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Nikolai Medtner

Nikolai Karlovich Medtner (Russian: Никола́й Ка́рлович Ме́тнер, Nikoláj Kárlovič Métner; 5 January 1880 [O.S. 24 December 1879] – 13 November 1951)[1] was a Russian composer and virtuoso pianist. After a period of comparative obscurity in the 25 years immediately after his death, he is now becoming recognized as one of the most significant Russian composers for the piano.

Nikolai Medtner
Medtner, 1910 postcard
Born5 January 1880 [O.S. 24 December 1879]
Moscow
Died(1951-11-13)13 November 1951
Golders Green, England
Occupations
  • Composer
  • Pianist
WorksList of compositions

A younger contemporary of Sergei Rachmaninoff and Alexander Scriabin, he wrote a substantial number of compositions, all of which include the piano. His works include 14 piano sonatas, three violin sonatas, three piano concerti, a piano quintet, two works for two pianos, many shorter piano pieces, a few shorter works for violin and piano, and 108 songs including two substantial works for vocalise. His 38 Skazki (generally known as "Fairy Tales" in English but more correctly translated as "Tales") for piano solo contain some of his most original music.

Biography

Nikolai Medtner was born in Moscow on 24 December 1879,[2] according to the Julian calendar; 5 January 1880 by the Gregorian calendar. He was the son of Karl Petrovich Medtner (1846–1921) and Alexandra Karlovna Goedicke (1843–1918), the fifth of their six children.[3]

Medtner first took piano lessons from his mother until the age of ten. He also had lessons from his mother's brother Fyodor Goedicke (the father of his more famous cousin Alexander Goedicke).[4][5] He then entered the Moscow Conservatory in 1891,[6] and graduated nine years later in 1900 at the age of 20, receiving the Anton Rubinstein prize, having studied under Pavel Pabst, Wassily Sapellnikoff, Vasily Safonov and Sergei Taneyev among others. Despite his conservative musical tastes, Medtner's compositions and his pianism were highly regarded by his contemporaries.

With the support of Taneyev, Medtner rejected a career as a performer and turned to composition, partly inspired by Ludwig van Beethoven's late piano sonatas and string quartets. His composing career began professionally in 1903, when he began publishing his first music, and it began receiving its first performances.[7] With the publication of his First Piano Sonata in F minor, he was noticed by Sergei Rachmaninoff,[1] who would remain a friend of Medtner's throughout his life, as well as a supporter of his composing. Among his students in this period was Alexander Vasilyevich Alexandrov.

During the years leading up to the 1917 Russian Revolution, Medtner lived at home with his parents. During this period he fell in love with Anna Mikhaylovna Bratenskaya (1877–1965), a respected violinist and the young wife of his older brother Emil. Later, when World War I broke out, Emil was interned in Germany where he had been studying. He generously gave Anna the freedom to marry his brother. Medtner and Anna were married in 1918.[8]

 
Medtner's home at Golders Green, London, where he lived from 1935 to 1951

Unlike Rachmaninoff, Medtner did not leave Russia until well after the Revolution. Rachmaninoff secured him a tour of the United States and Canada in 1924; his recitals were often all-Medtner evenings consisting of sonatas interspersed with songs and shorter pieces. He never adapted himself to the commercial aspects of touring and his concerts became infrequent. Esteemed in England, he and Anna settled in London in 1936, modestly teaching, playing and composing to a strict daily routine.

At the outbreak of the Second World War, Medtner's income from German publishers disappeared, and during this hardship ill-health became an increasing problem. His devoted pupil Edna Iles gave him shelter in Warwickshire where he completed his Third Piano Concerto, first performed in 1944. In 1949 a Medtner Society was founded in London by Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar Bahadur, the Maharajah of Mysore (the princely state in Karnataka, southern India). The Maharajah was an honorary Fellow of Trinity College of Music, London, in 1945 and was the first president of the Philharmonia Concert Society, London. He founded the Medtner Society to record all of Medtner's works. Medtner, already in declining health, recorded his three Piano Concertos and some sonatas, chamber music, numerous songs and shorter works before his death in London in 1951. In one of these recordings he partnered with Benno Moiseiwitsch in his two-piano work entitled "Russian Round-Dance", Op 58 No. 1; in another he accompanied Elisabeth Schwarzkopf in several of his lieder, including The Muse, a Pushkin setting from 1913. In gratitude to his patron, Medtner dedicated his Third Piano Concerto to the Maharajah of Mysore.

Medtner died at his home at Golders Green, London on 13 November 1951,[9][10] and is buried alongside his brother Emil in Hendon Cemetery.

Music

Piano sonatas

 
Tale from Op. 51, No. 3

Medtner composed 14 piano sonatas.

The First Piano Sonata in F minor, Op. 5, is a four-movement work written between 1901–3[11] (completed August 1903);[12] though it suggests the style of Scriabin or Rachmaninoff, it is nonetheless original. Medtner's craft gained subtlety and complexity in later years, but this work is already evidence of his mastery of musical structure. An opening Allegro, dramatic and imbued like much Russian music with a bell-like sonority, is separated by an Intermezzo from a Largo divoto that reaches a Maestoso climax before plunging into the headlong Allegro risoluto finale.

The Second, Third and Fourth piano sonatas are unrelated one-movement works. They were written during the period 1904–07 and published as the "Sonata-Triad", Op. 11. The first of the trio, in A, is an ecstatic work with attractive, lyrical themes, prefaced by a poem by Goethe.[13] The second, in D minor, is entitled "Sonate-Elegie". It opens slowly with one of Medtner's best-known themes and closes with an animated coda (Allegro molto doppio movimento, in D major) based on the second subject. The third, in C, returns to the lyricism of the first.

