Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Piano Sonata No. 9 ("Black Mass"), Op. 68

 
Classical Work: Piano Sonata No. 9 ("Black Mass"), Op. 68

Review

Given the general outlook of the late-nineteenth century Russian musical world into which Alexander Scriabin was born, and especially the Romantic pianistic outlook inherited from the legendary Anton Rubinstein, it is not surprising that Scriabin's earliest compositions are profoundly influenced by Chopin and Liszt. Even the first few piano sonatas, though of far greater individuality than his youthful works, still the harmonic and thematic world of Chopin and Liszt. By the time of the Fourth (1903) and Fifth Sonatas (1907), however, Scriabin was rapidly moving towards the eventual atonal revolution that he would, independently from Arnold Schoenberg or any other composer, carry out on his music in the years before World War I. With the so -- called "Black Mass" Sonata of 1913 (the Sonata No. 9, Op. 68, occasionally, but inaccurately, said to be in F major), the journey is complete. The Sonata, whose colorful subtitle is the composer's own, is a masterwork of bleak despair, a musical portrait of evil and spiritual decay whose violence and menacing harmonies are said to have shocked even the composer himself. With its antithesis, the "White Mass" Sonata of 1912, this work is the most infamous -- if not necessarily the most frequently performed -- work by Scriabin; it is a complex piece that both his champions and detractors cite evidence for their opposite views. After the Fifth Sonata Scriabin cast all his works in the genre into single-movement molds, and the last five (all composed over a remarkable two year span) can be heard as separate portions of one larger musical entity. Among their common features is a mutual reliance on Scriabin's much-discussed "Mystic" chord, a chromatic harmony built on the basic tones C, F sharp, B flat, E, A, and D, but rarely presented in that basic form. The "Black Mass" Sonata opens with a grimacing web of thin harmonies that seem to point to some not-so-distant explosion of grief; a sepulchral repeated-note gesture punctuates the otherwise lugubrious texture. A delicate second theme, more clearly drawn than is the composer's norm during these final years, appears, like a haunted vision of redemption, marked "avec une langueur naissante" (increasingly langorous). Nowhere is there any reprieve from the unbelievable harmonic tension, and, after outbursts of grim despair, the reprise of the opening bars achieves a final and utter desolation, locked in by a single low F natural. ~ Blair Johnston, All Music Guide

Albums with Complete Performances of the Work

Title Date
11th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition: Olga Kern 2001
2008 Sydney International Piano Competition of Australia, Vol. 1: Solo Highlights 2008
Alexander Scriabin: Piano Sonatas 2005
Alexander Scriabin: Piano Sonatas Nos. 1 - 10 1987
Alexander Scriabin: The Complete Piano Sonatas
Alexander Scriabin: The Complete Sonatas
Alexander Scriabin: Vers La Flamme; 24 Preludes: Sonatas 2007
Alexandr Scriabin: Piano Music 1987
Alexandre Scriabine: Sonates pour piano 6 à 10 2004
Andrei Korobeinikov en Tôkyô, Japanio, 2004
Andrew Armstrong plays Rachmaninov, Scriabin & Mussorgsky 2004
Andreï Vieru plays Bach, Beethoven, Liszt & Alexander Scriabine
Complete Piano Sonatas, Vol.2
Dvorák: 4 Quatours; 2 Quintettes (Includes bonus CD, "Travelling") 2003
Francisca Skoogh plays Béla Bartók, Sergey Prokofiev, Ravel & Alexander Skryabin 1998
Great Pianists of the 20th Century: The Complete Edition (Box 2) (Box Set) 1999
Grigory Sokolov (Box Set) 2003
Horowitz Live and Unedited [includes Bonus DVD] 2003
Horowitz Plays Mussorgsky, Scriabin, Prokofiev, and others 1992
Horowitz Plays Scriabin 2003
Igor Lovchinsky Plays Chopin, Scriabin, Gershwin 2007
Messe Noire 2005
Moussorgsky, Scriabin & Clementi
Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition No1-10; Skryabin: Sonatas for piano No9
Original Jacket Collection: Vladimir Horowitz 2001
Piano XX, Vol. 1 1998
Portrait of a Legend: Richter 2007
Prokofiev, Scriabin, Shostakovich: Complete Piano Sonatas (Box Set)
Prokofiev: Piano Sonata No. 6; Skryabin: Sonatas for piano No9
Rachmaninov/Scriabin/Prokofiev: Sonatas 1993
Richter Plays Mozart, Tchaikovsky, and Rachmaninov 2001
Richter Plays Scriabin
Scriabin: 10 Piano Sonatas 1994
Scriabin: Beyond the Black Mass 2006
Scriabin: Complete Piano Sonatas 2004
Scriabin: Complete Piano Sonatas
Scriabin: Complete Sonatas 2004
Scriabin: Complete Sonatas 2002
Scriabin: Etude In C/Eight Etudes/Sonata Nos. 4, 5, 9 & 10 1991
Scriabin: Les Dernieres Coeuvres 1988
Scriabin: Piano Music 2006
Scriabin: Piano Sonatas 1989
Scriabin: Piano Sonatas Nos. 1-10 1994
Scriabin: Piano Sonatas, Vol. 1 1996
Scriabin: Preludes, Poems and Sonatas for Piano 1998
Scriabin: Rêverie; Piano Sonatas Nos. 4 & 9; Fantasia; Preludes; etc. 1996
Scriabin: Sonatas Nos. 1, 4, 5, 7, 9
Scriabin: Sonatas, Preludes and Other Pieces 2007
Scriabin: The Complete Piano Sonatas 2008
Scriabin: The Complete Piano Sonatas 1996
Scriabin: The Piano Sonatas 1997
Scriabin: Vol.XIV, Edition Vol.4
Scriabine
Scriabine 2008
Scriabine, Prokofiev, Rachmaninov 2003
Scriabine: Intégrale des Sonates pour Piano 2005
Sergey Prokofiev, Sergey Rachmaninov, Alexander Scriabin: Piano Works 1991
Sergey Prokofiev: Visions fugitives; Alexander Scriabin: Vers la flamme; Sonata No. 9 "Black Mass" 1991
Shukow Edition, Vol. 1 1999
Skryabin, Bach, Liszt and others
Skryabin: Piano Music 1998
Skryabin: Sonatas for piano No9; Preludes Op74
Skryabin: Sonatas for piano No9; Sonatas for piano No4
Skryabin: Sonatas for piano No9; Sonatas for piano No5
Skryabin: Sonatas for piano No9; Études Op8
Sofronitsky, Vol.8: Scriabin Edition, Vol.2
Sviatoslav Richter Concert Performances And Broadcasts, 1958-1976
The Art of Henry Neighaus 2005
The Complete Masterwork Recordings, 1962-1973 [Box Set]
The Historic Return: Carnegie Hall 1965; The 1966 Concerts 1993
The Mystic Skryabin 1991
The Voyage of a Pianist 1995
Van Cliburn Competition 1993 1998
Vladimir Horowitz Live at Carnegie Hall 1988
Vladimir Horowitz Plays Scriabin 1987
Vladimir Sofronitsky 1999
Vladimir Sofronitsky Plays Scriabin 2006
Winners of the 3rd Scriabin Piano Competition 2004
Yevgeny Sudbin Plays Scriabin [Hybrid SACD] 2007

Albums with Excerpt Performances of the Work

Title Date
Previously Unissued Public Performances and Broadcasts
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Classical Work. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more