Strawinski, The Firebird - the borrowings.
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| Ivan Bilibin, Ivan-Tsarevich and the Firebird,
skazka illustration (1899). St. Petersburg, 1901; Boulder, 1980. |
Yelena Polenova, Ivan-Tsarevich and the Firebird, Mir
iskusstva no.13-14 (1900). |
Konstantin Somov, The Firebird. Balmont,
Zhar-ptitsa, frontipiece (1907). |
- The octatonic scale.
- In the Firebird Strawinsky makes much use the octatonic scale and
chromatic melodies and chords to depict the supernatural
world of evil power (Kashchey is the bad guy). In the Infernal dance of
Kashchey the use of the octatonic
scale leads to much harsh dissonance.
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- The diatonic scale.
- Opposed to this world is the human world
of the good (the 13 Princesses as victims of Kashchey and Ivan-Tsarevich as
the good guy who rescues them). They are characterised by the diatonic scale and
the use of folksong or folksong-like musical material. Stravinsky made use of two existing folk melodies in The Firebird
which is much less than he did in Petrushka. The two
authentic folksongs are: the beautiful khorovod melody of the oboe in the
romantic Ronde des princesses and solemn horn-theme of the finale. Both
songs are found in Rimsky-Korsakov's famous collection 100 Russian Folk Songs
(1876).
- A third melody in folksong-style must be
mentioned. song that has to be associated with
Ivan-Tsarevich must be mentioned. Maybe it is Strawinsky's own tune in
folksong style.
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- The khorovod-theme.
- Every musician
who knows The Firebird quite well but is not acquainted with its Russian roots will
be shocked when he discovers that the beautiful oboe theme of the princesses' khorovod
was
not Stravinsky's own invention but a borrowing from Rimsky-Korsakov's
Sinfonietta on Russian Themes op.31. Diaghilev was flabbergasted when
Edwin Evans who just had discovered the theme in the Sinfonietta slyly invited
Diaghilev to play the work with him four-hands:
- Diaghilev ... was rather mystified by Evan's eagerness to draw his
attention to the work. When, however, he reached the tune in the second
movement, he jumped up from the piano and exclaimed 'Non, ce n'est pas vrai!'
- The story of Diaghilev's reaction on Evan's discovery is told in Eric Walter White,
Strawinsky's sacrifice to Apollo [London, Hogarth Press, 1930] and cited
in Taruskin, Srawinsky and the Russian traditions.
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- Further investigation learns that the theme in the
Sinfonietta on Russian Themes op.31 is not Rimsky-Korsakov's own
invention, but an original Russian folksong. It is published in the collection 100 Russian Folk Songs with
piano accompaniment compiled by N.Rimsky-Korsakov op.24 (1876), no.79:
In
the garden, .
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The origin of the Khorovod (Round dance) of the
Princesses in The Firebird. "In
the garden" is no.79 in the collection 100 Russian Folk Somgs
compiled by N.Rimsky-Korsakov op.24 (1876). |
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| Some years later Rimsky-Korsakov gave the same folksong
a prominent role as the first theme in the
second movement of his Sinfonietta on Russian
Themes op.31. My personal shock in bar 9 when the
melody continues and arrives at the high c:
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The finale theme.
The second borrowing is the horn melody that is so well chosen to
express the triumph of the good after the defeat of the evil. It is no.21 in the same collection,
the 100 Russian Folk Songs
compiled by N.Rimsky-Korsakov op.24 (1876)
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The original
folk song that became the theme of the glorious finale of The
Firebird. 'By the gateway there swayed the tall pine tree',
no.21 in the 100 Russian Folk Songs
compiled by N.Rimsky-Korsakov op.24 (1876).
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The song text tells about the young girl Dunyushka who is desired by a young
nobleman. That association fits well with the very ending of the ballet where
Ivan-Tsarevich marries with solemnity with one of the 13 princesses, the
Tsarevna. (In the songtext the princess takes ill and dies in later strophes).
- The theme of Ivan-Tsarevich.
- The third quasi-borrowing is a folksong-style melody of Strawinsky's
own invention (?) that always comes along with Ivan's appearances. It
is used three times in constant variation. The first time at nr.12 in a
simple oboe melody:
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The second time is the horn solo at nr.45. The song has a much more
expressive melodic shape with a much wider compass:

The third time is horn solo in the episode called Sudden
Appearance of Prince Ivan that starts at nr.71. This episode which is the
most composed of the three has a special interest for the fragmentation of the
horn melody. This fragmentation of the melody was an choreographic idea suggested to Strawinsky by Fokine. Fokine writes
in his Memories of a Ballet Master about a meeting when Strawinsky visited him
and played at the piano while he was dancing: (...) he broke up his national themes
into short phrases corresponding to the separate moments of a scene, separate
gestures and poses. (...). Strawinsky played and I interpreted the role of
Ivan-Tsarevich, the piano substituting for the wall. I climbed over it, jumped
down from it, and crawled, fearstruck, looking around - my living room.
Strawinsky, watching, accompanied me with patches of the Tsarevich melodies,
playing mysterious tremolos as background to depict the garden of the sinister
Kashchey the Deathless.
All dansers and choreographers, musicians and conductors will allways regret that no
filmrecording has been made of that historic meeting.
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