The Fifth and formerly the most popular of his sonatas is the G minor, Op. 22, written in 1909–1910. The piece alternates a slow introduction with a three-theme, propulsive sonata movement, one of whose themes was heard in the Introduction. The emotional center of this compact work (sixteen minutes in duration) is the Interludium: Andante lugubre: this comprises most of the development section and contains some of Medtner's loveliest harmonies. There are historic recordings by Moiseiwitch and Gilels.

The Sixth Sonata followed soon after, the first of two that comprise his Op. 25. It bears the title "Sonata-Skazka", usually translated as "Fairy Tale Sonata". This short work in C minor, written in 1910–11, is in three movements; the second and third are connected. The first movement is a compact sonata-form, the slow movement rondo-like (the similarity to one melody by Rachmaninoff is coincidental, as the latter was not written until some thirty years later). A minatory final march with variations ends with a Coda that revisits earlier material. This was the only Medtner sonata that Rachmaninoff performed.

Its companion in Op. 25 is entirely different. The Seventh Sonata in E minor, Night Wind, after Fyodor Tyutchev's 1832 poem "Of what do you howl, night wind...?" (Russian: О чем ты воешь, ветр ночной...?, tr. O chem ty voesh', vetr nochnoy...?), an excerpt of which provides an epigraph, was completed in 1911 and dedicated to Sergei Rachmaninoff, who immediately recognised its greatness. It is a vast one-movement work, lasting almost 35 minutes, in two major parts: an Introduction and Allegro sonata-form, followed by a Fantasy capped by a shadowy but active Coda, the latter entirely and ingeniously based on material presented in the Introduction. Under the title "Sonata" Medtner added a note: "The whole piece is in an epic spirit" (Вся пьеса в эпическом духе). Geoffrey Tozer said: "it has the reputation of being a fearsomely difficult work of extraordinary length, exhausting to play and to hear, but of magnificent quality and marvelous invention."

The Eighth "Sonata-Ballade" in F, Op. 27, began as a one-movement work, and was expanded into its present form over the period 1912–14. It comprises a Ballade, Introduction and Finale. The tonality and some of the material make passing reference to Chopin's Barcarolle. The first movement opens with one of Medtner's lovely pastoral melodies. The finale, like the Piano Quintet, has a thematic connection with his Pushkin setting The Muse. Medtner himself recorded this work.[14]

The one-movement Ninth Sonata in A minor, Op. 30, was published without a title but was known as the "War Sonata" among Medtner's friends; a footnote "during the war 1914–1917" appeared in the 1959 Collected Edition.

The Tenth "Sonata-reminiscenza" in A minor, Op. 38, No. 1, commences a set of eight pieces entitled "Forgotten Melodies (First Cycle)". Two further cycles followed, published as Op. 39 and 40. Both this and the following sonata were completed in 1920, the year before Medtner emigrated. This single movement is one of Medtner's most poetic creations; as the title indicates, its character is nostalgic and wistful. Other pieces in opus 38 contain variants of the Sonata's opening theme, such as the concluding "Alla Reminiscenza". This sonata is nowadays the most often performed.

The Eleventh, "Sonata Tragica" in C minor, Op. 39, No. 5, concludes "Forgotten Melodies (Second Cycle)". There is some repetition of themes in this set as well—the piece which precedes the Sonata, "Canzona Matinata", contains a theme which recurs in the Sonata, and according to Medtner's wishes both pieces are to be played attacca—without pause. This is also a single movement sonata-allegro form, but Allegro, dramatic and ferocious, with three themes of which one (the reminiscence from "Canzona Matinata") does not return. A violent coda concludes. This sonata is well served by recordings, including one by Medtner in 1947.[15]

The Twelfth Sonata, entitled "Romantica" in B minor, Op. 53, No. 1, was completed at the end of 1930, along with its twin. It was premièred in Glasgow in 1931. Returning to a four-movement form, it consists of a Romance (B minor), Scherzo (E minor), Meditazione (B minor), and Finale (B minor). The ending quotes his Sonata-Skazka, Op. 25, No. 1.

The Thirteenth Sonata, the "Minacciosa"[7] ("menacing") in F minor, Op. 53, No. 2, is another one-movement work. It is highly chromatic, and contains a fugue. Medtner described it as "my most contemporary composition, for it reflects the threatening atmosphere of contemporary events". Marc-André Hamelin described it as "the most concentrated 15 minutes of music one could ever hope to play or listen to". It was dedicated to the Canadian pianist and pupil of Scriabin, Alfred La Liberté, one of Medtner's most loyal supporters.

The last of the sonatas, "Sonata-Idyll" in G major, Op. 56, was completed in 1937. It consists of two movements: a short Allegretto cantabile Pastorale and a sonata allegro Allegro moderato e cantabile (sempre al rigore di tempo).

