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Nagasaki (Schnittke)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nagasaki is an oratorio composed by Soviet composer Alfred Schnittke in 1958, at the age of 25. It was Schnittke's graduation composition in the Moscow Conservatory, and the topic was suggested by his teacher Evgeny Golubev.

The work was considered formalistic, and Schnittke was accused of forgetting the principles of Realism. Thus, he suppressed the expressionistic central movement depicting the nuclear explosion and modified the finale.[1] It was recorded by the Moscow Radio Symphony in 1959 and broadcast to Japan through Voice of Russia, but it wasn't printed and it didn't receive any subsequent performances. Nagasaki was finally given its public premiere in its original form in Cape Town on 23 November 2006, eight years after Schnittke's death, by Rupert Hanneli and the Cape Philharmonic conducted by Owain Arwel Hughes.[2]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Шнитке. Оратория «Нагасаки» для меццо-сопрано, хора и оркестра (1958). Фрагмент
  • SCHNITTKE : In Memoriam
  • Дирижирует Геннадий Рождественский. А.Шнитке «Мёртвые души»

Transcription

Form

It consists of five movements, on Soviet and Japanese lyrics:

  1. "Nagasaki, City of Grief" (Anatoly Sofronov)
  2. "The Morning" (Tōson Shimazaki)
  3. "On that Fateful Day" (A. Sofronov)
  4. "On the Ashes" [Yoneda Eisaku)[notes 1]
  5. "The Sun of Peace" (Georgy Fere)

Recordings

Notes

  1. ^ Yoneda Eisaku, Yoneda is the family name, is a Japanese poet and one of victims of the Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima, not of Nagasaki hence he wrote poems about Hiroshima not Nagasaki but Schnittke applied his two verses from Kawa yo Towa ni Utsukushiku (川よ とわに美しく), Yoneda's second poetry collection published in 1952.[3][4] Words are taken from Kōhai ni Tachite, 1(荒廃に立ちて その一) and Kawa yo Towa ni Utsukushiku, 1(川よ とはに美しく その一). The first and second stanzas in the text of the fourth movement are from Kōhai ni Tachite, 1 and the third and fourth from Kawa yo Towa ni Utsukushiku, 1.[5][4]The former are relatively correctly translated from Yoneda's original but the latter altered by the Russian translator. Especially Yoneda's original poem is almost not included in the fourth stanza to be able to say it is effectively a new poem by the translator.

References

  1. ^ Program notes by Calum MacDonald for the work's performance in the 2009 BBC Proms
  2. ^ Profile of the composition in G. Schirmer's website
  3. ^ 米田栄作詩集 (新・日本現代詩文庫 40)、土曜美術社出版販売、2006、ISBN 4-8120-1568-5, pp.168-173.
  4. ^ a b The booklet text in Alfred Schnittke Symphony No.0・Nagasaki, BIS CD-1647
  5. ^ 米田栄作詩集 (新・日本現代詩文庫 40)、土曜美術社出版販売、2006、ISBN 4-8120-1568-5, pp.26-27, 32-33.

See also


This page was last edited on 26 March 2024, at 23:46
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