Update browser for a secure Made experience

It looks like you may be using a web browser version that we don't support. Make sure you're using the most recent version of your browser, or try using of these supported browsers, to get the full Made experience: Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.

RACHMANINOFF WITH TRIFONOV & BABAYAN - SOLD OUT

Sergei Babayan, piano - Daniil Trifonov, piano
Chamber Music Series
Tuesday, June 25, 2024 at 7pm Donovan Pavilion
SOLD OUT

Please contact the box office to be added to the waitlist. Ticketing@BravoVail.org

World-renowned pianists Sergei Babayan and Daniil Trifonov—also former teacher and student—open Bravo! Vail’s Chamber Music Series with an all-Rachmaninoff program featuring two pianos.

Did you know?

Rachmaninoff is always an audience favorite, and his 150th birthday last year confirmed his popularity. His Symphonic Dances logged in as the most frequently played of all concert works in 2023. Here is an opportunity to hear its two-piano setting.

Featured Artists

Sergei Babayan

piano

Daniil Trifonov

piano

Program Highlights

  • Sergei Babayan, piano 
  • Daniil Trifonov, piano 

 

PROGRAM CHANGE: 6.24.2024

SCHUMANN/arr. Sergei BABAYAN Andante and Variations, Op.46

MOZART Sonata for Two Pianos in D. major K 448 

     Allegro con spirito
     Andante 
     Molto allegro

-INTERMISSION-

RACHMANINOFF Suite No. 1 

RACHMANINOFF Suite No. 2

 

Program Notes

Fantaisie (Tableaux), Suite No. 1 for Piano Duet, Op. 5 (1893)

(24 minutes)

SERGEI RACHMANINOFF (1873-1943)

Fantaisie (Tableaux), Suite No. 1 for Piano Duet, Op. 5
     Barcarolle
     La nuit ... L’amour (The Night ... The Love)
     Les larmes (The Tears)
     Pâques (Easter) 

Suite No. 2 for Piano Duet, Op. 17

(25 minutes)

SERGEI RACHMANINOFF (1873-1943)

Suite No. 2 for Piano Duet, Op. 17
     Introduction
     Valse
     Romance
     Tarantelle

INTERMISSION

(18 minutes)

Symphonic Dances, Op. 45

(30 minutes)

SERGEI RACHMANINOFF (1873-1943)

Symphonic Dances, Op. 45
     Non allegro
     Andante con moto (Tempo di valse)
     Lento assai—Allegro vivace—Lento assai.
        Come prima—Allegro vivace

When Sergei Rachmaninoff graduated from the Moscow Conservatory, in 1892, he was given the Great Gold Medal in composition, an honor that had been bestowed on only two students previously. Tchaikovsky, who was on the adjudicating panel, was so impressed that he gave Rachmaninoff the highest mark possible and then increased it by four plus-signs. Immediately following graduation, Rachmaninoff was signed to a publishing contract, and one of his first published pieces—his Piano Prelude in C-sharp minor—became an instant hit. Further works flowed forth, including his first opera, Aleko, produced at the Bolshoi in May 1893, and his Fantaisie (Tableaux) for Piano Duet. He wrote to a friend that he was “working on a fantasy for two pianos consisting of a series of musical pictures,” and he headed the movements with quotations drawn from 19th-century writers: Mikhail Lermontov, Lord Byron, Fyodor Tyutchev, and Aleksey Khomyakov, respectively. The four pieces are not programmatic depictions of the literary texts, but they do reflect their general moods. Lermontov writes, “At dusk half-heard the dull wave laps beneath the gondola’s slow oar,” which inspired Rachmaninoff to compose a slow, moody Barcarolle. The spirit does not change greatly for the second movement, for which Byron writes of a nocturnal nightingale. Bells seem to inhabit the remaining two movements—doleful funeral bells in “The Tears,” bells tolling the background to an Easter chant in the finale. Rimsky-Korsakov protested that the last movement would sound better without the bell effects, but perhaps he was grumpy because the piece rather resembled the Russian Easter Festival Overture he himself had written 15 years earlier. Tchaikovsky, on the other hand, was an enthusiast, happily accepting the work’s dedication and vowing to attend its public premiere—a promise aborted by his sudden death.

When Rachmaninoff produced his Suite No. 2, in 1901, people started calling the Fantaisie (Tableaux) his Suite No. 1, which remains common usage today. The Second Suite has no literary connections, its four movements tracing standard musical genres. The exuberant Introduction (marked Alla marcia) is followed by a spirited waltz that works in a sly reference of the funeral chant Dies irae, which would resurface as a fingerprint in multiple ensuing compositions. The Romance is a love song, and the concluding Tarantella leaps forth with an unmistakably Russian accent, even though Rachmaninoff said he borrowed the theme from a collection of Italian songs. The composer’s advance beyond the idiom of the First Suite is unmistakable. He had been through a crucible in the intervening years. He had reacted to the failure of his First Symphony, in 1897, by going silent as a composer, and the Suite No. 2 was one of the first pieces he wrote when coaxed back into action through psychological therapy.

The Symphonic Dances take us to the end of the composer’s career. He had left Russia in 1917, when the nation collapsed into revolution, and lived the rest of his life elsewhere, principally in the United States though also passing extended periods of his later years at the lakeside villa he built in Switzerland. He toured busily as a soloist, gaining a reputation as one of his era’s supreme pianists, and he earned parallel acclaim as a composer and conductor. He spent the summer of 1940 at an estate near Huntington, Long Island, and it was there that his final work, the Symphonic Dances, came into being. He initially planned to name the piece Fantastic Dances, which would have underscored their vibrant personality. He also pondered titling the three movements “Noon,” “Twilight,” and “Midnight”—or, as his biographer Victor Seroff recounted the story, “Morning,” “Noon,” and “Evening,” meant as a metaphor for the three stages of human life. He scrapped those ideas in favor of the more objective name Symphonic Dances. The spirit of the dance does indeed inhabit this work, if in a sometimes mysterious or mournful way.

Having completed his working score, he developed it in two directions more-or-less simultaneously—into the colorful orchestral setting and into a version for two pianos. In September 1940, his friend Vladimir Horowitz traveled out to Long Island for a visit, and there he joined Rachmaninoff in performing the piano-duet version for a private audience. Among the attendees was the composer’s old friend Michel Fokine, the one-time choreographer of the Ballets Russes, who immediately signaled his interest in using it for a ballet; regrettably, Fokine died in 1942 before he could make good on his intention.

The opening march-like movement is powerful and assertive. Its coda presents a gorgeous theme. This melody has not been previously heard in this piece, but that doesn’t mean it was actually new; Rachmaninoff borrowed it from his First Symphony, which had remained unpublished and unperformed since its disastrous premiere so many years before, an autobiographical vindication of that early effort. A waltz follows, though more a doleful Slavic waltz than a lilting Viennese one. To conclude, Rachmaninoff offers a finale that includes quotations from Russian Orthodox liturgical chants and from his signature Dies irae. Both would seem odd allusions for what are, after all, identified as dances. But Rachmaninoff subsumes his borrowed material brilliantly into the general spirit of the Symphonic Dances, and near the end of the manuscript—the last pages he would ever complete—he inscribed, in Roman script, the word “Alliluya.”