Tchaikovsky and Rimsky-Korsakov: Dichotomy as a Driving Force of Russian Music
Introduction: Two Poles of the National Composer's School
The creative and personal relationships between Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) and Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908) represent one of the most productive and substantial dichotomies in the history of Russian music. Their confrontation and mutual influence were not an antagonism between enemies, but rather a constructive polemic between two titanic figures, embodying two different paths of national culture's development in the last third of the 19th century. This confrontation between the "Westernizer" and the "Native," the psychologist-lyricist and the epic-fairy tale writer, the intuitive and the systematic.
1. Ideological and Aesthetic Antipodes
Their differences were rooted in fundamental principles.
Tchaikovsky: Universalism and personal psychologism. A graduate of the Petersburg Conservatory (of a Western model), he saw music primarily as a universal language of human passions. His ideal was the synthesis of universal European forms (sonatas, symphonies, ballet) with the Russian melodic and emotional idiom. His creativity is autobiographical and focused on the inner world of the individual.
Rimsky-Korsakov: The National School and "Musical Painting." A member of "The Mighty Handful," he was oriented towards creating a distinctive Russian composer's school based on folklore, ancient church modes, orientalism, and literary-fairy tale plots. His music is often objective, illustrative, "telling" or "painting" (fairy tale operas, symphonic pictures). After the "revaluation of values" in the 1870s, he became the main systematizer and teacher of the "Mighty Handful" direction.
2. Professionalism versus Intuition: Conflict and Overcoming
The most acute disagreements were in relation to compositional technique.
Early Rimsky-Korsakov and the criticism of "kuchkiysts." In his youth, Rimsky-Korsakov, like other "kuchki ...
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