- Variations on a Rococo Theme
The Variations on a Rococo theme for
violoncello andorchestra was the closestPyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky ever came to writing a fullconcerto for cello and orchestra. The style was inspired by Mozart, Tchaikovsky's role model, and makes it clear that Tchaikovsky admired the Classical style very much. However, one should note that the "Thema" is notRococo in origin, but actually an original theme.Tchaikovsky wrote this piece for and with the help of
Wilhelm Fitzenhagen , a German cellist and fellow-professor at theMoscow Conservatory . Fitzenhagen gave the premiere in Moscow onDecember 30 ,1877 , withNikolai Rubinstein conducting. This was perhaps the only hearing of the "Variations" as Tchaikovsky wrote the piece until 1941, when it was played in Moscow without Fitzenhagen's by-then-standard emendations.Orchestration
The piece is scored for a reduced orchestra consisting of pairs of basic
woodwind instrument s, two horns, and strings. This reduction of forces is a deliberate reflection of an 18th-century orchestra.Structure and overview
The piece is comprised of a theme and seven variations (eight in Tchaikovsky's original version), making up roughly 20 minutes of music. The variations are played without pause, except between the last slow movement and the finale; even these are not set off by the thick double bar which traditionally indicates separate movements, but only by a
fermata over the final rest. The difficulty of the piece lies in this seemingly innocent set-up of the eight differing sections, without the usual longer orchestral interludes for the soloist to catch his or her breath.#Moderato assai quasi Andante - Thema: Moderato semplice
#:The orchestra comes in with a somewhat brief (though it looks long on paper) introduction, and the solo cello states the simple, elegant theme. The theme is repeated a total of six times, then the cello plays a brief conjunctive passage, the same exact notes of which are used to link Vars. I and II. The same conjunction is played an octave lower to link Vars. II and III.
#Var. I: Tempo della Thema
#:The first variation is in triplets, through the midst of which the orchestra restates the theme. The sound is very lively and graceful.
#Var. II: Tempo della Thema
#:The second variation features a section of conversation between the orchestra and soloist, in which the theme is nearly doubled in speed.
#Var. III: Andante sostenuto
#:In the third variation the theme has changed key to C major and is played at a more contemplative speed.
#Var. IV: Andante grazioso
#:The fourth variation is back in A major and is a livelier version of the theme.
#Var. V: Allegro moderato
#:The fifth variation carries over trills from the end of the fourth variation, and after a grand "fall" by the solo cello onto a low E, the orchestra takes over gallantly. A cadenza follows, ending back in the trills from the beginning, and once again the melody is taken over by the full orchestra, at which point a second, much longer and more difficult cadenza follows. The second cadenza, which is brazen and filled with chords, steadfastly refuses to resolve its minor key.
#Var. VI: Andante
#:The sixth variation is a melancholy restatement of the theme in D minor, which carries over from the cadenza.
#Var. VII e Coda: Allegro vivo
#:After a brief pause, the soloist launches into the most difficult variation, an Allegro vivo which rarely relents its constant 32nd notes. The orchestra, too, has a difficult time keeping up with the blazing speed of the finale, the solo flute being one example.The piece was written between December 1876 and March 1877, immediately following his tone poem
Francesca da Rimini , and compared to the vehemence and intensity of "Francesca", the "Variations" show an elegant detachment that was new to his music. While the theme upon which the composition is based is Tchaikovsky's own, the graceful contours and well-mannered cadence that make up the first half of this theme show clearly from which period Tchaikovsky had taken his model.Tchaikovsky had rarely been attracted to the variation form. The convenience of this form became apparent with what he now set out to accomplish. With a traditional concerto format, structural complexities and dramatic issues that would have clashed with the 18th-century detachment and finesse could not have been avoided. A neat and easier solution was, in each variation, to retain the melodic outlines and harmonic support outlined in his initial theme.
The potential problem with this approach could be a lack of variety between variations. This would effectively kill the piece. Thanks to his consummate craftsmanship, Tchaikovsky avoids this trap. There is barely a phrase within each variation whose relationship with its progenitor is not explicit. However, no two variations assemble their constituent phrases in the same manner, nor build to the same proportions.
