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Pictures at an Exhibition

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Grace notes imply movement, unborn chicks pecking at shell ... Woodwinds used to vocalize chicks. Bassoon bass to indicate clumsiness of the unborn chicks in shells ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pictures at an Exhibition


1
Pictures at an Exhibition
Modest Mussorgsky
  • 9 original pieces of artwork by Victor Hartmann
  • Mussorgsky, shocked by Hartmanns death, wrote
    piano piece as tribute
  • Ravel commissioned by Sergey Koussevitzky to
    orchestrate Mussorgskys piece

Maurice Ravel
2
Overall Transformations
  • From pictures to piano arrangement Hartmanns
    ideas are transformed from static to real-time
    presentation
  • From piano to orchestra arrangement Hartmanns
    ideas are more specifically presented through
    diverse instrument timbres
  • With every transformation, the ideas behind
    Hartmanns original artwork are reinterpreted
    with added dimensions

3
Hartmanns sketches Ballet of the Unborn Chicks
  • Originally commissioned as costume design
    sketches for 1871 production of the ballet
    Trillby
  • Eggshell costumes represent chicks in shells
    prior to hatching

4
Mussorgskys Ballet of the Unborn Chicks
  • Scherzino vivo, leggiero jokingly,
    lightheartedly, alive
  • Grace notes imply movement, unborn chicks pecking
    at shell
  • Trills (right) quick pulse (left)
    unsteadiness, wavering of limbs inside shells
  • High F grace-note consistently used chicks
    cheeping

5
Ravels Ballet of the Unborn Chicks
  • Woodwinds used to vocalize chicks
  • Bassoon bass to indicate clumsiness of the unborn
    chicks in shells
  • Trills given to strings for fluttery sound
  • Use of glockenspiel, cymbal splashes and triangle
    for ringy, whimsical effect
  • Piccolo cheeping sound (high F)

6
Hartmanns Pictures of Two Jews
  • Hartmann visited Jewish ghetto in Sandomir,
    Poland in 1868
  • Rich Jew
  • Confident
  • Poor Jew
  • Hopeless

7
Mussorgskys Samuel Goldenberg and SchmuĂżle
  • 2 pictures ? 1 piece examining relationship
  • Rich Jew speaks first
  • Low ? deep, powerful voice
  • Two hands in unison ? assertive
  • Slow tempo, pauses for breath ? composed
  • Poor Jew
  • High, with quick repeated notes ? weak,
    high-pitched whining
  • Triplet tremolo ? teeth chattering, body shaking

8
Mussorgsky's Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle
  • Rich Jew starts talking before poor Jew finishes
  • Gets more attention
  • Keeps going after poor Jew stops
  • Ends with both Jews in unison
  • Rich Jew sends poor Jew off with nothing

9
Ravels Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle
  • Brings out contrast between rich and poor Jew
  • Rich Jew
  • Strings (and woodwinds) playing tutti
  • Poor Jew
  • 1 muted piccolo trumpet over accompaniment
  • Ends with two voices in unison, but different
    timbres

10
Hartmanns Hut on Chicken Legs
  • Pencil sketch design for a clock 14th century
    Russian style
  • The clock sits on two hens feet. It is the House
    of Baba Yaga (a fairy-tale motif)
  • Very ornate with rope-like and textile
    ornamentation and patterns

11
The Story of Baba Yaga
  • Baba Yaga is a witch who lives in a house on
    chicken feet
  • She kills and eats little children crushing
    their bones in her giant mortar in which she
    flies around
  • Both Hartmann and Mussorgsky have an interest in
    old Russian culture

12
Mussorgsky's House on Chicken Legs
  • Music is not very representative of the clock
    design, other than quarter note 120, making
    each measure last exactly one secondlike a clock
  • Music is Mussorgsky's representation of the story
    of Baba Yagaher flying in a mortar chasing after
    little children

13
Mussorgsky continued
  • Starts with low rumble in the left hand
  • Pounding,with a repetitive descending line.like
    she is circling her prey
  • Trills and descending chromatic scalecreate
    tension
  • The tone is angry and frantic, created by a
    flurry of notes

14
Ravels Hut on Chicken Legs
  • Pretty loyal to Mussorgsky's version, but with
    more depth and texturehe has different voices to
    work with
  • blaring harsh brass, loud percussion, high flutes
    add contrast

15
Hartmanns The Great Gate of Kiev
  • Design competition for gate
  • Commemorate Tsar Alexander IIs escaped
    assassination
  • Competition ultimately called off
  • Hartmanns design
  • Archway on granite pillars
  • Russian state eagle at peak
  • Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the
    Lord

16
Mussorgsky's The Great Gate of Kiev
  • Exposition
  • Powerful opening processional tune
  • Repeated several times, emphasis on majesty
  • Religious undertones
  • Intertwining of Russian Orthodox Church choir
    music
  • As you are baptized in Christ

17
Mussorgsky's The Great Gate of Kiev
  • Recapitulation and close
  • Introduction of super triplets then regular
    triplets into piece
  • Return of open theme superimposed on top of
    developed religious theme
  • End with the opening of Gates of Kiev

18
Ravels The Great Gate of Kiev
  • Use of tutti brass in opening to encapsulate
    grandeur
  • Contrasted by soft woodwind choir interludes
  • Orchestral ornamentation
  • Ending written in 3/2, original in 2/2
  • Straight triplets only
  • Doubling of half notes in end
  • Representation of church bells
  • Pulsating, dissonant mass of sound
  • Restatement on end note for finality

19
In Conclusion
  • There are multiple transformations taking place.
    The Hartmann pictures Mussorgsky piano piece
    Ravel orchestration
  • Every time a piece of art is transformed, a new
    dimension is added.

20
Transformations
  • From Pictures to Music-- an element of time
  • From Piano to Orchestra -- an element of texture
    and color
  • Transformations tend to adapt the original work
    to the conventions of the timethus
    transformations help ensure the survival of the
    original work

21
Works Referenced
  • 1. Brown, David. Mussorgsky His Life and
    Works. 2002
  • University Press, Oxford.
  • 2. Calvocoresi, M.D. Modest Mussorgsky. 1956
    Salisbury Square, London.
  • 3. Eagen, Tim. Images for Pictures at an
    Exhibition
  • http//www.stmoroky.com/reviews/gallery/pictures/h
    artmann.htm. Jan. 2000.
  • 4. Mussorgsky, Modest. Pictures at an
    Exhibition piano score. 1983 Breitkopf
    Hartell Wiesbaden.
  • 5. Mussorgsky, Modest. Pictures at an
    Exhibition sound recording. 1997
    Longworth, Peter.
  • 6. Ravel, Maurice. Pictures at an Exhibition
    musical score. 1929 Boosey Hawkes,
    London.
  • 7. Ravel, Maurice. Pictures at an Exhibition
    sound recording. 1993 New York
    Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein.
  • 8. Russ, Michael. Musorgsky Pictures at an
    Exhibition. 1992 Cambridge University Press,
    Cambridge.
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