"To regret the past, and hope for the future, never satisfied
with the present: that is my life passes."
Piotr Il'ich Tchaikovsky.
“Tchaikovsky was not a child prodigy as
Mozart, he did not appear as a great talent during his young years -
nether as a pianist, nor as a composer. His life in music was not
smooth and predictable. Tchaikovsky is regarded as the most popular
Russian composer, and even "the most Russian" composer,
though he was not like Glinka consecrated to the service of
nationality, and no doubt was influenced by German, Italian and
French composers. Even among the other quite famous Russian
contemporaries, "The Mighty Five", as they are known***,
he stays aside: his music was considered too Western, though it had
been written at the rising time of the national movement.
Tchaikovsky was born in a middle class
family of a mine inspector. From the early years his life was filled
with melodies from Mozart, Rossini, Bellini, Donicetti, played on
the orcestrina by his father. The boy, very likely taught piano by
his mother, showed the perfect pitch and remarkable musical memory.
But his parents did not pay attention to his musical capabilities.
One time, however, once, he was so engaged with a rhythm, tapping
with his fingers on the windowpane that he broke the window, cutting
his hand. This incident moved his parents to engage a music tutor
for young Piotr.
Tchaikovsky's musical lessons were not
very regular. At the age of nine he was sent to the School of
Jurisprudence in St. Petersburg, where he studied until the 1861.
During these years musical activities of the young composer were
minimal, though he did go to the performances of very famous
musicians, such as Clara Schumann, and also frequented the Italian
opera, which was very popular that time. Outside the school he took
music lessons on Sundays from the pianist Rudolph Kundinger, but the
teacher discovered no particular talent in his pupil. Nobody could
see in young Tchaikovsky what he would later become. His classmates
remembered that they were amazed by his improvisation on the themes
from fashionable opera, but mostly by the musical tricks, he could
demonstrate, like the guessing keys and playing the piano covered by
a towel.
After his graduation from the School of
Jurisprudence, Tchaikovsky began his civil service in the
administrative division of the Department of Justice in St.
Petersburg, trying to find his niche in this field. According to his
brother Modest, who has written the most detailed biography of the
composer, the first indication of his intention to change his career
is dated 1861, when in the letter to his sister Aleksandra he wrote:
"Papa insists that it is not that late for me to become an
artist… But the fact is that even if I do have some talent, it is
probably already impossible to develop it. They have made a clerk
out of me, and a poor one at that: I try to improve as much as I
can, to take my work more seriously - and now to study thoroughbass
at the same time!"
That time was a crucial moment in Russian
music life. In 1857 the Russian Musical society was formed, which
soon brought the classical music out of the aristocratic salons to
public. There were many musical classes opened for general
education, which of course gave rise to professional education as
well.> Tchaikovsky was told about these classes by his cousin, a
young officer in the Horse Grenadiers, who once mentioned that he
"can make the transition from one key to any other in no more
than three chords"; and demonstrated immediately. "I
considered myself more talented than he musically, but at the same
time I was unable to do such a thing", he told to his friend
Mikhail Kashkin, "When I asked where he had learned this, I
found out that the Russian Musical Society offered classes in music
theory where one could learn all these clever tricks; I went
immediately to those classes and signed up to audit one taught by
Nikolay Zaremba". It was the turning point of his life: on
September 1862, Tchaikovsky was among the first students of new
opened St. Petersburg Conservatory.
The classes on orchestration and
composition with one of the most significant musician of hat time,
the director of St. Petersburg Conservatory Anton Rubinstain, became
the centerpiece of Tchaikovsky's studies. His teaching was
improvisational, and even having not very wide musical outlook,
Rubinstain was not only a great pianist and composer, "but also
a man of rare nobility, sincere, honest, magnanimous, align to any
baseness or vulgarity, with a clear, straightforward mind… as a
teacher, he was incomparable…"***
Anton Rubinstain recognized an outstanding
talent in his pupil and wanted to encourage him. He arranged to
bring one of the first serious work of his student to the attention
of Johann Strauss. The performance of " Characteristic
dances"***,
incorporated later to Tchaikovsky's first opera "The
Voevoda" was, indeed, the first public performance of any of
his works.
Before even graduating, Tchaikovsky had
already composed the Overture in F and the String quartet movement
in B flat, both of which were performed in student concerts at the
conservatory. As his graduation work, Tchaikovsky proposed his
cantata on the text of Schiller's ode "An die Freude" (the
same text as in Beethoven's Ninth Symphony). Reaction on it was
almost uniformly unfavorable. The compose Aleksandr Serov was
disappointing, commenting, "No, the cantata is not good. I
expected much more from Tchaikovsky." In his sarcastic review,
the composer and musical critic Cezar Cui asserted, that "the
composer Mr. Tchaikovsky is utterly week…and if he had any talent,
then somewhere at least it would have broken the chains of the
conservatory."
