachmaninoff and prelude Op.11No.10 by A.N. Scriabin : two facets of drama

Veretennikov Sergey

Associate Professor; Music Education Department; Moscow State Institute of Culture

141406, Russia, Moscow region, Khimki, Bibliotechnaya str., 7K.2

severet@yandex.ru
Savost'yanov Maksim Alekseevich

Artist of the Pop Symphony Orchestra; Krasnodar State Philharmonic named after G.F.Ponomarenko

350000, Russia, Krasnodar Territory, Krasnodar, Krasnaya str., 55, office 1

vmutrombmax@yandex.ru

DOI:

10.7256/2453-613X.2024.3.71069

EDN:

LJDFTS

Received:

16-06-2024


Published:

23-06-2024


Abstract: The two considered dramatic preludes were written by the young S.V. Rachmaninov and A.N. Scriabin almost at the same time, with a difference of two years. The article examines the interrelationships and features of these two plays. The basis for the joint study of these miniatures is the same tonality (C-sharp minor), one genre definition, as well as a number of similar features in imagery (drama) and in the dramatic idea (the juxtaposition of the "fatal" beginning and the pleading voice). The interrelations are manifested in form, texture, harmony, and specific compositional techniques. On the other hand, distinctive features are also studied in the form, texture, harmony, concert scale, and features of the melodic relief of these compositions. An attempt is made to substantiate the specificity of the figurative and semantic content of the plays by the peculiarities of the musical language. S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude Op.3No.2 and A.N. Scriabin's prelude Op.11 No.10 are studied by comparison. The method of sequential comparison makes it possible to study in detail the interrelationships, as well as to clearly identify the features, individuality of the figurative and semantic content and musical language of each of the miniatures. For the first time, these two famous preludes are considered in comparison with each other in detail, sequentially in the context of each part. It can be argued that preludes have a number of similar features (dramatic, compositional, textural) that have not been discussed before. As a result of the comparison, both the peculiarities of imagery and the peculiarities of musical language are highlighted in a new way. A number of these features will later, in the course of the evolution of creativity, become distinctive features of the compositional styles of each of the authors. Due to these individual characteristics, one dramatic idea is embodied in each of these preludes in its own way: the idea of contrasting and further interaction of two contrasting images - "rock" and "supplication" is embodied in each prelude in its own way. These features emphasize the difference in the nature of the drama of each of the plays. This difference is related to the individuality of the emotional, figurative, semantic content of creativity and the specifics of the aesthetic positions of the two Russian contemporary composers.


Keywords:

prelude, texture, bell-ringing, peculiarities of musical language, organ point, comparison, symbolism, basses, harmony, drama

This article is automatically translated. You can find original text of the article here.

In the study of musical compositions, the method of comparative study seems to be increasingly effective today, when works that are similar in style, the composer's language of the authors and the time of writing are studied in comparison with each other. The more we find common features, the more distinctly the differences and peculiarities of each composition appear.

Let us consider in this context two dramatic miniatures written by composers close in style at a young age: S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude Op.3 No. 2 and A.N. Scriabin's prelude Op.11 No. 10.

S.V. Rachmaninov wrote his prelude in 1892. It is well known that she immediately becomes popular. The prelude by A.N. Scriabin was written in 1894. In 1892, both A.N. Scriabin and S.V. Rachmaninov graduated from the Moscow Conservatory at the same time. S.V. Rachmaninov repeatedly performed his prelude from the moment of writing to 1894. Here are some performances: the first performance on September 26, 1892 in the 18th Symphony Concert at the Electric Exhibition in Moscow [1, p.116], December 28, 1892 [1, p. 119] and January 27, 1893 [1, p.123] in Kharkov, January 31, 1894 at the first copyright a concert in the Small Hall of the Noble Assembly [1, p.149]. In 1893, this prelude was played abroad for the first time by A.I. Ziloti, and the prelude received brilliant reviews [2, p.109]. In early 1894, A. Gutheil published Rachmaninov's "Five Pieces" Op. 3, including his Prelude in C-sharp Minor. These historical facts allow us to assume with a high degree of probability that by the time of writing his prelude Op.11 No. 10, A.N. Scriabin could have been familiar with the prelude Op.3 No. 2 by S.V. Rachmaninov.

