1 / 24

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Trevyn Mace. Biography. Tchaikovsky was born in Votkinsk , Russia on May 7 th , 1840 . Profound interest in music from a very young age. Studied at St. Petersburg Conservatory. Taught at Moscow Conservatory. Born into a middle-class family.

giona
Download Presentation

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PyotrIlyich Tchaikovsky Trevyn Mace

  2. Biography • Tchaikovsky was born in Votkinsk, Russia on May 7th, 1840. • Profound interest in music from a very young age. • Studied at St. Petersburg Conservatory. • Taught at Moscow Conservatory. • Born into a middle-class family. • A great amount of depression in his life.

  3. The Early Years • Being in a middle-class family, Tchaikovsky could not pursue his musical interests at a young age. • As the time passed, he got more serious about music and composition. • He loved to learn as much as he could about music. • Eventually he went on to study music and to assure his future in that field. • Though discouraged at times, he always remained faithful to his music.

  4. His Mental State • Tchaikovsky suffered greatly for his music and the stress from it induced great depression at times. • He was indeed a perfectionist and would break down when something was not perfect. • Undertones in his music reveals a depressiveness in him that influenced his actions. • In fact, some believe his death was suicide, rather than cholera. • He was often criticized for his music, which didn’t help his mental state.

  5. His Music • His first ever symphony, Winter Daydreams • He struggled greatly with insomnia and depression at this point in his life because of the stress of composing. • Romeo and Juliet • 1812 Overture • Marche Slave • The Queen of Spades • Eugene Onegin

  6. The History of His Music • Tchaikovsky is renowned for his three greatest works, • Swan Lake • The Sleeping Beauty • The Nutcracker

  7. Swan Lake

  8. The Sleeping Beauty

  9. The Nutcracker

  10. Swan Lake • This ballet was commissioned in 1875 by the Directorate of the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow. • The original name was to be The Lake of Swans. • Tchaikovsky started to lose touch with his music and become disappointed quickly by this composition. • It was composed between 1875 and 1876. • The ballet premiered at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow on March 4th of 1877.

  11. The Sleeping Beauty • This ballet was composed from October 1888 to around June 1889 at Frolovskoe. • Some of the scenes were composed at Tiflis as well. • Tchaikovsky focused greatly on The Sleeping Beauty and completed huge parts of the composition in consecutive periods of time. • He was completed absorbed in his work at the time and was immensely pleased with how the work was being produced. • The first production of The Sleeping Beauty was performed at the Mariinskii Theatre in Saint Petersburg on January 15th 1890.

  12. The Nutcracker • This composition was composed at Frolovskoe, Rouen, and Maidanovo around February 1891 until July of the same year. • It was orchestrated at Maidanovo from January to March 1892. • This composition was written at request of Ivan Vsevolozhskii, Director of the Imperial Theatres. • Tchaikovsky worked closely with the choreographer of this ballet, Marius Petipa, in order to better match the dancing with the music. • Tchaikovsky wasn’t very pleased to using The Nutcracker as the setting for his ballet.

  13. Listening Guide • The Nutcracker, Op. 71, Act 1, No. 2 – March • (2:10) • The Nutcracker, Op. 71, Act 2, No. 14c, Var. 2 – Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy • (1:59) • The Sleeping Beauty, Op. 66, Act 1, No. 6 – Waltz • (4:29) • Swan Lake, Op. 20, Act 1, No. 2 – Waltz • (5:25)

  14. The Nutcracker, Op. 71, Act 1, No. 2 – March • (0:00) • This piece begins with the trumpets playing a march fanfare leading into the strings playing irregular rhythms as the loudness gradually increases. • (0:24) • Here the music changes tones and melodies in a different form while keeping the same pattern of trumpets and strings. • (0:35) • The piece returns to the original form and melody as started but louder than before. • (0:58) • The flutes begin at a much faster tempo while descending. Strings accompany.

  15. The Nutcracker, Op. 71, Act 1, No. 2 – March – cont. • (1:10) • Again returns to the original melody but stronger than before and louder still with strings accompanying with more influence. • (1:33) • Same tone change as at 0:24 but stronger and louder than previously. • (1:45) • Back to the original melody as played at 1:10 until ending.

