ABSTRACT

Little is known outside of Russia about the nation's musical heritage prior to the nineteenth century. Western scholarship has tended to view the history of Russian music as not beginning until the end of the eighteenth century. Marina Ritzarev's work shows this interpretation to be misguided. Starting from an examination of the rich legacy of Russian music up to 1700, she explores the development of music over the course of the eighteenth century, a period of especially intense Westernization and secularization. The book focuses on what is characteristic and crucial to Russian music during this period, rather than seeking to provide a comprehensive survey. The musical culture of the time is discussed against the rich background of social, political and cultural life, tying together many of the phenomena that used to be viewed separately. The book highlights the importance of previously marginalized sectors - serf culture, choral sacred culture, the contribution of foreign musicians, the significant influence of Freemasonry, the role of Ukrainian and West-European cultures and so on - as well as casting new light on the well-researched topic of Russian opera. Much new archival material is introduced, and revised biographies of the two leading eighteenth-century Russian composers, Maxim Berezovsky and Dmitry Bortniansky, are provided, as well as those of the serf composer Stepan Degtyarev and the Italian Giuseppe Sarti. The book places eighteenth-century Russian music on the European map, and will be of particular importance for the study of European musical cultures remote from such centres as Italy, Germany-Austria and France. Eighteenth-century Russian music is organically linked with its past and future and its contributory role in forming the Russian national identity and developing the Russian idiom is clarified.

chapter 2|20 pages

Pre-Petrine Legacy

chapter 5|30 pages

The ‘Thaw’ of the 1760s

chapter 7|16 pages

The City in the 1770s

chapter 8|28 pages

Bortniansky and the 1780s

chapter 9|32 pages

The Late Eighteenth-Century Russian Salon

chapter 10|20 pages

Sarti in Russia

chapter 11|20 pages

1790s: Muses and Cannons

chapter 12|34 pages

Master and Serf

chapter 13|24 pages

The Choral Concerto in the 1790s

chapter 14|36 pages

Bortniansky in the Nineteenth Century