In the Steppes of Central Asia - A. Borodin (1833-1887)
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- Опубликовано: 23 сен 2024
- The SCM Symphony Orchestra conducted by Associate Professor Roger Benedict perform Alexander Borodin's In the Steppes of Central Asia.
Alexander Borodin was a major Russian composer of the nineteenth century. A doctor by profession, Borodin maintained a strong passion for music throughout his life. As part of ‘The Five,’ he promoted Russian music alongside Balakirev, Cui, Mussorgsky and Rimsky-Korsakov. Soon after the group dispersed in the 1870s, Borodin composed the symphonic poem In the Steppes of Central Asia. Originally written as a set of 12 musical tableaus to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Tsar Alexander II of Russia’s reign, it is primarily concerned with the encounter between Russia and Central Asia - a fitting topic given the Tsar’s expansion into the territory. This is reflected by the interaction of two simple themes, which gradually overlap throughout the work. Through this deceptively simple material, Borodin crafts a sophisticated orchestral work that exemplifies his Russian style.
The symphonic poem is set in the wide expanse of the titular steppes, conveyed through sustained high string harmonics. The desert contains the Russian army, represented by a quintessentially Russian melody played by the clarinet and the French horn. The low strings enter with pizzicato octaves that depict their horses and camels travelling through the desert. The army is escorting a caravan of Central Asians through the desert, represented by a long, winding Cor Anglais melody filled with minor second turns and ornamentation: stereotypical markers for ‘oriental’ music. As this music ceases, the Russian melody repeats itself and culminates in a full orchestral statement of the Russian army’s might. The oriental melody returns on the strings before magically appearing alongside the Russian melody, now played by the oboe. This contrapuntal moment is the climax of the symphonic poem, as the groups’ melodies seamlessly flow together. The music fades, leaving only the lingering Russian melody as the work ends where it began: in the steppes of Central Asia.
Program notes © Rafael Echevarria
13 March, 2020
Verbrugghen Hall
Beautiful!
The French horns are wonderful.
Bonjour quel est la structure musicale ?
De cette musique s'il vous plaît
Ptn j’allais demander pareil en commentaire 😭
ya des 4ème7 ??
y'a des 4D ???
Uiii
presque
C quoi la structure musicale de cette musique svp urgent
Mdr je cherche aussi
@@Sach_a je l’ai stv
@@vtrix9445 je veut bien stp
@@Sach_a je te l’envoie ce soir je peux pas la dsl c pas grv si c des phrases ?
@@vtrix9445 nn tkt
y a des 4e2 ici ?
Y’a des gas de Fenelon
oui
mdr slt
0:35
6:12
Il y a des 4F ici ? 😂
4C
oums lala ééé
Not bad for someone who wrote music in his spare time
les 4e 6 de stan on est la😂
Truc -Bidule carrement
@@newscherry7849 c quoi ton nom 😅
@@newscherry7849 4eme8 a Stan 😂😂c quoi la structure musicale stp ?
Yo les 4•3
c’est clément ?
@@marielpb83 😉
@@lunagorjux1287 vas dormir !!
Les bests sont la
@@zouma3103 👋😁