Piano concertos

Medtner composed three piano concertos:

  • Piano Concerto No. 1 in C minor, Op. 33 (1914–18). Dedicated to the composer's mother, this one-movement work opens with an exposition section setting out the material for the work, the opening pages of which erupt with fireworks from the piano against a surging orchestral statement of the subject. A set of variations make up the central development before the opening returns two thirds of the way through the piece. Eventually the coda sets out the romantic "big tune" before the final pages lead to an unexpectedly bittersweet ending.
  • Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 50 (1920–27). Dedicated to Rachmaninoff, who dedicated his own Fourth Concerto to Medtner. In three movements: Toccata, and a Romanza from which follows a Divertimento. The first movement is propulsive with kinetic energy, and there is much dialogue between piano and orchestra (a subsidiary theme resembles the Fairy Tale from the Op. 14 (1906–07) pair, the March of the Paladin). The Romanza and Divertimento are each in their own way varied in character, the Divertimento particularly rich in inspiration.
  • Piano Concerto No. 3 in E minor "Ballade", Op. 60, 1940–43. The factors which led to the creation of this work are closely connected to the circumstances of his final years. It is dedicated to his generous patron, the Maharajah of Mysore. Three connected movements: the first, Con moto largamente, sustained and profound, slowly developing motion and energy; the second an Interludium, Allegro, molto sostenuto, misterioso quotes the first movement and prefigures the finale; a lengthy Allegro molto. Svegliando, eroico vigorously concludes the work. Medtner recorded all three Concertos with the Philharmonia Orchestra in 1947.

Chamber music

Medtner's chamber music includes a violin sonata and a piano quintet:

  • Violin Sonata No. 3 in E minor, Op. 57 (1938). Recorded by David Oistrakh, among others. A vast work in four movements, a counterpart to his Night Wind Piano Sonata, No. 7. Introduzione – Andante meditamente, Scherzo – Allegro molto vivace, leggiero, Andante con moto, Finale – Allegro molto. A motto theme in the Introduction juxtaposes chords quietly but insistently, joined by a melody on the violin. The melody becomes the first theme of the – lengthy – sonata-form movement that follows, juxtaposed with other themes including a march in imitation. The folksy and syncopated Scherzo in A minor, thematically related to the opening movement's faster sections, is in Rondo-form. After a reminiscence of the motto, the Andante is a lament in F minor, extremely Russian in sentiment. The virtuoso Finale has thematic elements related to Russian Orthodox liturgical music (Medtner was born Lutheran but late in life converted to Orthodox).
  • Piano Quintet in C major, Op. posth. It was published after the composer's death. He worked on sketches of the work from 1903 until its completion in 1949. Medtner considered it the ultimate summary of his musical life. Due to Medtner's illness, the piano part in the work's premiere was taken by Colin Horsley. Medtner's recording of the work with the Aeolian Quartet, unpublished at the time, has been released on the St Laurent label.

Songs

Medtner published over 100 songs for voice and piano, with words from texts by Pushkin, Goethe, Mikhail Lermontov, Fyodor Tyutchev, and Afanasy Fet, among others.

Legacy

"I repeat what I said to you back in Russia: you are, in my opinion, the greatest composer of our time."
Sergei Rachmaninoff (1921)[16]

Edward Mitchell was an early champion of Medtner, and gave the first complete performance of Medtner's Sonata-Triad in the UK at the Aeolian Hall on 3 February 1922.[17] Geoffrey Tozer recorded almost all of Medtner's works for the piano including all the concertos and sonatas. Hamish Milne has recorded most of the solo piano works, while Geoffrey Douglas Madge, Konstantin Scherbakov and Yevgeny Sudbin have recorded the three piano concertos. Other pianists who championed Medtner's work and left behind recordings include Benno Moiseiwitsch, Sviatoslav Richter, Edna Iles, Emil Gilels, Yevgeny Svetlanov and Earl Wild. In modern times, pianists noted for their advocacy include Ekaterina Derzhavina, Marc-André Hamelin, who is responsible for the first-ever complete recording of all 14 piano sonatas, Malcolm Binns, Irina Mejoueva (ja), Nikolai Demidenko, Anna Zassimova, Boris Berezovsky, Paul Stewart, Dmitri Alexeev, Evgeny Kissin, Andrey Ponochevny, Konstantin Lifschitz, Daniil Trifonov, Gintaras Januševičius, and Alessandro Taverna.

Far fewer singers have tackled the songs. Medtner himself recorded a selection with the sopranos Oda Slobodskaya, Tatiana Makushina, Margaret Ritchie and Elisabeth Schwarzkopf. In recent times Susan Gritton and Ludmilla Andrew have recorded complete CDs with Geoffrey Tozer, as has Caroline Vitale with Peter Baur. The bass-baritone Vassily Savenko has recorded a considerable number of Medtner songs with Boris Berezovsky, Alexander Blok and Victor Yampolsky. A handful of other singers have included Medtner songs in compilations; particularly notable are historic recordings by Zara Dolukhanova and Irina Arkhipova. However, many songs are not available on CD, and some await their first recording. A substantial two-CD set, presenting fifty-four Medtner songs, accompanied by Iain Burnside, has appeared in 2018.

Medtner recorded piano rolls of some of his works for Welte-Mignon in 1923 and Duo-Art in 1925, before his later studio recordings for Capitol Records and other labels.

In 2017 the Ukrainian pianist Darya Dadykina and the Russian pianist Vasily Gvozdetsky founded the International Nikolai Medtner Society in Berlin to popularize his work and to advance cultural exchange in and around Europe. In October/November 2018 the society organized the 1st International Nikolai Medtner Music Festival in Berlin, which brings together artists and musicologists to perform and discuss his work (see the festival programme [1]).

An asteroid called 9329 Nikolaimedtner is named after the composer.[18]

Publications

Medtner's one book, The Muse and the Fashion, being a defence of the foundations of the Art of Music[19] (1935, reprinted 1957 and 1978) was a statement of his artistic credo and reaction to some of the trends of the time. He believed strongly that there were immutable laws to music, whose essence was in song. An English translation of the book was published in 1951 by Alfred Swan.[20]

Medtner also wrote a memoir titled "With S.V. Rachmaninoff" in 1933, in which he writes admiringly about his friend as a composer and as a pianist.

