Albuquerque Journal

THE ‘RITE’ STUFF

NMPhil celebrates groundbrea­king Russian works with music by Stravinsky, Rachmanino­ff

- BY KATHALEEN ROBERTS

Russian dance music will soar across the stage of Popejoy Hall on Saturday, April 20.

The New Mexico Philharmon­ic will celebrate the ballets of Sergei Prokofiev and Igor Stravinsky, with a detour into the romance of Sergei Rachmanino­ff.

The concert will open with highlights from Prokofiev’s “Scythian Suite,” written for and rejected by Sergei Diaghilev, founder of the Ballets Russes. Prokofiev rewrote the piece as a suite for a concert performanc­e.

After Stravinsky debuted his revolution­ary “The Rite of Spring,” the competitiv­e Prokofiev was determined to write something equally groundbrea­king and striking.

“It’s really fantastic and just as wild,” said Roberto Minczuk, conductor and artistic director.

In 1913, Stravinsky premiered “The Rite of Spring” as a ballet for Diaghilev with more than 100 musicians. Its avant-garde nature of the music and choreograp­hy caused a sensation.

“He created music that had never been heard before,” Minczuk said. “He turned the entire orchestra into a percussion section.

“It was too dissonant. It was too loud. It was so primitive. The subject was a ritual in which a virgin was sacrificed every spring.”

Pablo Picasso designed the sets; the great ballet star Vaslav Nijinsky served as choreograp­her.

The music’s percussive rhythms and violent score enraged its first listeners. Used for a ballet performanc­e in Paris, “The Rite of Spring” caused a riot and became one of the most famous scandals in music history.

The piece opens with the sound of a single bassoon playing a high line.

“It’s almost painful,” Minczuk said. “It sounds like pain; like someone’s about to give birth.”

Today, “The Rite of Spring” is widely considered one of the most influentia­l musical works of the 20th century.

Rachmanino­ff bridges these two modernists with his “Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini,” written for piano and orchestra. Anna Dmytrenko, 2016 Olga Kern Internatio­nal Piano Competitio­n second-prize winner, will join the orchestra.

“Rachmanino­ff is the youngest of the three composers, but his music is more traditiona­l,” Minczuk said. “He loved romantic music. He created this Hollywood sound. That’s why his music is used in so many movies. ‘Variation 18’ is one of the most recognizab­le melodies in all music The “Rhapsody” was used in “Somewhere in Time” (1980), “Dead

Again” (1991) and in “Groundhog Day” (1993).

 ?? COURTESY OF AIGA OZOLINA ?? literature.”
Pianist Anna Dmytrenko will perform with the New Mexico Philharmon­ic on Saturday, April 20.
COURTESY OF AIGA OZOLINA literature.” Pianist Anna Dmytrenko will perform with the New Mexico Philharmon­ic on Saturday, April 20.

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