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Russian Piano Music Series, Vol. 2 - R...

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Rebikov: Piano Works

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Rebikov: Piano Works

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Rebikov: Valse Melancolique Op. 2, No....

Les étrennes de Noël

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Boîte à Musique (Music Box)

Christmas Tree (Full Instrumental)

Rebikov: Piano Works

Biography

Vladimir Rebikov is a founding figure among modern Russian musicians and a pioneer in the use of the whole-tone scale. He studied piano with his mother, and completed a course in linguistics before entering the Moscow Conservatory; there he studied music theory with Nikolai Klenovsky, a student of Tchaikovsky. Despite Rebikov's reputation as a composer of piano miniatures, musical theater would prove the all-consuming passion of his life; in fact, his compositional career began with his opera V grosu, Op. 5 (In the Storm), in Odessa in 1894. In Odessa, Rebikov began to teach, and he is known to have taught at the Philharmonic School in Moscow, Kiev, and Kishinev by 1898. In 1898 - 1901 he traveled to Vienna and Berlin, bringing him into contact with music outside of Moscow, resulting in a crisis of confidence in his own work. Rebikov felt that his music leaned far too heavily on salon tastes and the short pieces of Grieg and Tchaikovsky. Determined to make his own way, Rebikov willfully ignored the music of his contemporaries and strove to re-invent the whole idea of musical theater. Rebikov's first major stride towards this end was Mélomimiques, Op. 10 (1898), a series of short pieces scored for piano. "Melomimics" are somewhat similar to eurhythmy, except that they have nothing to do with dance. Rebikov prefaces each mini-drama with a brief scenario that is silently "enacted" to the music itself. Within the melomimic suite Les Rêves (Dreams, 1899) Rebikov includes the piece "Les demons s'amusent," entirely written in the whole-tone scale. Throughout the next several years Rebikov would expand his harmonic palette to include seventh and ninth chords, unresolved cadences, polytonality, and harmony based upon open fourths and fifths. Yet Rebikov never strayed from within the boundaries of tonality, and did not seek to experiment with atonality. Rebikov's new style did win some recognition, including a vote of confidence from Grieg, although most of this encouragement came from outside Russia, where Rebikov's work was received with confusion and contempt. In Moscow from 1901 - 1904 he ran the first composer controlled record label, issuing primitive phonograph records of singers from the Moscow Opera performing his own works and those of others. Rebikov's best-known work in Russia, The Christmas Tree (1901), makes use of another new technique, "melodeclamation," a type of rhythmic vocal writing that bears a resemblance to Sprechstimme. Rebikov settled in Yalta in 1909, and in his last years attempted to expand his dramatic concepts out of the melomimic miniatures and into something more substantive. His final theatrical work, Dvorianskoe gnezdo, Op. 55 (The Nobleman's Nest, 1916), is a hyper-realistic setting of a Turgenev play where the vocal parts are speech-based and the music a mere underpinning to support the action. Characters break into song only as relevant to the story, as in the manner of a movie musical. Every aspect of the production, including psychological profiling of characters and set design, is contained in the score. The Nobleman's Nest was a brave experiment, but a failed one, as Rebikov fashions the music so scantily that it is unable to stand on its own merits. Rebikov was already a forgotten figure by the time of his death at age 54. He was bitter and disillusioned, convinced wrongly that composers such as Debussy, Scriabin, and Stravinsky had made their way into public prominence through stealing his ideas. Ironically Rebikov is best known by way of his insubstantial music in salon genres. Rebikov's role as an important early instigator of twentieth-century techniques deserves to be more widely recognized.