Print sources

After Medtner's death, the Mysore Foundation sponsored the publication of Medtner: A Memorial Volume, also titled Nicolas Medtner (1879–1951): A Tribute to his Art and Personality. It contains photographs and essays from his widow, friends, critics, musicians, composers, and admirers. A few of the contributors were: Alfred Swan, translator of Medtner's The Muse and the Fashion into English, Ivan Ilyin, Ernest Newman, Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji, Marcel Dupré, Russian music critic Leonid Sabeneev, Canadian pianist and close friend of the composer Alfred La Liberté, singers Margaret Ritchie, Tatania Makushina and Oda Slobodskaya, and Medtner himself via extracts from Muse and the Fashion. The editor of the volume was Richard Holt.

In 2004, Natalia Konsistorum published, in Russian, Nikolai Karlovich Medtner: Portrait of a Composer (ISBN 3-89487-500-3). The book is available in a German translation by Christoph Flamm and is notable for the two CDs it contains with original recordings of a variety of Medtner's works.

There have been numerous dissertations on Medtner's music. One of the most influential is Der russische Komponist Nikolaj Metner : Studien und Materialien by Christoph Flamm. Originally presented as the author's Ph.D thesis (Heidelberg, 1995), it was published by Kuhn (ISBN 3-928864-24-6, 1995, out of print). It includes letters, reviews and other documents in German, Russian, English and French, a bibliography and partial discography. Wendelin Bitzan's dissertation "The Sonata as an Ageless Principle" (Vienna, 2019, available in open access) was written under guidance from Flamm and presents in-depth analyses of Medtner's sonatas and their historical and aesthetic contexts.

In 2003, David J. Skvorak wrote a doctoral thesis Thematic unity in Nicolas Medtner's works for piano : Skazki, sonatas, and piano quintet at the University of Cincinnati, published by UMI. It contains theoretical analyses of several of Medtner's works.

Adaptations and citations

Bart Berman composed Variations and Fugue based on the theme in Medtner's Theme with Variations, Op. 55 in 2009.[21] The author Philip Pullman declared Medtner as his favourite composer during a short interview available on the BBC website in September 2011.[22]

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b Martyn 2001.
  2. ^ Montagu-Nathan 1969, p. 308.
  3. ^ Martyn 2016, p. 2-3..
  4. ^ Hyperion Records
  5. ^ Rimm 2003, p. 118.
  6. ^ Gerstlé 1924, p. 501.
  7. ^ a b Martyn 2001.
  8. ^ Magnus Ljunggren.The Russian Mephisto: A Study in the Life and Work of Emilii Medtner (1994)
  9. ^ Martyn 2016, p. 259.
  10. ^ Holt 1951, p. 149.
  11. ^ "Sonata in F minor, Op 5". Hyperion Records. Retrieved 2016-12-11.
  12. ^ Martyn 2016, p. 23.
  13. ^ Newman 1915, p. 11.
  14. ^ Medtner recorded it in 1947. See Op.27 discography at Medtner.org.uk.
  15. ^ See Op.39 discography @ Medtner.org.uk which notes a recording of Op.39 nos.3-5 performed by the composer.
  16. ^ Martyn 2016, p. 145.
  17. ^ Music News and Herald, 11 February 1922, p 182
  18. ^ "Small-Body Database Lookup". ssd.jpl.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2021-10-13.
  19. ^ Medtner, Nikolai (1978) [1935]. МУЗА И МОДА защита основ музыкального искусства (PDF) (in Russian). Paris.
  20. ^ Medtner, Nicolas (1951). The Muse and the Fashion, being a defence of the foundations of the Art of Music (PDF). Translated by Swan, Alfred J.
  21. ^ Gabriel, Hod (2009). [The Maestro Chapter 3]. no-R (in Hebrew). Israel. Archived from the original (article and video) on 2009-03-01. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  22. ^ "Five Minutes with: Philip Pullman". BBC News.

Sources

  • Gerstlé, Henry S. (1924). "The Piano Music of Nicolai Medtner". The Musical Quarterly. 10 (4): 500–510. doi:10.1093/mq/X.4.500. JSTOR 738471.
  • Holt, R. (1951). "Nicolas Medtner (1880-1951)" (PDF). The Gramophone. 29: 149–150.
  • Martyn, Barrie (2001). "Medtner, Nicolas". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  • Martyn, B. (2016). Nicolas Medtner: His Life and Music. Abingdon: Routledge. ISBN 978-1351556361.
  • Montagu-Nathan, M. (1969) [1918]. A History of Russian Music: Being an Account of the Rise and Progress of the Russian School of Composers, with a Survey of Their Lives and a Description of Their Works (2nd ed.). New York: Biblio & Tannen. ISBN 0819602515.
  • Newman, E. (1915). "Medtner". The Musical Times. 56 (863): 9–11. doi:10.2307/909070. JSTOR 909070.
  • Rimm, Robert (2003). The Composer-Pianists: Hamelin and The Eight. Amadeus Press. ISBN 978-1-57467-072-1.

Further reading

  • Chernaya-Oh, Ekaterina (2008). The Skazki (Fairy Tales) of Nikolai Medtner: The Evolution and Characteristics of the Genre with Compositional and Performance aspects of Selected Fairy Tales (PDF) (DMA thesis). University of North Texas. OCLC 429643041.
  • Holt, R. (1955). Nicolas Medtner, 1879-1951: A Tribute to his Art and Personality. London: Dennis Dobson.
  • Montagu-Nathan, M. (1917). Contemporary Russian Composers. London: C. Palmer & Hayward. ISBN 1404790411.
  • Nagahata, Hiroko (2012). Medtner's Fairy Tales: Texture and Subtlety (PDF) (DMA thesis). Michigan State University.
  • Sabeneev, Leonid; Pring, S. W. (1928). "Nikolai Medtner". The Musical Times. 69 (1021): 209–210. doi:10.2307/916075. JSTOR 9160753.

