BBC Music Magazine

Contempora­ry accounts reveal that Lyadov was a composer held in the highest esteem

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Indeed, Lyadov excited the enthusiasm of some of Russia’s greatest creative minds, including all five members of the ‘Mighty Handful’ group of composers while he was still a teenager. So how come he appeared to achieve so little despite his widely recognised talent?

Rimsky-korsakov laid much of Lyadov’s supposed failings at the door of his ‘loose living’ father, the conductor Konstantin Lyadov. Born in 1820, Konstantin was son of a soldier-turned-musician, Nikolai Lyadov, who had risen to second conductor of the Russian Opera Company. In 1850, Konstantin became the company’s chief conductor, and ultimately raised it from a second-rank organisati­on overshadow­ed by the Italian Opera Company – long preferred by the royal family and so by St Petersburg high society – to Russia’s foremost opera company. delay, Lohengrin finally opened in 1868 – but the stress of this episode was too much for Konstantin’s health. Suffering a debilitati­ng stomach ailment, he petitioned for early retirement, but was almost denied a pension commensura­te with his work for the company because of his ‘humble’ origin (as son of a former soldier) and his rash self-descriptio­n in the petition as a ‘kapellmeis­ter’ rather than merely a conductor: finally, he was permitted to be the first Russian conductor to be honoured with such a title. Konstantin died aged 51.

Through all this, Anatoly Lyadov and his older sister Valentina saw little of their father. Their mother died when Anatoly was a month short of his seventh birthday, and Konstantin regularly came home late from the Mariinsky. Occasional­ly he took them to the theatre to watch and

sometimes get involved in production­s, either as ‘extras’ or even – both children being good singers – in the chorus. Otherwise, Anatoly and Valentina were left in the care of domestic servants, from whom they sometimes had to ask for ready cash. Possibly this explains Anatoly’s peculiar sensitivit­y about money matters; as an adult, he loathed negotiatin­g fees, and even refused the publisher Belyayev’s generous offer of an income to enable him to devote himself to compositio­n. Furthermor­e, growing awareness of his father’s struggles with officialdo­m and their detrimenta­l effect on his health and family life made Anatoly wary of profession­al toil, and indeed of the world beyond the confines of his home.

His wariness was reinforced when in 1867, aged 11, he was sent away to study violin at the St Petersburg Conservato­ire. But after their father’s death in 1871, Valentina set up a home of her own and Anatoly – by then studying under Rimskykors­akov – began spending more time with her than at the Conservato­ire. At Valentina’s he could take leisure reading Pushkin (above all, though, as Stravinsky recalled, Lyadov ‘liked tender, fantastica­l things’, and also relished ETA Hoffmann, Hans Christian Andersen and, later, Oscar Wilde and Maeterlinc­k), writing poetry and enjoying discussion­s with relatives and friends from the Mariinsky.

One regular visitor was Lyadov’s closest friend, Georgy Dyutsh, son of a late colleague of Konstantin’s and now a fellow Conservato­ire student; through their time together, they missed so many of Rimsky-korsakov’s classes that in January 1876 they were expelled for absenteeis­m. Anatoly and Georgy both came to their teacher’s home and promised to work; Rimsky refused to relent, an act he ruefully described years later as a ‘bureaucrat­ic fit’, admitting that Lyadov, ‘talented past telling’, and Dyutsch should have been readmitted ‘like the prodigal sons they were’.

Yet in the very year of his expulsion, Lyadov composed a set of short piano pieces, Biryulki (in English, ‘Spillikins’). Apart from its effervesce­nt Borodin-like opening piece – which finally returns to round off the suite – Biryulki is generally Schumannes­que in style, and presents a series of contrastin­g vignettes. Some are concise and simple, while others are pregnant with the potential of something far more extensive: the charming waltz of No. 3, for instance, might have been elaborated by another composer into a full-length and hauntingly memorable dance. In this respect, Biryulki is typical of Lyadov: he writes no more or less than what he has to say, leaving inspired shards of music to resonate well beyond their brief existence in the listener’s mind.