S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude Op.3 No.2 and A.N. Scriabin's prelude Op.11No. 10 are united by a number of parameters: one genre, one tonality, close time of creation, some similar features in imagery, drama, form, texture, harmony. From the point of view of figurative content, both preludes are dramatic dialogues, the struggle of two principles: fatal and human. There is a single dramatic message: from pleading, requests in the first parts through contrasting middle parts to powerful bell-ringing in dynamized reprises and the final constructions on the piano. In both preludes in the reprises, two opposite beginnings combine into a single dramatic flow. At the same time, the Scriabin prelude is much more concise. It is threefold, unlike the bipartite prelude by S.V.Rachmaninov.

The first parts. Let's pay attention to the same textural principle of constructing the initial themes, the principle of showing two opposite emotional spheres: the opposition of volitional intonations in the lower register to harmonized melodic aching phrases in the upper (Figure 1).

Figure 1. The initial constructions of S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude (right) and A.N. Scriabin's prelude (left).

In these topics, we emphasize the difference between the "broken" melodic relief, as if loosening the foundations, in A.N. Scriabin (within the framework of one motif, the direction of melody movement often changes) as opposed to the smoother ("embracing", "gathering") melodic relief in S.V. Rachmaninov, when the direction of intonation movement is from the bass and further in the motif, harmonized by choral chords, does not change so often.

The "fatal" three-tone imperative in the bass in the prelude by S.V. Rachmaninov, in the prelude by A.N. Scriabin corresponds to a laconic dotted exclamation in the middle register, also expressing a volitional imperative.

At the end of the first phrases of S.V. Rachmaninov and by the end of the first sentences of A.N. Scriabin, the pulsation of alternating bass and chord increases in the same way (Figure 2).

The harmonies of the opening themes of both preludes, for all their individuality, have some points of contact. The first harmony of S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude is a tonic C-sharp minor triad (t35). The first harmony of A.N. Scriabin's prelude differs from Rachmaninoff's only by one sound "la", which gives the initial harmony astringency and sophistication (VI56, taking into account the bass). But S.V. Rachmaninov also has this "la" sound, only it is given in the horizontal carrying out of the "fatal" motif in the bass. A.N. Scriabin heard this "la" as part of the vertical. Here the words of T.N. Levoy, said in connection with the plays of A.N. Scriabin Op.57, about the dialectic of "extension and simultaneity", about the "transition of time into space", when the horizontal relief (in this case, the relief of the "fatal" motif of S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude with the note "la") "it passes"into the harmonic vertical (in this case, the vertical of the initial harmony of the prelude by A.N. Scriabin) [3, p.28]. Next, let's pay attention to the harmonies that complete the first intonation fragment of the "plea" in both cases. For both authors, this is "re#-fa x-la (#)-do#". The difference is only in one sound. This sound is again "la": A.N. Scriabin's la-bekar, left over from the previous harmony, and S.V. Rachmaninov's la-sharp. This la bekar again conveys the greater astringency of A.N. Scriabin's harmony. Note that if S.V. Rachmaninov has this harmony at the end of the league and the unstressed time of the beat, then A.N. Scriabin exacerbates the tension by placing such harmony on a relatively strong time of the beat.

Next, let's look at a fragment of the increase in textured pulsation at the end of the constructions: These are the harmonies of the third bar of S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude and the last two harmonies of A.N. Scriabin's prelude. In each of the compositions, these are two chords that complete the construction: a sentence by A.N. Scriabin and a phrase by S.V. Rachmaninov (Figure 2).