External links

Recordings

  • Medtner plays his Danza Festiva, Op. 38, No. 3 Piano Roll c. 1925, New York. (The Pianola Institute)
  • Nicolas Medtner: The complete solo recordings Vol.1 (Appian Publications and Recordings)
  • Nicolas Medtner: The complete solo recordings Vol.2 (Appian Publications and Recordings)
  • Nicolas Medtner: The complete solo recordings Vol.3 (Appian Publications and Recordings)
  • The Medtner Collection (St-Laurent Studio)

nikolai, medtner, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nikolai Medtner news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nikolai Karlovich Medtner Russian Nikola j Ka rlovich Me tner Nikolaj Karlovic Metner 5 January 1880 O S 24 December 1879 13 November 1951 1 was a Russian composer and virtuoso pianist After a period of comparative obscurity in the 25 years immediately after his death he is now becoming recognized as one of the most significant Russian composers for the piano Nikolai MedtnerMedtner 1910 postcardBorn5 January 1880 O S 24 December 1879 MoscowDied 1951 11 13 13 November 1951Golders Green EnglandOccupationsComposerPianistWorksList of compositionsA younger contemporary of Sergei Rachmaninoff and Alexander Scriabin he wrote a substantial number of compositions all of which include the piano His works include 14 piano sonatas three violin sonatas three piano concerti a piano quintet two works for two pianos many shorter piano pieces a few shorter works for violin and piano and 108 songs including two substantial works for vocalise His 38 Skazki generally known as Fairy Tales in English but more correctly translated as Tales for piano solo contain some of his most original music Contents 1 Biography 2 Music 2 1 Piano sonatas 2 2 Piano concertos 2 3 Chamber music 2 4 Songs 3 Legacy 4 Publications 5 Print sources 6 Adaptations and citations 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 7 3 Further reading 8 External links 8 1 RecordingsBiography EditNikolai Medtner was born in Moscow on 24 December 1879 2 according to the Julian calendar 5 January 1880 by the Gregorian calendar He was the son of Karl Petrovich Medtner 1846 1921 and Alexandra Karlovna Goedicke 1843 1918 the fifth of their six children 3 Medtner first took piano lessons from his mother until the age of ten He also had lessons from his mother s brother Fyodor Goedicke the father of his more famous cousin Alexander Goedicke 4 5 He then entered the Moscow Conservatory in 1891 6 and graduated nine years later in 1900 at the age of 20 receiving the Anton Rubinstein prize having studied under Pavel Pabst Wassily Sapellnikoff Vasily Safonov and Sergei Taneyev among others Despite his conservative musical tastes Medtner s compositions and his pianism were highly regarded by his contemporaries With the support of Taneyev Medtner rejected a career as a performer and turned to composition partly inspired by Ludwig van Beethoven s late piano sonatas and string quartets His composing career began professionally in 1903 when he began publishing his first music and it began receiving its first performances 7 With the publication of his First Piano Sonata in F minor he was noticed by Sergei Rachmaninoff 1 who would remain a friend of Medtner s throughout his life as well as a supporter of his composing Among his students in this period was Alexander Vasilyevich Alexandrov During the years leading up to the 1917 Russian Revolution Medtner lived at home with his parents During this period he fell in love with Anna Mikhaylovna Bratenskaya 1877 1965 a respected violinist and the young wife of his older brother Emil Later when World War I broke out Emil was interned in Germany where he had been studying He generously gave Anna the freedom to marry his brother Medtner and Anna were married in 1918 8 Medtner s home at Golders Green London where he lived from 1935 to 1951 Unlike Rachmaninoff Medtner did not leave Russia until well after the Revolution Rachmaninoff secured him a tour of the United States and Canada in 1924 his recitals were often all Medtner evenings consisting of sonatas interspersed with songs and shorter pieces He never adapted himself to the commercial aspects of touring and his concerts became infrequent Esteemed in England he and Anna settled in London in 1936 modestly teaching playing and composing to a strict daily routine At the outbreak of the Second World War Medtner s income from German publishers disappeared and during this hardship ill health became an increasing problem His devoted pupil Edna Iles gave him shelter in Warwickshire where he completed his Third Piano Concerto first performed in 1944 In 1949 a Medtner Society was founded in London by Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar Bahadur the Maharajah of Mysore the princely state in Karnataka southern India The Maharajah was an honorary Fellow of Trinity College of Music London in 1945 and was the first president of the Philharmonia Concert Society London He founded the Medtner Society to record all of Medtner s works Medtner already in declining health recorded his three Piano Concertos and some sonatas chamber music numerous songs and shorter works before his death in London in 1951 In one of these recordings he partnered with Benno Moiseiwitsch in his two piano work entitled Russian Round Dance Op 58 No 1 in another he accompanied Elisabeth Schwarzkopf in several of his lieder including The Muse a Pushkin setting from 1913 In gratitude to his patron Medtner dedicated his Third Piano Concerto to the Maharajah of Mysore Medtner died at his home at Golders Green London on 13 November 1951 9 10 and is buried alongside his brother Emil in Hendon Cemetery Music EditMain article List of compositions by Nikolai Medtner Piano sonatas Edit Tale from Op 51 No 3 Medtner composed 14 piano sonatas The First Piano Sonata in F minor Op 5 is a four movement work written between 1901 3 11 completed August 1903 12 though it suggests the style of Scriabin or Rachmaninoff it is nonetheless original Medtner s craft gained