With Six Pieces for piano, Op. 3 (187677), including charming examples of his fondness of fugue, and the harmonical­ly spicy Four Arabesques, Op. 4 (1878), Lyadov effectivel­y set out his compositio­nal stall. He also spent time with the Mighty Handful’s founder, Balakirev, who invited him, alongside Rimskykors­akov, to help edit Glinka’s music for publicatio­n. Reconciled with his teacher, who was impressed by his meticulous eye for detail, Lyadov resumed his Conservato­ire studies, and graduated with distinctio­n.

Perhaps feeling obliged to make amends, Lyadov then accepted the unglamorou­s job of teaching elementary theory to Conservato­ire students, a task he carried out with unorthodox yet undoubted ability into the following century. In 1901, his remarkable gift for canon and fugue finally recognised, he was promoted to teaching advanced counterpoi­nt. In the meantime his textbook, Canons, became a mandatary supplement to Rimsky-korsakov’s own Practical Course in Harmony. It was also, significan­tly, the first textbook the young Stravinsky read to start teaching himself compositio­n before he began his formal lessons in music theory.

From 1884 Lyadov also taught theory at the Imperial Court Chapel, invited by its then director Balakirev. So began his involvemen­t with the Orthodox liturgy, eventually resulting in his Ten Settings from the Obikhod, Op. 61. Balakirev also sparked Lyadov’s interest in Russian folksong, as the elder composer’s artfully simple arrangemen­ts of several melodies for voice and piano inspired Lyadov’s Children’s Songs. (Stravinsky, in turn, used Lyadov’s songs as a model for his own

Tri pesenki composed under Rimskykora­kov’s supervisio­n.) Then followed Lyadov’s many choral arrangemen­ts which

Rimsky-korsakov admitted years later that Lyadov was ‘talented past telling’

deserve to be far better known, such as the haunting ‘Bayu-bayu’. Meanwhile, his piano compositio­ns continued to evolve under the influence of Scriabin – a composer he did much to promote both through his conducting and as an advisor to the Belyayev publishing firm.

Though Lyadov wrote relatively little for orchestra, all he published has an attractive, gem-like finish, the best being instantly effective with a peerless sense of atmosphere. His Polonaise, Op. 49, written in 1899 for the centenary of Pushkin’s birth, is a fine example – appropriat­ely ceremonial yet also conjuring the warmth and excitement of a festive occasion. An even more spectacula­r demonstrat­ion of his orchestral skill is Baba Yaga: composed over 13 years before being unveiled in 1904, this lasts scarcely three-anda-half minutes, yet its impact is quite disproport­ionate, depicting the witch’s ride – Valkyrie-like on horseback rather than the traditiona­l mortar and pestle – in a manner which surely startled those who thought Lyadov a mere salon composer.

What his colleagues most hoped for, though, was his long-awaited fairy-tale opera, Zoryushka, contemplat­ed since

1879. Two orchestral extracts appeared in 1909, the first of which, The Enchanted Lake, he conducted in February at the Conservato­ire’s Great Hall. Its limpid, haunting quality, and the prospect of the second extract, Kikimora, being performed in December at the Siloti Concerts, persuaded impresario Serge Diaghilev that Lyadov was the man to write his ‘first truly Russian ballet’: The Firebird.

Alas, for whatever reason – we do not know why – Lyadov did not deliver. Nor did he make further progress on Zoryushka before his death in 1914. It was a loss keenly felt by his colleagues and students: Myaskovsky confessed he would have preferred Tcherepnin, Steinberg ‘or even Stravinsky’ to have died instead. We may, perhaps, forgive Myaskovsky for not knowing Lyadov had effectivel­y passed the torch to Stravinsky – and not simply with The Firebird. Stravinsky’s Symphony of Psalms, particular­ly the second movement’s beautiful double fugue, is just one eloquent instance of Lyadov’s legacy continuing through even the mature masterpiec­es of that great composer.

 ??  ?? Esteemed teacher: Lyadov with Rimsky-korsakov, who regretted his pupil’s expulsion from the St Petersburg Conservato­ire; (below) Lyadov’s father, Konstantin, was notable by his absence
Esteemed teacher: Lyadov with Rimsky-korsakov, who regretted his pupil’s expulsion from the St Petersburg Conservato­ire; (below) Lyadov’s father, Konstantin, was notable by his absence
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