Details
Duration:
21'
Instrumentation:
voice 2perc, pf str (6.6.4.4.2)
Commissioned by:
Amsterdam Sinfonietta – with financial support from the Nestlé Composition Fund
Premiere:
19 Feb. 1996, Concertgebouw, Amsterdam – Nikita Storozjev, bass, Amsterdam Sinfonietta, Lev Marikz, conductor
In Theo's Own Words
“Songs and Dances of Death is a cycle of four songs for low voice and piano based on texts by Prince Golenistsjev-Koetoesov, one of Mussorgsky’s friends. The score was first published in 1882, by Bessel. The first three songs were written in the spring of 1875, the last song materialized in 1877. The lullaby is a dialogue between death and a mother, taking place above the cradle of her dying child at dawn. The mother fights for her child’s life, but death rocks the child into an eternal sleep. The poem is in atmosphere and content strongly related to the Erlkönig of Goethe, Franz Schubert’s ballad. The second song, Serenade, sketches how a sick woman is unable to sleep in the spring night. Under her window death brings a serenade, in which he sings of the woman’s beauty awaiting the eternal embrace. The third song tells of a drunken farmer who has stumbled in the obscurity of a snowstorm. In Death dances the Trepak with the farmer and sings in his ear: he invites the farmer to death. In the General Mussorgsky has used an existing theme from a Polish revolutionary march. After the battle, night falls, and death appears as the supreme general. He orders the fallen soldiers to join his army. One nevertheless will forget why and for what reason the soldiers have fought and death himself will be the only victor. Initially Mussorgsky planned to orchestrate this cycle himself, but it never happened. After his death both Glazunov and Rimsky-Korsakov made arrangements for voice and large orchestra. My instrumentation for voice and chamber orchestra, at the request of Nieuw Sinfonietta Amsterdam, is nearly the same as the 14th Symphony by Shostakovich. Both works have been written for a small string orchestra and percussion. I have strived in my arrangement in harmony to the poor, low and empty piano arrangement by Mussorgsky, and abandon any external show as much as possible. The percussion is only used at moments of abrupt changes in atmosphere.”
– Theo Verbey
In Concert
12 Apr 2012
Amsterdam Sinfonietta / Stotijn / Shostakovitch, Mussorgsky, Debussy
Enschede, Netherlands
10 Apr 2012
Amsterdam Sinfonietta / Stotijn / Shostakovitch, Mussorgsky, Debussy
Amsterdam, Netherlands
06 Apr 2012
Amsterdam Sinfonietta / Stotijn / Shostakovitch, Mussorgsky, Debussy
Amsterdam, Netherlands