Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin (Russian: Алекса́ндр Никола́евич Скря́бин, Aleksandr Nikolaevič Skrjabin; sometimes transliterated as Skryabin or Skrjabin) (6 January 1872 – 27 April 1915) was a Russian composer and pianist.
He was a hypochondriac his entire life. He died in Moscow from septicemia, contracted as a result of a shaving cut. For some time before his death he had planned a multi-media work, to be performed in the Himalayas, that would bring about the armageddon, "a grandiose religious synthesis of all arts which would herald the birth of a new world" (AMG *). This piece, Mysterium, was never realized.
He was possibly the uncle of Vyacheslav Molotov, the Russian politician and eponym of the Molotov cocktail. Molotov's original surname was Scriabin. Simon Montefiore in his biography of Stalin, states that despite the shared family name, Molotov was not in any way related to the composer.
Pianists who have performed Scriabin to critical acclaim include Vladimir Sofronitsky, Vladimir Horowitz and Sviatoslav Richter.
Aaron Copland praised Scriabin's thematic material as "truly individual, truly inspired", but criticized Scriabin for putting "this really new body of feeling into the strait-jacket of the old classical sonata-form, recapitulation and all" calling this "one of the most extraordinary mistakes in all music." According to Samson the sonata-form of Sonata No. 5 has some meaning to the work's tonal structure, but in Sonata No. 6 and Sonata No. 7 formal tensions are created by the absence of harmonic contrast and "between the cumulative momentum of the music, usually achieved by textural rather than harmonic means, and the formal constraints of the tripartite mould." He also argues that the Poem of Ecstasy and Vers la flamme "find a much happier co-operation of 'form' and 'content'" and that later Sonatas such as Sonata No. 9 employ a much more flexible sonata-form. (Samson 1977)
While Scriabin wrote only a small number of orchestral works, they are among his most famous, and some are frequently performed. They include 3 symphonies, a piano concerto (1896), The Poem of Ecstasy (1908) and Poem of Fire (1910), which includes a part for a "clavier à lumières", also known as the Luxe, - which was a color organ designed specifically for the performance of Scriabin's symphony. It was played like a piano, but projected colored light on a screen in the concert hall rather than sound. Most performances of the piece (including the premiere) have not included this light element, although a performance in New York City in 1915 projected colours onto a screen. It has erroneously been claimed that this performance used the colour-organ invented by English painter A. Wallace Rimington when in fact it was a novel construction personally supervised and built in New York specifically for the performance by Preston S. Miller, the president of the Illuminating Engineering Society.
Scriabin's original colour keyboard, with its associated turntable of coloured lamps, is preserved in his apartment near the Arbat in Moscow, which is now a museum dedicated to his life and works.
1872 births | 1915 deaths | Modernist composers | Romantic composers | Russian classical pianists | Russian composers | Synaesthetes | 20th century classical composers
Александър Скрябин | Alexander Scriabin | Aleksandr Skrjabin | Alexander Nikolajewitsch Skrjabin | Alexander Scriabin | Alexandre Scriabine | Alexander Scriabin | אלכסנדר סקריאבין | Aleksandras Skriabinas | Alexander Skrjabin | アレクサンドル・スクリャービン | Aleksandr Skrjabin | Aleksander Skriabin | Alexander Scriabin | Скрябин, Александр Николаевич | Alexander Scriabin | Aleksander Nikolajevič Skrjabin | Aleksandr Skrjabin | Aleksandr Skrjabin
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