Nikolai Roslavets - In the Hours of the New Moon

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4 жыл бұрын

Nikolai Roslavets (1881 - 1944) - In the Hours of the New Moon (1912 - 1913)
Radio Filharmonisch Orkest, James Judd (2011)
Nikolai Roslavets's In the Hours of the New Moon is one of his few surviving orchestral works, reconstructed from a manuscript and almost-completed orchestral parts by Marina Lobanova. The work is thought to be inspired by a poem from the collection "L'Imitation de Notre Dame la Lune" by Jules Laforgue, who was one of Roslavets's favorite poets. The piece typically lasts around 13 minutes.
"The symphonic poem In the Hours of the New Moon (Russian: V chasi novolunya) is one of Roslavets’s earliest surviving works, written (or at least begun) while he was still a student at Moscow Conservatory. (Dates suggested for the work range from 1910 to 1913.) There is no evidence that it was ever performed in the composer’s lifetime, and very little is known about it except what can be deduced from the score itself. It is not even clear if the title is merely descriptive, or a quotation: but it is certainly appropriate for a work which seems to present itself as an ecstatic but perhaps ultimately rather sinister nocturne. The manuscript of the symphonic poem languished for many years in the Central State Archives of the USSR, and is here recorded based on the reconstruction and editing work carried out by Dr. Marina Lobanova.
Written for a large orchestra, it clearly manifests a number of contemporary influences, above all that of Scriabin, whose Poem of Ecstasy had been premiered in 1908; but also the French Impressionist composers, particularly Debussy and Ravel, and perhaps, too, the heady orchestral textures of Richard Strauss and Franz Schreker. If the latter were not direct influences, they were contemporary parallels-and for another we should remember that In the hours of the New Moon is an exact contemporary of Stravinsky’s ballet The Firebird. The magical, nocturnal, Impressionistic aspects of that work derive much more from Rimsky-Korsakov, of whom there are few traces in Roslavets’s score. In purely Russian terms, therefore, Roslavets here shows himself the more cosmopolitan composer.
The work has a clear ternary form, beginning and ending with slow-moving but lustrous Lento music. The initial quiet brass chord, of two perfect fourths separated by a tritone, is the harmonic foundation of the piece. The rustling string figurations, tremulous flutes, rising trumpet-calls (shades of Poem of Ecstasy) are joined by shimmering harp and celesta in a sonic fabric of remarkable delicacy, showing Roslavets’s sure command of a large orchestra. Ostinato figures build to a tumultuous but harmonically static tutti climax, which then dissipates into a languorous episode centred around woodwind solos, especially from the cor anglais. This gives way to an Allegro, soon increasing speed to Presto, which forms a central scherzo-like episode. This is certainly a dance (of elves, moon-sprites or more sinister figures) in a lively 3/8 time-the most Impressionistic music in the work but reminiscent particularly of Debussy’s ballet Jeux (1912), a work Roslavets presumably could not have known. There is a return to the opening Lento material, its various elements heard now in similar but slightly different relationships, rising once again to an overwhelming climax, a varied intensification of the climax in the first section. It is broken off abruptly; the quiet, hushed conclusion unwinds back to the soft brass chord with which the work began.
For all the picturesque and free-form aspects of this piece, it has a firm structural basis and indeed much of Roslavets’s output is concerned with his personal treatment of sonata-based genres."
(source: www.hyperion-records.co.uk/dw...)
Original audio: • Nikolai Roslavets ~ In...

Пікірлер: 22
@roberthayes7737
@roberthayes7737 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder how familiar Bernard Herrmann was with Roslavets. The opening, especially the instrumentation/color, sounds like something Herrmann could have composed for a film.
@Medtnaculuss
@Medtnaculuss 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much... I've been wanting to see the score to this for forever! Great work
@scriabinismydog2439
@scriabinismydog2439 4 жыл бұрын
What a gem! Thank you so much for the upload!
@ilikeplayingffftonecluster851
@ilikeplayingffftonecluster851 4 жыл бұрын
paeffill Scriabin drugs
@thenameisgsarci
@thenameisgsarci 4 жыл бұрын
Perfect. I was also about to make a sheet vid of this but I have no idea where to get the score. Thanks for this one! :D
@attimiespazi
@attimiespazi 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your channel..
@Akseydem
@Akseydem Жыл бұрын
Unbelievably exciting!
@user-mb2sn4it4d
@user-mb2sn4it4d 10 ай бұрын
Ооо, это для сегодня😇
@francoisvillon1300
@francoisvillon1300 3 ай бұрын
Ве-ли-ко-леп-но!!
@fritzkehrwald
@fritzkehrwald 4 жыл бұрын
Très scriabinesque
@raulespejo2587
@raulespejo2587 4 жыл бұрын
Très debussyesque
@toothlesstoe
@toothlesstoe 4 жыл бұрын
Très Roslavetsesque
@fredericchopin6445
@fredericchopin6445 3 жыл бұрын
@@toothlesstoe lol
@bassoonatic
@bassoonatic 8 ай бұрын
Think there's even a quote or two from Prometheus in there :D
@sneddypie
@sneddypie 3 жыл бұрын
i love roslavets
@etc.-1912
@etc.-1912 3 ай бұрын
I like this work. I wonder if Scriabin and Roslavets knew each other?
@stephenjablonsky1941
@stephenjablonsky1941 3 жыл бұрын
Life in Soviet Russia must have been a living hell for intellectuals and creative artists. Here is a wonderful score by a brilliant composer who was relegated to an intellectual gulag by morons and bureaucrats.
@Resplencemelodi
@Resplencemelodi 2 жыл бұрын
They eventually come for their most ardent believers. Skimmed over a bit of Solzhenitsyn, The arresting officers couldn't read maps, so they had to ask the more educated prisoners for help. The people they just ambushed.
@handledav
@handledav 2 ай бұрын
🌑
@davidrehak3539
@davidrehak3539 4 жыл бұрын
Nyikolaj Roszlavec:Az új hold óráiban Holland Rádió Szimfonikus Zenekara Vezényel:James Judd
@mysterium364
@mysterium364 11 ай бұрын
Riveting.
@syrinx9196
@syrinx9196 4 ай бұрын
Haven't listened to all of it yet but, so far, the entire thing is an extremely obvious pastiche of Scriabin's Prometheus. Inspiration is one thing but this is funny.
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