The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1

191


Columbine and Harlequin evoke
The Nutcracker’s fantasy world in
costumes designed by Denmark’s
Queen Margrethe II for a production
in Copenhagen in 2016.

See also: Le bourgeois gentilhomme 70–71 ■ The Magic Flute 134 –137 ■
Le Sacre du printemps 246–251 ■ Romeo and Juliet 272 ■ Appalachian
Spring 286–287

ROMANTIC 1810 –1920


he collaborated with Tchaikovsky
on Sleeping Beauty (1890). The work
was well received by the critics,
and the two men joined forces again
for The Nutcracker two years later,
although illness compelled Petipa
to delegate much of the work to his
assistant Lev Ivanov.

Fairytale ending
Composition of The Nutcracker
had a difficult start. Tchaikovsky felt
constrained by the unimaginative
libretto Petipa had created from
Alexandre Dumas’s adaptation of
German author E.T.A. Hoffman’s
darker tale. The composer finally
found inspiration in the death of his
sister, his childhood playmate. He
poured his memories of her into the
music, particularly into the central
character, the young girl Clara,
who creeps down on Christmas
Eve to play with her favorite gift, a
nutcracker figure, which magically
comes to life. After she helps it to

defeat a vicious Mouse King, the
Nutcracker turns into a prince, who
takes her to the Land of Sweets,
ruled by the Sugar Plum Fairy.
The charm of Tchaikovsky’s
score is in large part due to his
creative use of the orchestra,
from the sinuous woodwind of the
Arabian Dance and the trilling
flutes’ and piccolos’ contrast with
the low bassoons in the Chinese
Dance, to the novelty of the celesta,
a newly invented keyboard
instrument with bars like a
glockenspiel, to introduce the Sugar
Plum Fairy. While the music gave
Petipa and his dancers the lead
they required, Tchaikovsky’s unique
sonority raises the music far above
the old music of the “specialists.” ■

Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky

Born in Votkinsk, Russia, in
1840, Tchaikovsky received
piano lessons from an early
age. He enrolled at the newly
opened St. Petersburg
Conservatory in 1861 and
wrote his First Symphony in


  1. His Romeo and Juliet
    overture (1869) was his first
    international success.
    Despite recognizing
    his own homosexuality,
    Tchaikovsky entered a
    doomed marriage in 1877.
    A year earlier, the wealthy
    widow and arts lover
    Nadezhda von Meck had
    become his patroness,
    enabling him to devote his
    time to composing. Von Meck
    declared herself bankrupt
    in 1890, causing a rift with
    Tchaikovsky. The fatalism
    that often tinged his music is
    clearly present in last works,
    such as his Sixth Symphony
    (“Pathétique,” 1893). He died
    nine days after its premiere.


Other key works

1876 Swan Lake
1878 Eugene Onegin
1889 Sleeping Beauty
1893 Symphony No. 6
(“Pathétique”)

US_190-191_Tchaikovsky.indd 191 26/03/18 1:01 PM

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