Ever since hearing the late John
Lill playing Sergei Vasilievich Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody on a Theme by
Paganini at a Glasgow Proms concert on Wednesday 26 June 1974, I have been
hooked on this piece. A few weeks later, I came across the boxed set of records
of Vladimir Ashkenazy playing the entire cycle of Rachmaninoff’s concerted
piano works on a stall at Glasgow’s legendary The Barras in the Gallowgate. His
performance of the Rhapsody remains my “go-to” recording to this day.
The Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini, op.43 was Rachmaninoff’s last work for piano and orchestra. It was completed at the composer’s residence, Senar, on the shores of Lake Lucerne. The premiere performance was given by the Philadelphia Orchestra on 7 November 1934. It was conducted by Leopold Stokowski with Rachmaninoff as soloist.
The piece is not actually a
‘rhapsody’ as such but a set of variations on the well-known theme from
Paganini’s 24th Caprice for solo violin. This tune is only alluded
to in the Introduction but is presented in full in the first variation. In the
succeeding twenty-three variations, the theme is subject to a wide variety of
transformations – “harmonically, melodically, rhythmically, atmospherically.”
The famous 18th variation is well-known as a standalone piece, often
heard on Classic Fm. Rachmaninoff is supposed to have said that this
“voluptuous, tender…variation was a love episode” was there to please his
manager and guarantee the work’s success.” The work ends with massive chords
played ‘ff,’ before the Rhapsody ends in a quiet A minor perfect cadence.
“Benno Moiseiwitsch [1] …friend and admirer of Rachmaninoff, tells an anecdote about the composer's troubles in practicing the final variation for concert performance. The episode occurred in 1934 at the home of Mrs. Steinway, following one of Rachmaninoff’s superb Carnegie Hall recitals. [2] During dinner, he discussed with Moiseiwitsch a new work which he would soon introduce for the first time, a Rhapsody and Variations on a Theme by Paganini, but he seemed worried while describing it. Moiseiwitsch recounts the conversation thus:
‘I wrote the Rhapsody down,’ he
said in his slow drawl, ‘and it looked good. Then I went to the piano and tried
it, and it sounded good, but now, when I am practicing it for the concert, it
all goes wrong!’
He was referring to the twenty-fourth variation, and his difficulty was in getting through the chord jumps, always a formidable problem in the Paganini variations. I did not know the work at all and could not offer any suggestions but just then the Steinway butler came to my rescue. He had just entered with a tray full of a wonderful array of liqueurs. Everyone helped himself to a drink, but Rachmaninoff, as was his custom, refused. Here I stepped in, saying: ‘Sergei Vasilievich, do have a glass of this beautiful crême de menthe.’
He waved the butler aside and
said to me: ‘You know I never drink any alcohol.’
‘Yes, I know that’ I replied, ‘but
do you know that crême de menthe is the best thing in the world for jumps.’
The 'Jumps' |
‘Do you mean it?’ he asked dubiously.
‘Definitely,’ I replied. So, he
called back the butler and helped himself to a generous portion of crême de
menthe.
Afterwards, when we joined the
ladies in the drawing room, he sketched some of his variations, including a
faultless execution of the one with the jumps. I reminded him of my inspired
suggestion, and he thanked me very seriously for my help.
Eyewitness accounts and
Rachmaninoff's own assertions have it that he always had a glass of crême de
menthe before playing the Rhapsody in public. Hence the superscription to the
final variation: ‘The Crême de Menthe Variation!’”
Donald L. Engle Philadelphia
Programme Notes.
[2] In his Rachmaninoff: Composer, Pianist, Conductor, (London Routledge 1990), Barrie Martyn gives another version of this tale. This time it is set in London, during the composer’s tour in the spring of 1935. Rachmaninoff gave the British premiere of the Rhapsody in London on 21 March 1935. Thomas Beecham conducted the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
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