  16. The Nutcracker, Op. 71, Act 2, No. 14c, Var. 2 – Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy • (0:00) • Very subtle, quiet plucking (pizzicato) of strings introducing the setting. Gradual increase in loudness. • (0:08) • Celesta plays the main theme. • (0:14) • Bass clarinet descends as celesta melody continues. • (0:29) • Woodwinds introduced. • (0:35) • Strong influence from strings and woodwinds with celesta more in the background.

  17. The Nutcracker, Op. 71, Act 2, No. 14c, Var. 2 – Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy – cont. • (0:57) • Celesta soloing leading back into main theme. • (1:04) • Woodwinds begin main theme again. • (1:33) • Celesta along with pizzicato from the strings descending. • (1:50) • Celesta and pizzicato repeats the same note until end with loud chord.

  18. The Sleeping Beauty, Op. 66, Act 1, No. 6 – Waltz • (0:00) • Introduction using crescendo of strings and brass increasing in loudness and complexity. • (0:30) • The piece starts off in the A stage with strings providing the melody and brass accompanying. • (1:05) • Moving into B form with focus completely on the strings with brass but more descending on this part. • (1:38) • Moves back to A form with woodwinds accompanying instead of brass. • (1:59) • Moves into C form with strings and brass. Woodwinds accompanying.

  19. The Sleeping Beauty, Op. 66, Act 1, No. 6 – Waltz - cont. • (2:39) • Back into A form, strings and brass accompanying. • (3:03) • Transition into B form, strings and brass, same as before. • (3:40) • Again into A form, strings with woodwind accompanying rather than brass. • (4:02) • Strings performing coda with brass in background. Crescendos and repetition to finalize.

  20. Swan Lake, Op. 20, Act 1, No. 2 – Waltz • (0:00) • Pizzicato with strings descending. • (0:06) • Brass and percussion changing the loudness greatly for 3 notes. • (0:08) • Brass very lightly in background. • (0:21) • Strings come in playing melody twice through in first form. Second time with woodwind accompanying. • (0:56) • Brass changing the tone into a faster tempo with the strings into second form, brass accompanying. • (1:10) • Woodwinds introducing new form, with brass accompanying.

  21. Swan Lake, Op. 20, Act 1, No. 2 – Waltz – cont. • (1:17) • Strings join woodwinds. • (1:24) • Variation of woodwinds, strings accompanying. • (1:41) • Transition with loud brass back into the form at 1:10. • (1:50) • Back into the first form with strings. Light brass background. • (2:07) • Woodwinds join brass.

  22. Swan Lake, Op. 20, Act 1, No. 2 – Waltz – cont. • (2:23) • Same as 0:56 with brass and faster tempo into different form. • (2:37) • Strings in a slower tempo and lighter sound go into new form alternating with quick woodwinds. • (2:52) • Brass slow accompanied by strings. • (3:09) • Back to same as 2:37. • (3:22) • Strings flowing with woodwind accompaniment. • (3:37) • Much stronger sounding strings with strong bass strings behind it transitioning into brass accompaniment.

  23. Swan Lake, Op. 20, Act 1, No. 2 – Waltz – cont. • (3:51) • Same as 3:22. • (4:05) • Crescendo into faster tempo with strings and woodwinds accompanying. • (4:21) • Brass added to strings. Much louder and faster. • (4:30) • Same melody but an octave increasing each repetition. • (4:36) • Everything descending. • (4:44) • Brass taking control with everything else behind it as crescendo. • (4:58) • Coda with repetitions from full orchestra with brass and drumming finishing the piece.

  24. Bibliography • Biography.com: http://www.biography.com/people/piotr-ilyich-tchaikovsky-or-tschaikovsky-9503375 • ClassicCat.net: http://www.classiccat.net/tchaikovsky_pi/biography.php • Langston, B. (2006). Retrieved from TchaikovskyResearch.net: http://www.tchaikovsky-research.net/en/Works/Ballets/index.html • Wiley. (2001). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. • Wisc.edu: http://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~boris/maha/music/tchaikovsky.html

More Related