Overture Magazine - 2014-2015 September-October 2014 | Page 34

{ program notes A fellow pupil of Sergei Rachmaninoff’s at the Moscow Conservatory in the 1880s and ’90s, Scriabin had to be content to come second to him at graduation because his composition teacher Anton Arensky disliked his already unorthodox creations. Physically diminutive, effete in manner, and a dandy in his dress, he usually wore gloves to ward off germs and avoid the contamination of directly handling money. For him, music was always something much more than notes: “The purpose of music is revelation,” he said. Mysticism, whether religious or occult in nature, was sweeping Russia in the years immediately before the Revolution, but Scriabin was exceptional in the degree to which his mystical beliefs dominated his life and creative work. In time, he began to see himself as a messianic figure who would bring in a new age for humankind through his music. Hinduism, Nietzsche and Theosophy all contributed to his personal philosophy. Many thought Scriabin mad, but most were willing to admit that as a musician he possessed genius. Scriabin was a radical who eventually left traditional tonality behind in his late works. He saw musical tones as colors—a phenomenon known as synesthesia—and he dreamed of uniting all the senses in his works — hearing, sight, taste and smell—though the unperformed color score for his late orchestral tone poem Prometheus was as far as he realized these ideas. Although Scriabin was predominantly a composer of piano works — he wrote about 200 of them — his creation of a Piano Concerto in 1896 unleashed a fascination with the orchestra. Having already written three symphonies, in late 1904 he began to conceive of a fourth, but after three years of work, it would turn into something quite different: a massive onemovement tone poem, The Poem of Ecstasy (Le Poème de l’extase). Before he began putting notes on paper, Scriabin, however, began his creative work by writing a lengthy poem in Russian initially called “Orgiastic Poem.” Not intended as a script for his musical composition, it was rather a parallel expression in another medium of his conception of ecstasy, which 32 O v ertur e | www. bsomusic .org mingles equally spiritual and sensual fulfillment. It opens: “Spirit,/ Winged with thirst for life,/ Is drawn into flight/ On the summits of negation./ There, under the rays of its dream,/ Emerges a magical world/ Of heavenly forms and feelings …” The poem is an effusion of mystical late-Romantic language, and though Scriabin loved it, it is hard going for the modern reader. But it worked to prime Scriabin’s creative pump, and the sumptuous musical work that followed is much more universally appealing. [Scriabin] saw musical tones as colors—a phenomenon known as synesthesia—and he dreamed of uniting all the senses in his works. However, the first audience that heard it — on December 10, 1908 in New York City played by the visiting Russian Symphony Orchestra — didn’t know what to make of it, and the critics were cruel. Much more successful we