During these years, Tchaikovsky worked as
teaching assistant in a harmony class. Several weeks before his
graduation, he was invited by Anton Rubinstain's brother Nikolay to
teach at the newly founded Moscow Conservatory. Tchaikovsky, a vary
soft and charming person, very quickly became a member of musical
family, attracting people not only by his promising talant, but
mostly by his character. But his creative efforts still were not
still productive. Early in 1866 he began work on his first symphony
"Winter Daydreams". It was time of endless depression,
enforced by insomnia. The abnormal labor was killing his sleep, and
sleepless nights were sapping his energy and paralyzing his creative
power. In the middle of July, as his doctor said, Tchaikovsky was
even close to insanity. In September, he showed the unfinished yet
score to his former teachers - Anton Rubinstain and Nikolay Zaremba.
To his dismay both men disliked of the symphony. But the
"Moscow Rubinstain", Nikolay liked it and in December
played the scherzo from it at a concert of the Russian Musical
Society. The full performance of this work in February 1868 was a
resounding success, which brought it in the row of one of the first
symphonies written by Russian composer. "Winter
Daydreams", filled with folk motives, already showed
Tchaikovsky's own style. It was his first triumph, but aware of
number of weaknesses in the work, Tchaikovsky decided to rewrite it.
Encouraged by his first successful works, Tchaikovsky began to work
on his first opera, with the libretto of the famous Russian
playwright Aleksandr Ostrovsky. He composed with great speed and
enthusiasm, but in his inexperience he made a number of scenographic
errors. "I really wrote music to a given text, without a view
to the immense difference between symphony and opera in terms of
style". The first performance, which took place at the Bolshoy
Theater, was not vary successful - the National opera was not as
popular as Italian. Russian composers were not even permitted the
advantage of a full orchestra and the second-rate singers were
considered good enough. Even so, the opera was performed in all
about ten times. Afterwards Tchaikovsky burned the score, perhaps
from disappointing. But some parts of this fist opera would be
included in his later opera "The Oprichnik".
Tchaikovsky's next work, the fantasia
"Fatum", which joined the list of his failures, was
performed in March 1869 with some success. And again, unsatisfied by
it Tchaikovsky destroyed the score.
The end of his failures was soon to come.
In the spring of 1869 Balakirev discussed with young talented
composer the plan of his next work - Fantastic Overture "Romeo
and Juliet". They talked about all the details very carefully.
Later Kashkin wrote about this talk: "The plan, adapted to
sonata form, was as follows: First, an introduction of a religious
character…, followed by Allegro in b minor (Balakirev suggested
most of the tonalities), was to depict the enmity between the
Montagues and Capulets… Then was to follow the love of Romeo and
Juliet (second subject in D flat major), succeeded by elaboration of
both subjects…." Tchaikovsky came from his vacation in
September with the almost finished score. But the evil fate did not
forget the young composer. On the evening of forth of March 1870,
Nikolay Rubinstain appeared in the hall of Moscow Conservatory to
conduct his work, which was predicted to be a great success. But he
was received the fantastic demonstration of students against him,
after an incident with a student of Conservatory, resented a
reprimand. "Romeo and Juliet" was published at 1871 in
Berlin and indeed became one of the most popular classical
masterpieces. ***
The next seven years (1871-1877) were more
or less successful in Tchaikovsky's creative work. His next two
operas were not good ones: "Undina" was rejected by
Theatral Direction, "Snow maiden" (Snegurochka") did
not have success (not like the Rimsky-Korsakov opera of the same
theme). But at the same time, Tchaikovsky composed such famous works
as the Second Symphony ("A Little Russian", almost fully
consisting of variations on Russian folks melodies), Third Symphony,
the opera "Vakula the Smith", which had significant
success in Russia and Europe, but was remodeled later into the opera
"Cherevichek"; the opera "The Oprichnik" - the
great advance of his previous operas "Undina" and
"The Voevoda"; the ballet "Swan Lake", the
Fantasia "Franceska di Rimini" etc.
To this period belongs the Piano Concerto
in b flat minor. M.Kashkin gives an interesting story of the birth
of his work: "Tchaikovsky, who had long had it in his mind to
compose a pinoforte concerto for Nikolay Rubinstain, set about this
work in the winter of 1874… The invention of passages for piano
combined with orchestra did not come easily to him: but in February
1875 the composition was quite ready. Tchaikovsky took the finished
score to Nikolay Rubinstain, and the title page was inscribed the
dedication to him… But he, it appeared, was disagreeably surprised
that Tchaikovsky - not being a pianist - had not asked his advise
about the piano part." As Tchaikovsky later wrote in his
letter, Rubinstain particularly said, that "it was impossible
to play, that the passages were hackneyed, clumsy, and so awkward
that there was no way even to correct them, that as a composition it
was bad, vulgar." But Tchaikovsky decided to publish the
concerto without alteration a single note. Only the dedication was
replaced by one to Hans von Bulow, who performed for the it first
time in Boston with a great success.