subtlety and complexity in later years but this work is already evidence of his mastery of musical structure An opening Allegro dramatic and imbued like much Russian music with a bell like sonority is separated by an Intermezzo from a Largo divoto that reaches a Maestoso climax before plunging into the headlong Allegro risoluto finale The Second Third and Fourth piano sonatas are unrelated one movement works They were written during the period 1904 07 and published as the Sonata Triad Op 11 The first of the trio in A is an ecstatic work with attractive lyrical themes prefaced by a poem by Goethe 13 The second in D minor is entitled Sonate Elegie It opens slowly with one of Medtner s best known themes and closes with an animated coda Allegro molto doppio movimento in D major based on the second subject The third in C returns to the lyricism of the first The Fifth and formerly the most popular of his sonatas is the G minor Op 22 written in 1909 1910 The piece alternates a slow introduction with a three theme propulsive sonata movement one of whose themes was heard in the Introduction The emotional center of this compact work sixteen minutes in duration is the Interludium Andante lugubre this comprises most of the development section and contains some of Medtner s loveliest harmonies There are historic recordings by Moiseiwitch and Gilels The Sixth Sonata followed soon after the first of two that comprise his Op 25 It bears the title Sonata Skazka usually translated as Fairy Tale Sonata This short work in C minor written in 1910 11 is in three movements the second and third are connected The first movement is a compact sonata form the slow movement rondo like the similarity to one melody by Rachmaninoff is coincidental as the latter was not written until some thirty years later A minatory final march with variations ends with a Coda that revisits earlier material This was the only Medtner sonata that Rachmaninoff performed Its companion in Op 25 is entirely different The Seventh Sonata in E minor Night Wind after Fyodor Tyutchev s 1832 poem Of what do you howl night wind Russian O chem ty voesh vetr nochnoj tr O chem ty voesh vetr nochnoy an excerpt of which provides an epigraph was completed in 1911 and dedicated to Sergei Rachmaninoff who immediately recognised its greatness It is a vast one movement work lasting almost 35 minutes in two major parts an Introduction and Allegro sonata form followed by a Fantasy capped by a shadowy but active Coda the latter entirely and ingeniously based on material presented in the Introduction Under the title Sonata Medtner added a note The whole piece is in an epic spirit Vsya pesa v epicheskom duhe Geoffrey Tozer said it has the reputation of being a fearsomely difficult work of extraordinary length exhausting to play and to hear but of magnificent quality and marvelous invention The Eighth Sonata Ballade in F Op 27 began as a one movement work and was expanded into its present form over the period 1912 14 It comprises a Ballade Introduction and Finale The tonality and some of the material make passing reference to Chopin s Barcarolle The first movement opens with one of Medtner s lovely pastoral melodies The finale like the Piano Quintet has a thematic connection with his Pushkin setting The Muse Medtner himself recorded this work 14 The one movement Ninth Sonata in A minor Op 30 was published without a title but was known as the War Sonata among Medtner s friends a footnote during the war 1914 1917 appeared in the 1959 Collected Edition The Tenth Sonata reminiscenza in A minor Op 38 No 1 commences a set of eight pieces entitled Forgotten Melodies First Cycle Two further cycles followed published as Op 39 and 40 Both this and the following sonata were completed in 1920 the year before Medtner emigrated This single movement is one of Medtner s most poetic creations as the title indicates its character is nostalgic and wistful Other pieces in opus 38 contain variants of the Sonata s opening theme such as the concluding Alla Reminiscenza This sonata is nowadays the most often performed The Eleventh Sonata Tragica in C minor Op 39 No 5 concludes Forgotten Melodies Second Cycle There is some repetition of themes in this set as well the piece which precedes the Sonata Canzona Matinata contains a theme which recurs in the Sonata and according to Medtner s wishes both pieces are to be played attacca without pause This is also a single movement sonata allegro form but Allegro dramatic and ferocious with three themes of which one the reminiscence from Canzona Matinata does not return A violent coda concludes This sonata is well served by recordings including one by Medtner in 1947 15 The Twelfth Sonata entitled Romantica in B minor Op 53 No 1 was completed at the end of 1930 along with its twin It was premiered in Glasgow in 1931 Returning to a four movement form it consists of a Romance B minor Scherzo E minor Meditazione B minor and Finale B minor The ending quotes his Sonata Skazka Op 25 No 1 The Thirteenth Sonata the Minacciosa 7 menacing in F minor Op 53 No 2 is another one movement work It is highly chromatic and contains a fugue Medtner described it as my most contemporary composition for it reflects the threatening atmosphere of contemporary events Marc Andre Hamelin described it as the most concentrated 15 minutes of music one could ever hope to play or listen to It was dedicated to the Canadian pianist and pupil of Scriabin Alfred La Liberte one of Medtner s most loyal supporters The last of the sonatas Sonata Idyll in G major Op 56 was completed in 1937 It consists of two movements a short Allegretto cantabile Pastorale and a sonata allegro Allegro moderato e cantabile sempre al rigore di tempo Piano concertos Edit Medtner composed three piano concertos Piano Concerto No 1 in C minor Op 33 1914 18 Dedicated to the composer s mother this one movement work opens with an exposition section setting out the material for the work the opening pages of which erupt with fireworks from the piano against