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242th Season

Concert Hall

16 February
19:00
2022 | Wednesday
Stars of the Stars
Shchedrin "The Sealed Angel" and Prokofiev "Alexander Nevsky"
Concert
Artists Credits
Conductor
Mezzo soprano
Flute
Sofia Viland
Cast to be announced


PROGRAMME:

Rodion Shchedrin
The Sealed Angel, choral music after Nikolai Leskov

Sergei Prokofiev
Alexander Nevsky, cantata

Principal Chorus Master: Konstantin Rylov

ABOUT THE CONCERT
This concert has been conceived by the theatre as a musical celebration to commemorate Rodion Shchedrin’s birthday. For the first time at the Mariinsky Theatre there is to be a performance of the choral concerto The Sealed Angel.

“This Angel was in truth too wonderful to describe. His countenance, as I now see it, seemed shining with divinity and readiness to help; his glance compassionate; his little ears were pointed as if ever ready to hearken; his vesture shone and his tunic seemed powdered with gold; wings sprang from his shoulders, he wore a girdle; on his breast was the face of the babe Emmanuel; a cross in his right hand and in his left a fiery sword. Wonderful, wonderful! The locks on his dear little head were curly, and auburn, winding beneath his ears, and every hair painted as if with a needle, and every curl nestled against the next curl.”

Thus does the protagonist from Nikolai Leskov’s tale The Sealed Angel (1872) describe an icon particularly revered by an artel of masonic Old Believers. Leskov’s wondrous lexis with its incomparably colourful intonation inspired Rodion Shchedrin to compose a Sealed Angel of his own (1988). “Here there are no direct plot links with the literary source,” the composer has explained, “but the most important idea, in my opinion, of Leskov of the incorruptibility of artistic beauty, of the magical and lofty power of art is feasibly interpreted by means of musical language. Here and there, onto the pages of his story Leskov scatters the first lines taken from hymns of the Old Believers, the literary texts of which have been, in part, set to my music.”

The Sealed Angel by Shchedrin emerged in the thousand-year anniversary of Christianity arriving in Rus’ of Old, though the anniversary date itself was not the principal guiding stimulus that compelled the composer, the grandson of a priest, to respond to “the call of the heart”, and in just one month to produce a score that he later came to call a “Russian liturgy”. At the turn of the 1980s-90s, the country “printed out” – acquiring once more – this jewel of its religious and spiritual tradition. In churches that reopened after long years of lying in ruins, church choruses could be heard. But Shchedrin was not composing for a choir; the emotional experience felt by someone in a church is something he brings to the concert hall. In translation from the Greek, “liturgy” means “shared service”, and through this “shared service” the composer offers the purification of the soul by means of singing in a choir and listening to a choir.

The choral writing in The Sealed Angel is unusually diverse and varied, with its sources lying in Russian folklore, as well as in Russian divine worship customs from several centuries, and also in the musical avant-garde of the 20th century. In combining the styles of early Russian anthem singing and the multi-voice church singing of the New Age (from partes to Rachmaninoff and Chesnokov), by employing musical means Shchedrin expresses the core thought behind Leskov’s story – the idea of reuniting the proponents of old and new rites, the Old Believers and the Nikonites, and – in a broader sense – the idea of national unity.

The gold, the blue of the sky and the whiteness shimmering in the miracle-working icon of the guardian angel are things that Shchedrin has succeeded in bringing to his music, which radiates an unearthly light. It is symbolic that The Sealed Angel is to be performed at the Mariinsky Theatre for the first time on 25 December, when many, many Christians throughout the world will be celebrating Christmas Day. Khristina Batyushina

Age category 6+


Mariinsky Theatre:
1 Theatre Square
St. Petersburg
Mariinsky-2 (New Theatre):
34 Dekabristov Street
St. Petersburg
Mariinsky Concert Hall:
20 Pisareva street
St. Petersburg

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