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Modest Mussorgsky
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=== Maturity === In October 1856, the 17-year-old Mussorgsky met the 22-year-old [[Alexander Borodin]] while both men served at a military hospital in Saint Petersburg. The two were soon on good terms.<ref>Brown (2002: p. 8).</ref> Borodin later remembered, {{quote|His little uniform was spic and span, close-fitting, his feet turned outwards, his hair smoothed down and greased, his nails perfectly cut, his hands well groomed like a lord's. His manners were elegant, aristocratic: his speech likewise, delivered through somewhat clenched teeth, interspersed with French phrases, was rather precious. There was a touch—though very moderate—of [[fop]]pishness. His politeness and good manners were exceptional. The ladies made a fuss of him. He sat at the piano and, throwing up his hands coquettishly, played with extreme sweetness and grace (etc) extracts from ''[[Il trovatore|Trovatore]]'', ''[[La traviata|Traviata]]'', and so on, and around him buzzed in chorus: "Charmant, délicieux!" and suchlike. I met Modest Petrovich three or four times at Popov's in this way, both on duty and at the hospital."<ref>Gordeyva (1989: pp. 86–87).</ref>}} [[File:Alexander Dargomyzhsky.jpg|thumb|upright|Alexander Dargomyzhsky]] More portentous was Mussorgsky's introduction that winter to [[Alexander Dargomyzhsky]], at that time the most important Russian composer after [[Mikhail Glinka]]. Dargomyzhsky was impressed with Mussorgsky's pianism. As a result, Mussorgsky became a fixture at Dargomyzhsky's soirées. There, as critic [[Vladimir Stasov]] later recalled, he began "his true musical life."<ref>Brown, 10.</ref> Over the next two years at Dargomyzhsky's, Mussorgsky met several figures of importance in Russia's cultural life, among them Stasov, [[César Cui]] (a fellow officer), and [[Mily Balakirev]]. Balakirev had an especially strong impact. Within days he took it upon himself to help shape Mussorgsky's fate as a composer. He recalled to Stasov, "Because I am not a theorist, I could not teach him harmony (as, for instance [[Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov|Rimsky-Korsakov]] now teaches it) ... [but] I explained to him the form of compositions, and to do this we played through both [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]] symphonies [as piano duets] and much else ([[Robert Schumann|Schumann]], [[Franz Schubert|Schubert]], [[Mikhail Glinka|Glinka]], and others), analyzing the form."<ref>Brown, 12–13.</ref> Up to this point, Mussorgsky had known nothing but piano music; his knowledge of more radical recent music was virtually non-existent. Balakirev started filling these gaps in Mussorgsky's knowledge.<ref>Brown, 12.</ref> In 1858, within a few months of beginning his studies with Balakirev, Mussorgsky resigned his commission to devote himself entirely to music.<ref>Brown, 14.</ref> He also suffered a painful crisis at this time. This may have had a spiritual component (in a letter to Balakirev the young man referred to "mysticism and cynical thoughts about the Deity"), but its exact nature will probably never be known. In 1859, the 20-year-old gained valuable theatrical experience by assisting in a production of Glinka's opera ''[[A Life for the Tsar]]'' on the Glebovo estate of a former singer and her wealthy husband; Mussorgsky also met {{ill|Konstantin Lyadov|fr|Constantin Liadov|ru|Лядов, Константин Николаевич}} (father of [[Anatoly Lyadov]]) and enjoyed a formative visit to Moscow – after which he professed love of "everything Russian". Mussorgsky and his brother were also inspired by the [[Blackletter|gothic script]], they were using an "M" personal sign instead of [[:File:Coat of Arms of Aladin.jpg|family coat of arms]], very similar to [[Symbols of the Rurikids|the symbols of the early Rurikids]].<ref>{{cite web |title=His Sign |url=https://mus.academy/storage/magazine/articles/pdfs/compressed/FtyvjP6NYDWGsSQou50MVUnjfECueD8GugButhID.pdf |website=mus.academy |publisher=[[Music Academy (journal)|Music Academy]] |access-date=13 September 2020|language=ru}}</ref> [[File:Gustave Flaubert.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Gustave Flaubert. Mussorgsky started an opera based on his ''Salammbô'' but did not finish it.]] Despite this epiphany, Mussorgsky's music leaned more toward foreign models; a four-hand piano sonata that he produced in 1860 contains his only movement in [[sonata form]]. Nor is any 'nationalistic' impulse easily discernible in the incidental music for [[Vladislav Ozerov]]'s play ''Oedipus in Athens'', on which he worked between the ages of 19 and 22 (and then abandoned unfinished), or in the ''Intermezzo in Modo Classico'' for piano solo (revised and orchestrated in 1867). The latter was the only important piece he composed between December 1860 and August 1863: the reasons for this probably lie in the painful re-emergence of his subjective crisis in 1860 and the purely objective difficulties which resulted from the [[Emancipation reform of 1861|emancipation of the serfs]] the following year – as a result of which the family was deprived of half its estate, and Mussorgsky had to spend a good deal of time in Karevo unsuccessfully attempting to stave off their looming impoverishment. By this time, Mussorgsky had freed himself from the influence of Balakirev and was largely teaching himself. In 1863 he began an opera – ''[[Salammbô (Mussorgsky)|Salammbô]]'' – on which he worked between 1863 and 1866 before losing interest in the project. During this period, he returned to Saint Petersburg and supported himself as a low-grade civil servant while living in a six-man "commune". In a heady artistic and intellectual atmosphere, he read and discussed a wide range of modern artistic and scientific ideas – including those of the provocative writer [[Nikolay Chernyshevsky|Chernyshevsky]], known for the bold assertion that, in art, "form and content are opposites". Under such influences he came more and more to embrace the idea of artistic realism and all that it entailed, whether this concerned the responsibility to depict life "as it is truly lived"; the preoccupation with the lower strata of society; or the rejection of repeating, symmetrical musical forms as insufficiently true to the unrepeating, unpredictable course of "real life". {{Listen|type=music|filename=Modest Mussorgsky - night on bald mountain.ogg|title=Night on Bald Mountain|description=Rimsky-Korsakov's edited version of the piece, performed by the Skidmore College Orchestra}} "Real life" affected Mussorgsky painfully in 1865 when his mother died; at this point, the composer had his first serious bout of alcoholism, which forced him to leave the commune to stay with his brother. However, the 26-year-old was on the point of writing his first realistic songs (including "Hopak" and "Darling Savishna", both of them composed in 1866 and among his first "real" publications the following year). The year 1867 was also the one in which he finished the original orchestral version of his ''[[Night on Bald Mountain]]'' (which, Balakirev criticised and refused to conduct,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Emerson|first1=Caryl|title=The Life of Musorgsky|url=https://archive.org/details/lifeofmusorgsky00emer_mzm|url-access=registration|year=1999|publisher=Cambridge Univ. Press|location=Cambridge [u.a.]|isbn=978-0-521-48507-4|page=[https://archive.org/details/lifeofmusorgsky00emer_mzm/page/34 34]|edition=1. publ.}}</ref> with the result that it was never performed during Mussorgsky's lifetime<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kramer|first1=Jonathan D.|title=Listening to Music : The Essential Guide to the Classical Repertoire|year=1991|publisher=Random House UK Ltd (A Division of Random House Group)|location=London, United Kingdom|isbn=978-0-413-45331-0|page=484}}</ref>).
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