a surging orchestral statement of the subject A set of variations make up the central development before the opening returns two thirds of the way through the piece Eventually the coda sets out the romantic big tune before the final pages lead to an unexpectedly bittersweet ending Piano Concerto No 2 in C minor Op 50 1920 27 Dedicated to Rachmaninoff who dedicated his own Fourth Concerto to Medtner In three movements Toccata and a Romanza from which follows a Divertimento The first movement is propulsive with kinetic energy and there is much dialogue between piano and orchestra a subsidiary theme resembles the Fairy Tale from the Op 14 1906 07 pair the March of the Paladin The Romanza and Divertimento are each in their own way varied in character the Divertimento particularly rich in inspiration Piano Concerto No 3 in E minor Ballade Op 60 1940 43 The factors which led to the creation of this work are closely connected to the circumstances of his final years It is dedicated to his generous patron the Maharajah of Mysore Three connected movements the first Con moto largamente sustained and profound slowly developing motion and energy the second an Interludium Allegro molto sostenuto misterioso quotes the first movement and prefigures the finale a lengthy Allegro molto Svegliando eroico vigorously concludes the work Medtner recorded all three Concertos with the Philharmonia Orchestra in 1947 Chamber music Edit Medtner s chamber music includes a violin sonata and a piano quintet Violin Sonata No 3 in E minor Op 57 1938 Recorded by David Oistrakh among others A vast work in four movements a counterpart to his Night Wind Piano Sonata No 7 Introduzione Andante meditamente Scherzo Allegro molto vivace leggiero Andante con moto Finale Allegro molto A motto theme in the Introduction juxtaposes chords quietly but insistently joined by a melody on the violin The melody becomes the first theme of the lengthy sonata form movement that follows juxtaposed with other themes including a march in imitation The folksy and syncopated Scherzo in A minor thematically related to the opening movement s faster sections is in Rondo form After a reminiscence of the motto the Andante is a lament in F minor extremely Russian in sentiment The virtuoso Finale has thematic elements related to Russian Orthodox liturgical music Medtner was born Lutheran but late in life converted to Orthodox Piano Quintet in C major Op posth It was published after the composer s death He worked on sketches of the work from 1903 until its completion in 1949 Medtner considered it the ultimate summary of his musical life Due to Medtner s illness the piano part in the work s premiere was taken by Colin Horsley Medtner s recording of the work with the Aeolian Quartet unpublished at the time has been released on the St Laurent label Songs Edit Medtner published over 100 songs for voice and piano with words from texts by Pushkin Goethe Mikhail Lermontov Fyodor Tyutchev and Afanasy Fet among others Legacy Edit I repeat what I said to you back in Russia you are in my opinion the greatest composer of our time Sergei Rachmaninoff 1921 16 Edward Mitchell was an early champion of Medtner and gave the first complete performance of Medtner s Sonata Triad in the UK at the Aeolian Hall on 3 February 1922 17 Geoffrey Tozer recorded almost all of Medtner s works for the piano including all the concertos and sonatas Hamish Milne has recorded most of the solo piano works while Geoffrey Douglas Madge Konstantin Scherbakov and Yevgeny Sudbin have recorded the three piano concertos Other pianists who championed Medtner s work and left behind recordings include Benno Moiseiwitsch Sviatoslav Richter Edna Iles Emil Gilels Yevgeny Svetlanov and Earl Wild In modern times pianists noted for their advocacy include Ekaterina Derzhavina Marc Andre Hamelin who is responsible for the first ever complete recording of all 14 piano sonatas Malcolm Binns Irina Mejoueva ja Nikolai Demidenko Anna Zassimova Boris Berezovsky Paul Stewart Dmitri Alexeev Evgeny Kissin Andrey Ponochevny Konstantin Lifschitz Daniil Trifonov Gintaras Janusevicius and Alessandro Taverna Far fewer singers have tackled the songs Medtner himself recorded a selection with the sopranos Oda Slobodskaya Tatiana Makushina Margaret Ritchie and Elisabeth Schwarzkopf In recent times Susan Gritton and Ludmilla Andrew have recorded complete CDs with Geoffrey Tozer as has Caroline Vitale with Peter Baur The bass baritone Vassily Savenko has recorded a considerable number of Medtner songs with Boris Berezovsky Alexander Blok and Victor Yampolsky A handful of other singers have included Medtner songs in compilations particularly notable are historic recordings by Zara Dolukhanova and Irina Arkhipova However many songs are not available on CD and some await their first recording A substantial two CD set presenting fifty four Medtner songs accompanied by Iain Burnside has appeared in 2018 Medtner recorded piano rolls of some of his works for Welte Mignon in 1923 and Duo Art in 1925 before his later studio recordings for Capitol Records and other labels In 2017 the Ukrainian pianist Darya Dadykina and the Russian pianist Vasily Gvozdetsky founded the International Nikolai Medtner Society in Berlin to popularize his work and to advance cultural exchange in and around Europe In October November 2018 the society organized the 1st International Nikolai Medtner Music Festival in Berlin which brings together artists and musicologists to perform and discuss his work see the festival programme 1 An asteroid called 9329 Nikolaimedtner is named after the composer 18 Publications EditMedtner s one book The Muse and the Fashion being a defence of the foundations of the Art of Music 19 1935 reprinted 1957 and 1978 was a statement of his artistic credo and reaction to some of the trends of the time He believed strongly that there were immutable laws to music whose essence was in song An English translation of the book was published in 1951 by Alfred Swan 20 Medtner also wrote