Figure 2. S.V.Rachmaninov's prelude (left) and A.N.Scriabin's prelude (right): increased pulsation and Neapolitan flavor.

One of these chords in both cases is phonically felt as Neapolitan: in S.V. Rachmaninov it is the first harmony before the dominant chord, in A.N. Scriabin it is the second harmony on the dominant bass after the cadence. If S.V. Rachmaninov's Neapolitan paint is clearly felt phonically, then A.N. Scriabin's Neapolitan component can be isolated in the chord itself (without the bass). But the presence of cadence and bass re#, of course, fundamentally affects the perception of the chord function: we hear the dominant unambiguously. The presence of a "Neapolitan" coloring gives these fragments rigor and concentration

S.V. Rachmaninov completes the first part by repeating the main motif twice. This repetition is associated with Russian epic folklore, where repetitions of phrases often occur. The first part of S.V. Rachmaninov ends with a descending intonation, A.N. Scriabin decides to end with an ascending one. The melody rises up a sexta. Unlike S.V. Rachmaninov, the transition to the second part of A.N. Scriabin is carried out concisely, through a single sound "mi" (Figure 3).

Figure 3. Completion of the first parts of S.V.Rachmaninov's prelude (left) and A.N. Scriabin's prelude (right).

A similar technique (lasting a lonely sound) on the edges of the form was used by F. Chopin in his ballads, emphasizing the moments of switching between time layers (present, past and future) [4, p.78]. And in this Scriabin prelude, perhaps such a switch from the present to the past (memory) can also be imagined.

The middle parts. In comparison of the light transparent middle of the prelude Op.11 No.10 by A.N.Scriabin with the gloomy, "epic" middle part of the prelude Op.3No.2 by S.V. Rachmaninov, Scriabin laconism is felt especially vividly: 29 bars of the repeated period with an expanded second sentence by S.V. Rachmaninov and a four-stroke sentence by A.N. Scriabin. M.K. Mikhailov He writes: "Rachmaninoff, with his "concertina", was mostly far from the trends of a more intimate chamber order, which formed an essential feature of the work of early Scriabin" [5, p.181]. The material of the middle sections of both works has intonational connections with the materials of the first parts. In both preludes, emotional and tempo movements take place here after the conditional static of the first movements: agitato in Op. 3 No. 2 and con anima in Op. 11 No. 10. Rachmaninoff's chromatic descending intonations are contrasted with the ascending Scriabin chromatics, which carry a dreamy image, some questionability. Note that we see the same chromatic movement, only in the bass, in the Rachmaninoff middle movement (bars 26-27). Typically, Rachmaninoff's conducting of the theme on legato in the prelude of Op.3 No. 2 is contrasted with the characteristic Scriabin technique "staccato under the league", which later became a characteristic feature of the composer's style, which A.I. Nikolaeva characterized as "flight" [6, p.76]. In both preludes, the middle parts lead us from the piano at the beginning through a significant amplification of the sound at the end to the culminating reprise constructions on fff.

Reprises. In both plays, these are powerful dramatic climaxes. The notes of the theme in both reprises are emphasized by both authors with accents. But the nature of the drama of these reprises is different.

