Anton Rubinstein - Symphony No. 2 "Ocean" (1851)
Painting Info -
http://challenge.cgsociety.org/dreamscape/entry/marc-austin/work_in_progress/3713
I.
Allegro Maestoso - 00:00
II.
Adagio Non
Tanto - 15:58
III. Allegro - 26:51
IV. Adagio - Allegro Con Fuoco - 33:02
Russian music and music in
Russia owe a great debt to
Anton Rubinstein.
Nevertheless he found himself, in his life-time, in opposition to the polymath
Stasov's
Mighty Handful, led by Balakirev, while a younger generation of composers, as
Stravinsky tell us, would use his name as characteristic of all that was meretricious. "C'est Rubinstein" was the ultimate condemnation of a new composition that failed to please. Subsequent musical opinion has tended to continue the denigration of Rubinstein, condemned for his facility and, indeed, for the very technical proficiency of his composition and the obvious virtuosity of his performances as a pianist.
Liszt, perhaps fearing a rival near the throne, spoke of him as the "pseudomusician of the
Future";
César Cui wrote of him as not a
Russian composer but "merely a Russian who composes, his music allied rather to that of
Germany". Jibes of this kind have continued.
Sacheverell Sitwell, in his biography of Liszt, describes Rubinstein as "a fountain of bad music", while a scholar of the eminence of
Gerald Abraham can refer to him as "a highly competent imitator of
Mendelssohn or Schumann".
There is no doubt that a great deal of the prejudice against Rubinstein was excited by anti-semitism.
Jewish emancipation brought a measure of freedom, political rights and greater opportunities, but suspicion, jealousy and hostility remained. Rubinstein, moreover, like Mendelssohn, was something of a cosmopolitan, in his own words "considered a Russian in Germany and a
German in Russia"
Anton Rubinstein was born in the
Podolsk district of Russia in 1829. He had piano lessons from his mother, before studying with
Alexandre Villoing in
Moscow. He gave his first public concert at the age of nine, thereafter touring
Europe.
In Paris he met Liszt and
Chopin, in the
Netherlands members of the
Russian Imperial family and in
England Queen Victoria. In
1844 his family settled in
Berlin, where, for two years, Rubinstein was able to take lessons from
Glinka's teacher,
Siegfried Dehn. In 1846 his father died and his family, including his younger brother
Nikolay, returned to Russia, while he moved to
Vienna, supporting himself as best he could. In later years he was to be critical of the failure of Liszt to give him any practical help. In 1846 he had played to Liszt, who was well known for the encouragement that he gave to young musicians. Possibly Liszt sensed competition from Rubinstein. "A talented man must win the goal of his ambition by his own unassisted efforts" was his comment.
Two months later he visited Rubinstein, in his attic in Vienna, "accompanied by his usual retinue, his so-called courtiers, who followed him wherever he went". The visit had no practical result, and Rubinstein was obliged to continue "by his own unassisted efforts".
Rubinstein spent the winter of
1848/
1849 in Russia. A meeting with the
Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, sister-in-law of the
Tsar, and formerly
Princess of Saxe-Altenburg, led to her continued patronage. Rubinstein was given an apartment in one of her palaces, and became, in his own words, her "musical stoker". The relationship proved an important one. With her support plans were drawn up for changes in Russian musical education, resulting in the foundation, in 1859, of the
Russian Musical Society, which promoted concerts, conducted by Rubinstein, and in
1862 the
St Petersburg Conservatory was established, with Rubinstein as its first director and
Tchaikovsky among its first pupils. In 1867 he resigned from both positions, although he was to return as director of the
Conservatory twenty years later, after a career in which he established himself as one of the greatest pianists of the time, as a composer of international reputation, and as a conductor. By the time of his jubilee, in 1889, he enjoyed the greatest fame. In spite of this, the Russian
Symphonic Evening in his memory, two weeks after his death in late 1894, failed to attract an audience. "So much for the public's famed love of Rubinstein", remarked Rimsky-Korsakov's memorialist, Yestrebstev.