a memoir titled With S V Rachmaninoff in 1933 in which he writes admiringly about his friend as a composer and as a pianist Print sources EditAfter Medtner s death the Mysore Foundation sponsored the publication of Medtner A Memorial Volume also titled Nicolas Medtner 1879 1951 A Tribute to his Art and Personality It contains photographs and essays from his widow friends critics musicians composers and admirers A few of the contributors were Alfred Swan translator of Medtner s The Muse and the Fashion into English Ivan Ilyin Ernest Newman Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji Marcel Dupre Russian music critic Leonid Sabeneev Canadian pianist and close friend of the composer Alfred La Liberte singers Margaret Ritchie Tatania Makushina and Oda Slobodskaya and Medtner himself via extracts from Muse and the Fashion The editor of the volume was Richard Holt In 2004 Natalia Konsistorum published in Russian Nikolai Karlovich Medtner Portrait of a Composer ISBN 3 89487 500 3 The book is available in a German translation by Christoph Flamm and is notable for the two CDs it contains with original recordings of a variety of Medtner s works There have been numerous dissertations on Medtner s music One of the most influential is Der russische Komponist Nikolaj Metner Studien und Materialien by Christoph Flamm Originally presented as the author s Ph D thesis Heidelberg 1995 it was published by Kuhn ISBN 3 928864 24 6 1995 out of print It includes letters reviews and other documents in German Russian English and French a bibliography and partial discography Wendelin Bitzan s dissertation The Sonata as an Ageless Principle Vienna 2019 available in open access was written under guidance from Flamm and presents in depth analyses of Medtner s sonatas and their historical and aesthetic contexts In 2003 David J Skvorak wrote a doctoral thesis Thematic unity in Nicolas Medtner s works for piano Skazki sonatas and piano quintet at the University of Cincinnati published by UMI It contains theoretical analyses of several of Medtner s works Adaptations and citations EditBart Berman composed Variations and Fugue based on the theme in Medtner s Theme with Variations Op 55 in 2009 21 The author Philip Pullman declared Medtner as his favourite composer during a short interview available on the BBC website in September 2011 22 References EditCitations Edit a b Martyn 2001 Montagu Nathan 1969 p 308 Martyn 2016 p 2 3 Hyperion Records Rimm 2003 p 118 Gerstle 1924 p 501 a b Martyn 2001 Magnus Ljunggren The Russian Mephisto A Study in the Life and Work of Emilii Medtner 1994 Martyn 2016 p 259 Holt 1951 p 149 Sonata in F minor Op 5 Hyperion Records Retrieved 2016 12 11 Martyn 2016 p 23 Newman 1915 p 11 Medtner recorded it in 1947 See Op 27 discography at Medtner org uk See Op 39 discography Medtner org uk which notes a recording of Op 39 nos 3 5 performed by the composer Martyn 2016 p 145 Music News and Herald 11 February 1922 p 182 Small Body Database Lookup ssd jpl nasa gov Retrieved 2021 10 13 Medtner Nikolai 1978 1935 MUZA I MODA zashita osnov muzykalnogo iskusstva PDF in Russian Paris Medtner Nicolas 1951 The Muse and the Fashion being a defence of the foundations of the Art of Music PDF Translated by Swan Alfred J Gabriel Hod 2009 המאסטרו פרק 3 The Maestro Chapter 3 no R in Hebrew Israel Archived from the original article and video on 2009 03 01 Retrieved 2011 08 18 Five Minutes with Philip Pullman BBC News Sources Edit Gerstle Henry S 1924 The Piano Music of Nicolai Medtner The Musical Quarterly 10 4 500 510 doi 10 1093 mq X 4 500 JSTOR 738471 Holt R 1951 Nicolas Medtner 1880 1951 PDF The Gramophone 29 149 150 Martyn Barrie 2001 Medtner Nicolas Grove Music Online 8th ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 Martyn B 2016 Nicolas Medtner His Life and Music Abingdon Routledge ISBN 978 1351556361 Montagu Nathan M 1969 1918 A History of Russian Music Being an Account of the Rise and Progress of the Russian School of Composers with a Survey of Their Lives and a Description of Their Works 2nd ed New York Biblio amp Tannen ISBN 0819602515 Newman E 1915 Medtner The Musical Times 56 863 9 11 doi 10 2307 909070 JSTOR 909070 Rimm Robert 2003 The Composer Pianists Hamelin and The Eight Amadeus Press ISBN 978 1 57467 072 1 Further reading Edit Chernaya Oh Ekaterina 2008 The Skazki Fairy Tales of Nikolai Medtner The Evolution and Characteristics of the Genre with Compositional and Performance aspects of Selected Fairy Tales PDF DMA thesis University of North Texas OCLC 429643041 Holt R 1955 Nicolas Medtner 1879 1951 A Tribute to his Art and Personality London Dennis Dobson Montagu Nathan M 1917 Contemporary Russian Composers London C Palmer amp Hayward ISBN 1404790411 Nagahata Hiroko 2012 Medtner s Fairy Tales Texture and Subtlety PDF DMA thesis Michigan State University Sabeneev Leonid Pring S W 1928 Nikolai Medtner The Musical Times 69 1021 209 210 doi 10 2307 916075 JSTOR 9160753 External links EditWorks by or about Nikolai Medtner at Internet Archive Nicolas Medtner Worklist Discography Publications and News Nikolay Karlovich Medtner in Russian Website of the International Nikolai Medtner Society Free scores by Nikolai Medtner at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Finding aid to the Nikolai Karlovich Medtner Papers at the Library of Congress PDF BBC Radio Composer of the Week Rachmaninov and Medtner 26 October 2012 MP3 download UK only Recordings Edit Medtner plays his Danza Festiva Op 38 No 3 Piano Roll c 1925 New York The Pianola Institute Nicolas Medtner The complete solo recordings Vol 1 Appian Publications and Recordings Nicolas Medtner The complete solo recordings Vol 2 Appian Publications and Recordings Nicolas Medtner The complete solo recordings Vol 3 Appian Publications and Recordings The Medtner Collection St Laurent Studio Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nikolai Medtner amp oldid 1145526858, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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