The programme includes:
Ottorino Respighi. Symphonic poem Fontane di Roma
Sergei Rachmaninoff. Spring cantata. Three Russian Songs, Op. 41
Ottorino Respighi. Symphonic poem Pini di Roma
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Piano concerto No. 21 C Major, K. 467
Mariinsky Theatre Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
Principal Chorus Master: Andrei Petrenko
Ottorino Respighi was a contemporary of Giacomo Puccini and also composed ten operas. But these were not the works that made him famous. It was through the symphonic poems Fontane di Roma and Pini di Roma that Respighi succeeded in restoring Italian orchestral music’s international significance, which had been lost following the deaths of Corelli, Vivaldi and Boccherini. In Italy in the 19th century there was not one symphonist composer, and it was only operas that were acclaimed. As a result, several musicians decided that this could no longer continue and they attempted to amend the situation. Among them was Giuseppe Martucci, a teacher at the Music School of Bologna. It may be true that his works failed to become part of the international repertoire, but he did teach Respighi. Sergei Vasilievich Rachmaninoff wrote the Spring cantata in 1902. Its premiere in St Petersburg took place in the hall of the Noble Assembly on 8 January 1905 with the participation of the Mariinsky Theatre Chorus (conducted by Alexander Ilyich Siloti). This work is unusual in many respects. Even Nekrasov’s poetry itself is unusual, forming the basis of the cantata in which the almost un-combinable is combined, where images of nature in wintertime and in springtime merge with the hero’s love drama (his wife’s infidelity, which almost results in a bloody denouement – a traditional melodramatic subject). With Nekrasov, nature is not just a background for the unfolding drama. “Dishevelled winter” and the “winter blizzard song” in the hero’s mind become direct “co-conspirators” of the impending murder (predicting and even demanding its execution). Spring, with its anthem and Christian motifs of love, tolerance and forgiveness, however, is allotted a reconciliatory role at the close of the poetry. Vivid images of springtime nature are seen in their own right, as independent and existing almost outside the dramatic plot (“Rush-buzz Green Noise. Green Noise, spring noise!”).
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