A.N. Scriabin halves the reprise of the theme: he compresses two sentences of the first part into one, cutting off the second phrases of each of these sentences. Thus, instead of an eight-stroke construction of the theme of the first part, we have a four-stroke reprise. As a result, the effect of acceleration, compression of time (the effect of a "black hole") is created, there is a feeling of a sharp increase in frequency and confusion of breathing, an increase in tension. Movement at the climax suddenly stops at the subdominant, creating a feeling of internal breakdown. Destruction, rupture – this is how you can characterize the idea of both the climax and the entire foreplay. This is justified by the aesthetic position of A.N. Scriabin, who, as formulated by the ideologist of symbolism V.V. Ivanov, "cast his vote for accelerating the destructive and regenerative catastrophe of the world" [7, p. 193]. From the position of the two-part reprise form, which is traditionally considered as the main concept of the form of this prelude, the main musical idea ends here. But the powerful energy of the movement, abruptly interrupted on the subdominant (and not on the tonic), brings out by inertia a musical thought in addition, which, due to the sound after the subdominant, and not after the tonic, we cannot consider as a code. Researcher of preludes A.N. Scriabin I.A. Brodova believes that here, according to the well-known theory of V.P. Bobrovsky, "the two-part reprise form modulates into a simple three-part one with a shortened middle and a dynamized reprise-coda" [8, p.71]. The energy of the forward movement, which was unexpectedly interrupted, is so strong that the entire reprise feels like one period to the end. Nevertheless, it cannot be called a full-fledged reprise of the three-part form because the middle part is too short. The form lacks the poise of classical three-partedness. This balance of the first movement and the reprise, followed by a full-fledged coda, is fully present in S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude. The form of this prelude is a simple three-part reprise. Here, the reprise almost completely repeats the first part, only the texture is even more saturated and the sound dynamics increases. "Stability of form", proportionality of sentences, smooth (not broken) melodic line, explain the energy of unification, "conciliarity", greater narrative in the reprise of Rachmaninoff's prelude, in contrast to the destructive energy in the less "proportional" form of A.N. Scriabin's prelude. Another factor that brings these two compositions closer together is the bell effect present in the reprises of both preludes. A.N. Scriabin's bell–ringing is more impulsive and intense. In S.V. Rachmaninov, bell-ringing, for all its power, brings regularity and calmness, it is more melodious, with a long humming continuation after the bell strikes.

Final constructions. A characteristic technique peculiar to the final constructions of both pieces is the use of the bell tonic organ point "C-sharp". In A.N. Scriabin, it becomes the key idea in the reprise. It appears at the beginning of the reprise as octaves in quarters in the bass on ff (sharper than Rachmaninoff basses, the bass is a "whip"), then its pulsation gradually increases, it moves into the middle register, moving from accompaniment to melodic voice. The three frenzied-sounding C-sharp on the sff become a symbol of a compressed, collapsed space. These "magical" elements of A.N. Scriabin's music - ostinateness, rhythmic and harmonic "charm" - will later become features of the composer's style. [3, p.18].

In conclusion, the pulsation of this sustained sound is enlarged again, and it becomes the final sound of A.N. Scriabin's prelude, broadcasting the aesthetics of extinction. It feels like something has snapped (Chekhov's "the sound of a broken string"). If A.N. Scriabin's conclusion in sustained C sharp conveys the complete devastation and destruction of the world, then S.V. Rachmaninov's tonic organ point-the bell, due to the regularity and chorality of the texture, sounds conciliatory, preserving inner harmony and harmony, emphasizes the inviolability of the foundations of the world. Together with the "sunset" bell chords, this organ point refers us to the introduction to the Second Concert (where the bass and chord will change the order). The alternations of the harmonies of the subdominant sphere, coloring the tonic organ point in both preludes, also have points of contact. In A.N. Scriabin– it is S35- VI35- II7- t35. In S.V. Rachmaninov, it begins with the VI stage and ends with the same turnover as in A.N. Scriabin: II7 (taking into account basa- II2) – t35. At the same time, Rachmaninov's major VI sounds enlightened (as if in A major), while A.N. Scriabin's it sounds just minor, scary. A peculiar compositional arch for both preludes is the fifth "C-sharp g-sharp", with which both pieces begin and end (Figure 4).

Figure 4. The endings (fifth C-sharp-G-sharp) of the prelude by A.N.Scriabin (left) and S.V.Rachmaninov (right).

In S.V. Rachmaninov, this fifth is a descending interval in the bass (imperative), and at the end of the piece it is ascending in the upper register (interrogative and at the same time conciliatory). In A.N. Scriabin, the same fifth is not decomposed, according to his principle of conciseness, it is taken simultaneously. This fifth refers us to the opening chant of the first movement of Beethoven's Sonata No. 14 Op.27 No. 2, as well as to the end of Chopin's posthumous nocturne, also in C-sharp minor.

