Photo unavailable
Music is Mussorgsky's Night on Bald Mountain
Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky
Mussorgsky, Modest Petrovich (1839-81):the most original and influential of the 19th-century Russian nationalist composers.
Born March 21, 1839, in Karevo, Mussorgsky was educated privately
and at a military academy in Saint Petersburg. When he was 18
years old Mussorgsky met the Russian nationalist composer
Aleksandr Dargomyzhsky, through whom he joined the circle of
Russian nationalist composers now known as The Five. In 1858 he
resigned from military service to devote himself to music; after
1863 he supported himself as a government clerk.
Musically, Mussorgsky was self-taught, except for some study with
two members of The Five, Mily Balakirev and Nikolay
Rimsky-Korsakov. His bold, unorthodox harmonies, based on the
scales of Russian folk music, influenced later non-Russian
composers. His songs, among the finest of the 19th century,
reflect his desire to reproduce the rhythms and contours of
Russian speech. So also does his masterpiece, the opera Boris
Godunov, based on a drama by the Russian author Aleksandr
Pushkin. Completed in 1868 and first produced (after considerable
changes) in 1874, it is a monumental work, unusual in its musical
and dramatic use of the chorus and admired for its psychological
insight and its evocation of the Russian people. In 1896 it was
reorchestrated and in places reharmonized by Rimsky-Korsakov and
is best known in this version. Mussorgsky's other works include
the piano suite Pictures at an Exhibition (1874, orchestrated in
1922 by the French composer Maurice Ravel); the symphonic poem
St. John's Night on the Bare Mountain (1867; also known as Night
on Bald Mountain); the song cycles The Nursery (1872) and Songs
and Dances of Death (1877); and the unfinished operas
Kovanshchina, completed by Rimsky-Korsakov, and The Fair at
Sorochinsk, completed by César Cui, another member of The Five.
Mussorgsky died on March 28, 1881, in St. Petersburg.
"Mussorgsky, Modest Petrovich," Microsoft (R) Encarta.
Copyright (c) 1994 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1994 Funk
& Wagnall's Corporation.