|
Sergei
Prokofiev (1891-1953), precocious as a child, entered
the St. Petersburg Conservatory in 1904, by which time
he had already written a great deal of music. At the
Conservatory he shocked the more conservative director,
Glazunov, but learned much from an older fellow-student,
the composer Myaskovsky. After the Revolution he was
given permission to travel abroad and he remained intermittently
out of Russia, in America and then in Paris, until his
final return to Russia in 1936. At home, though in touch
again with the root of his inspiration, he found himself
out of favour with the authorities and in 1948 the subject
of particular and direct censure. His death in 1953,
on the same day as Stalin, deprived him of the enjoyment
of the subsequent relaxation in musical censorship that
then took place. In style Prokofiev is ironic, writing
in a musical language that is often acerbic. Prokofiev
first attempted to write an opera at the age of nine.
Maturer operas include The Love for Three Oranges, written
in 1919 for Chicago, The Fiery Angel and War and Peace,
the last based on Tolstoy's novel. An early ballet score
for Dyagilev proved unacceptable, but later ballets,
once rejected as undanceable, include Romeo and Juliet,
and in 1944 Cinderella. Both ballets as well as the
first mentioned opera are known to concert audiences
from orchestral suites based on them by the composer.
Film scores by Prokofiev include Alexander Nevsky, written
for Eisenstein's film of that name, and music for the
same director's Ivan the Terrible. Music for the film
Lieutenant Kijé, a fictional character, created by a
clerical error and maintained in existence to the end,
was written in 1933. Of Prokofiev's five piano concertos
the third is best known, written in the composer's instantly
recognisable musical language, from the incisive opening
to the motor rhythms that follow, in a mixture of lyricism
and acerbic wit. More overtly romantic in feeling are
the two fine violin concertos. His early Cello Concerto
was followed in 1952, fourteen years later, by a Cello
Concertino, completed by the cellist Rostropovich and
the composer Kabalevsky after Prokofiev's death.
|