Once again, we emphasize that one of the key factors that allows us to compare these two preludes is the general tonality. As a continuation of the musical ideas of the prelude Op.11 No. 10 in the same key, the etude Op. 42 No. 5 acts, akin to the prelude not only tonally, but also in dramatic imagery, belliness, starting with the same harmony, with the same low-second intonation in the melody. The same fifth "C-sharp -g-sharp" forms an arch between the beginning and the end of the work. S.V. Rachmaninoff, many years later, will write an etude-painting Op.33, tonally, figuratively, texturally echoing the prelude Op.3 No. 2. For both composers, in these following works in C-sharp minor, there is a dynamization, an aggravation of the drama of the key of C-sharp minor.

Conclusions. The similarities found in the two preludes make it possible to see individual characteristics more clearly and in relief. Some of them later became characteristic features of the composers' style. Scriabin has laconism at the level of form, phrases, "flight" as a compositional device (according to A. Nikolaeva) in the middle part, incipient future suggestive ostinateness, a kind of bell-like (sharp, dramatic, "nervous"), saturation, "tartness" of the harmonic language, abrupt mood changes (as a result, sudden strong dynamic contrasts). S.V.Rachmaninov has richness of texture, vocal nature of the phrase, concert scale concerning texture, dynamics, duration of presentation, wide breathing, powerful but "calm" bell-ringing. The first fatal imperative of S.V. Rachmaninov's prelude in one form or another will pass through all the composer's work (for example, the First, Second, Third concertos, the Prelude Des-dur) [9].

All of the above allows us to talk about the differences in the sphere of imagery and semantic content of the two dramatic works. Rachmaninov's prelude, for all its drama, shows us an epic, conciliar image associated with narrative, inner strength, powerful but calm unfolding. The prelude of A.N. Scriabin transmits to us to a greater extent, according to the ideology of Russian symbolism, the energy of destruction for the sake of future creation (a lonely sound remained). "The break with the old shrine was this destructive creativity," V.V. Ivanov wrote about A.N. Scriabin [7, p. 193].

References
1. Valkova, V. B. (2020). S. V. Rakhmaninov. Chronicle of life and creativity. Part 1: 1873-1899. 2nd edition, revised and expanded. Tambov: S. V. Rakhmaninov Museum-Reserve "Ivanovka".
2. Keldysh, Yu. V. (1973). Rakhmaninov i ego vremya [Rachmaninov and his Time]. Moscow: Muzyka Publ.
3. Levaya, T. N. (2020). "Scriabin and the artistic quest of the XX century". St. Petersburg: Composer St. Petersburg.
4. Zenkin, K. V. (2010). On the meaning-forming role of the genre in the world of F. Chopin. Reflection of time as the essence of Chopin's ballads. Scientific Bulletin of the Moscow Conservatory, 3, 71-83.
5. Mikhailov, M. K. (1973). On the national origins of Scriabin's early creative work. To the centenary of the birth anniversary (1872-1972). Ed. and comp. by S. Pavchinsky, general ed. by V. Zukkerman (pp. 160-184). Moscow: Sovetsky kompozitor.
6. Nikolaeva, A. I. (2017). Piano style of A. N. Scriabin as a subject of mastering in the musical and performing class. Bulletin of the UNESCO Chair "Musical Art and Education", 2(18), 79-90.
7. Ivanov, V.V. (1979). Collected works in 4 vols. Vol. 3. Edited by D.V. Ivanov and O. Deshart; introduction and notes by O. Deshart. Brussels: Foyer Oriental Chrétien.
8. Brodova, I. A. (1999). Evolution of the musical form of A. N. Scriabin's piano Preludes: A textbook-essay for teachers and students of music schools and universities. Yaroslavl: DIA-press.
9. Kandinsky-Rybnikov, A. (1995). The problem of Fate and autobiography in the art of S. V. Rakhmaninov. To the 120th anniversary of his birth (1873-1943): materials of the scientific conference. Ed.-comp. by A. I. Kandinsky (pp. 90-110). Moscow.