The year of 1877 was the most crucial for
Tchaikovsky. In the August he married Antonina Miljukova. She was
one of his students, who had written him a confession of love.
"The letter had been written so genuinely, so warmly, that I
decided to answer it." "I am marring the girl not
particular young but entirely respectable and who has one main
virtue: she is in love with me like a cat…" On the day of
marriage he wrote several bravura letters to his friends, informing
them of this event. But on the train to St. Petersburg, where they
wanted to spent their fisrt days together, he was "ready to
scream from the sobs that were suffocating me." The marriage
appeared as a real disaster for his life. Later, in a letter to
relatives, he wrote: "…She has agreed with absolutely
everything and will never displeased… I have reserved for myself
complete freedom of action…" He had only one wish - to die.
It a week he tried to commit suicide - standing in cold Moscow river
water for one reason: to catch cold and to die from pneumonia. The
main dilemma in his life at this point was Tchaikovsky's
homosexuality. During his years in the boys School of Jurisprudence,
he was involved in homosexual relations with other students. Such an
experience, even if it takes place in the most important period of
psychological development, does not necessarily lead to the future
homosexuality. Tchaikovsky most likely did not consider himself as
exclusively homosexual and probably saw his marriage as a possible
solution to his sexual problems. Maybe his extremely sensitiveness
played a very important role, which he inherits from his father.
From his early years he was very hysteric, nervous and susceptible.
Many of his mental problem probably were genetically passed to him:
at least one of his ancestors on his mother's side suffered from
epilepsy and Tchaikovsky might have displayed, albeit in a lesser
form, certain secondary appearance of this disorder (all his
"little apoplectic fits"). In the early years he was found
to have a spinal cord problem, which, as the doctors said was the
reason for his extremely sensitivity and nervousness. These factors
combined together made his life very unhappy and unsatisfactory. At
the same time, maybe they made his music more sentimental, more
melodious. Herman Laroche, a musical critic and one of the
Tchaikovsky's best friends, and other critics would later casually
suggest, that even Tchaikovsky's music bore the imprint of his
"feminine" nature. This was a description the composer
himself strongly disliked.
During this very hard period of his life,
Tchaikovsky wrote two of his greatest works: the opera "Evgeni
Onegin" and the Forth Symphony. The brilliant Violin Concerto
also comes from the late 1870s.
Some time before, around 1876, a wealthy
widow appeared in Tchaikovsky's live. Nadezda von Meck, a patroness
of art, gave an income to the composer to cover his basic life
expenses, which allowed him to leave his teaching position in the
Conservatory and compose. They never met, but very soon they became
very good and close friends. Fourteen years later, Mrs. von Meck
suddenly stopped financing Tchaikovsky without any possibility to
continue their friendship - a blow from with Tchaikovsky never fully
recovered.
In 1893 Tchaikovsky died from cholera.
The last years of Tchaikovsky's life were
very productive. "The Queen of Spades", "The Sleeping
Beauty", the symphonic poem "Manfred", the lyric
opera in one act "Iolanta", the famous two act fairy
ballet "The Nutcracker", the Sixth Symphony… - this is
far from the full list of his late works. The last works did not
need the approval of critics. He became famous not only in Russia,
but in Europe and in America, as a incomparable master-orchestrator,
as a genius in creating melodies. The last symphony -
"Pathetic", is the most melancholy among them all (each of
his symphonies has a definite coloring. The Second was written in
national traditions, the Third - by influents of Schumann's
enthusiasm, the Forth is the only humorous one, the Fifth, which is
regarded as the most weak one has religious feelings). There are
many critical opinions with respect to his works: in his symphonic,
as well as in his instrumental work one can find a weakness: being
ultramelodiaous, able to find the expressive musical ideas in his
work, he seems to find difficulties in quitting them; the criticism
of his romances, that Tchaikovsky regarded the music as the most
important element of the song.
But even agreeing with this critics, it is
impossible not to acknowledge Tchaikovsky as a one of the most
significant composers in history, whose music is still very popular
and beloved by people in the world.
Works
By Opus Number
By Type
Listening Suggestions
To be added
Sources
- Poznansky, Alexandr. "Tchaikovsky. The Quest for the
Inner Man". Schirmer books, 1991
- Newmarch, Rosa. "Tchaikovsky. His life and works, with
extracts from his writings…" greenwood press, 1969.
- Leonard, Richard A. A History of Russian Music. The Macmillan
Co, 1957
- Goulding, Phil. Classical music. The 50 Greatest Composers and
there 1000 Greatest Works.
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