One device which helps Tchaikovsky greatly in this regard is a
codetta attached to the end of the theme. Attached to this codetta is a quasi-cadential or linking extension. Tchaikovsky varies this extension in length and direction, further modifying the proportions of individual variations and providing a bridge passage from one variation to the next. He even mixes the codetta material with the theme itself in the Andante grazioso variation (No. 4 in Fitzenhagen's arrangement, No. 5 in Tchaikovsky's original order).Tchaikovsky Versus Fitzenhagen
While the tasteful invention and refined craftsmanship with Tchaikovsky admired in classical-era music is thoroughly in evidence, the structure he intended in his ordering of variations was subverted by the work's dedicaté. Fitzenhagen intervened considerably in shaping what he considered "his" piece. Much of the detail in the solo part is his and was actually written by him into Tchaikovsky's autograph. More importantly, Fitzenhagen dropped one entire variation and reshuffled the order of the others. This, in turn, necessitated further cuts and splices.
Tchaikovsky had in fact asked Fitzenhagen to go through the "Variations"—something the composer apparently neglected to inform his publisher, P.I. Jurgenson. Jurgenson wrote to Tchaikovsky, "Horrible Fitzenhagen insists on changing your cello piece. He wants to 'cello' it up and claims you gave him permission. Good God! "Tchaïkovski revu et corrigé par Fitzenhagen!"
Fitzenhagen was proud of the success he had in performing the work, and in a report he wrote Tchaikovsky after playing it at the Wiesbaden Festival in June 1879, he gave a clue as to why he reshuffled the order of variations as he did. "I produced a furore with your variations. I pleased so greatly that I was recalled three times, and after the Andante variation (D minor) there was stormy applause. Liszt said to me: 'You carried me away! You played splendidly," and regarding your piece he observed: 'Now there, at last, is real music!'"
The D minor variation Fitzenhagen mentions is actually the third in Tchaikovsky's original sequence. Fitzenhagen may have thought it more effective later in the piece because of its ability to draw applause. he exchanged it with Tchaikovsky's slow penultimate variation, the one in 3/4 time in C major. The Allegro vivace variation which now followed the D minor contrasted very effectively. However, the eighth and final variation was extremely similar to the Allegro vivace. Fitzenhagen did not hesitate to jettison this variaton and tack the final 32 bars of the piece onto the Allegro vivace.
Nevertheless, in one of his occasional fits of insecurity about his work, especially when it came to form, Tchaikovsky allowed the changes to stand. Eleven years later one of Fitzenhaugen's students,
Anatoliy Brandukov , approached the composer about whether he would restore his original idea to the piece. Apparently irritated by the question, Tchaikovsky replied, "Oh, the hell with it! Let it stay the way it is."The "Variations" "stayed" in Fitzenhagen's order until Russian cellist Victor Kubatsky started researching the piece for himself. By subjecting the manuscript to X-ray experiments, he discovered that Tchaikovsky's text had been inked over. As a result of this discovery, the original version was finally published and has since been recorded. Nevertheless, most cellists still use the Fitzenhagen version of the piece.
Cellists who have recorded Tchaikovsky's original version have included
Steven Isserlis ,Raphael Wallfisch andJulian Lloyd Webber .Adaptations
In 2000,
trumpeter Sergei Nakariakov played a notable version of Variations on a Rococo Theme in a transcription for theflugelhorn .Sources
* Brown, David, "Tchaikovsky: The Crisis Years, 1874-1878", (New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1983). ISBN 0-393017-07-9.
* Campbell, Margaret, "The Great Cellists" (North Pomfret, Vermont: Trafalger Square Publishing, 1988). ISBN 0-943955-09-2.
* Steinberg, Michael, "The Concerto" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998). ISBN 0-19-510330-0.Related Links
*http://www.tchaikovsky-research.org/en/Works/Concertos/TH057/index.html
*IMSLP2|id=Variations_on_a_Rococo_Theme%2C_Op._33_%28Tchaikovsky%2C_Pyotr_Ilyich%29|cname=Variations on a Rococo Theme Please note: the information regarding the "original" version on this site is not entirely true; the theme and all the variations (except Variation IV) are what Tchaikovsky originally wrote, whereas the final coda is Fitzenhagen's version. However, since most cellists today play Fitzenhagen's version throughout, this score will still be substantially different from most modern recordings.
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