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The subject of the study presented for publication in the journal "PHILHARMONICA. International Music Journal" the article entitled "Prelude Op.3No.2 by S.V. Rachmaninov and Prelude Op.11 No.10 by A.N. Scriabin : two facets of drama" is a set of dramatic features in the piano pieces of two outstanding Russian contemporary composers indicated by the author in the title. If the author figuratively reflected the subject of the study ("two facets of drama") in the title, explained in a brief introduction and consistently disclosed in the content of the article, then the author keeps the object of research a secret from the reader until the final conclusion. A kind of narrative intrigue arises, forcing the reader to more thoughtfully summarize the details of the author's analysis simultaneously in several possible projections. Only in conclusion, the author admits that he revealed not only the totality of individual features of the drama of the two early plays in the works of the composers, but also compared them with the features of the stylistic originality of the composer's thinking formed over time by S. V. Rachmaninov and A. N. Scriabin ("Some of them [the discovered dramatic features] subsequently became characteristic features of the composers' style"). Therefore, it can be concluded that the process of forming the original styles of compositional thinking of S. V. Rachmaninov and A. N. Scriabin in this work is that part of historical reality that should be identified as the object of research. Anticipating the main analytical part of the article, the author avoids excessive formalization and detailing of the research program, since he operates with a well-proven set of techniques for formal and stylistic analysis of musical works and focuses the reader's attention precisely on the details of the analysis of empirical material, which are a logically constructed sequence of arguments of the final conclusion. The author compares the functional load of individual expressive elements most significant for the dramaturgy of the work, including melody, harmony (functional, textured and figurative logic), texture and logic of constructing the musical form of Rachmaninov and Scriabin's preludes; complements the analysis of empirical material with essential historical and biographical information; includes the analyzed plays in the general context of the creative heritage of the composers; appropriately complements formally analytical data using emotional metaphors and figurative expressions, both their own and from the words of reputable colleagues, achieving not only logical, but also emotional clarity of the presentation of the material. Thus, the subject of the study was considered by the author at a high theoretical level, and the article deserves publication in a reputable academic publication. The research methodology is based on the principles of comparative analysis of two piano pieces by outstanding Russian contemporary composers, the elements of which are revealed through a strict formal and stylistic analysis of empirical material, enhanced by historical and biographical information and emotional assessments of the perception of these works by both the author and colleagues. Despite the fact that the author avoided strict formalization of the details of the research program in the brief introductory section of the article, it is clearly visible in the logic and structure of the presentation of the research results. The author's conclusions are well-reasoned and beyond doubt. The author explains the relevance of the chosen topic by the fact that a comparative study of authors who are close in style, compositional language and the time of writing of works makes it possible to identify and present more clearly the features and uniqueness of each of them. Of course, this advantage of comparative studies is a sufficient argument for research of this kind. The scientific novelty, consisting in the author's analysis of empirical material, comparison and generalization of the dramatic features of two piano pieces by outstanding Russian contemporary composers revealed during the analysis, deserves theoretical attention. The style of the text is scientific, the only remark concerns the headings to the illustrations (examples): The reviewer draws attention to the fact that the standards of scientific and technical information assume a unified name for such illustrations (Figure 1, Figure 2, etc.). The structure of the article corresponds to the logic of presenting the results of scientific research. The bibliography, taking into account the author's reliance on the analysis of empirical material, sufficiently reveals the problematic field of research. The appeal to the opponents is quite correct and sufficient. The article is of interest to the readership of the journal "PHILHARMONICA. International Music Journal" and after a small correction of the captions to the illustrations according to the standards, as well as their mentions in the text, it can be recommended for publication.