Dmytro
Stepanovich Bortniansky was born in Hlukhiv in the province of Chernihiv,
Ukraine in 1751. He began his music education at the singing school
in his home town. His exceptional talents were soon recognized,
and at the age of seven he was sent to St. Petersburg, the capital
of the Russian Empire, to sing with the Imperial Chapel Choir. Bortniansky
possessed unique musical gifts, and he also had a beautiful soprano
voice. When he was eleven, he sang his first operatic solo with
the chapel choir. He also began his studies of music theory, harmony
and the art of the harpsichord at this time.
The Italian master Baldassare Galuppi, director of the Imperial
Chapel Choir from 1765 to 1768, devoted special attention to his
talented Ukrainian singer, and began to teach him the foundations
of music composition. In 1769, through the efforts of Galuppi, Bortniansky
was sent to Italy to con-tinue his studies. His eleven year sojourn
abroad marked the completion of his musical education and the de
finitive formation of the young musician's aesthetic and artistic
philosophy. In Venice, Bologna, Rome and Milan, Bortniansky steeped
himself in the music, painting and ar-chitecture of Italy. His first
significant large works were written in Italy, and earned him recognition
and high acclaim within musical circles. Bortniansky's first opera,
Creonte, was per-formed in Venice in 1776, followed by his opera
Alcide two years later. In 1779, a performance of his third opera,
Quinto Fablo, in the Greek theatre at Modena met with a triumphant
reception.
On his return to St. Petersburg in 1779, Bortniansky was appointed
Kappellmeister of the Imperial Chapel Choir. For twelve years, he
served as harpsichordist and composer at the "little court"
of crown prince Paul in Gatchina, near St. Petersburg. During this
period, he wrote numerous instrumental compositions and works in
the genre of musical theatre. These include the operas Le Fête
du Seigneur (1786), La Faucon (1786) and Le Fils-Rival ou Ia Moderne
Stratonice (1787); a sonata for harpsichord, strings (violins) and
piano; and numerous songs and romances. Even his earliest works
showed evidence of Bortniansky's reawakening of the national traditions
of his Ukrainian homeland. His "Kheruvyms'ka ("Song of
the Cherubim", 1782) gained tremendous popularity and is considered
a classic of Ukrainian music of the eighteenth century.
When Dmytro Bortniansky was appointed "Director of Vocal Music
and Administrator of the Imperial Chapel" in 1796, he was a
musician at the height of his creative powers. Within a short time,
he brought the chapel choir to unprecedented heights. The excellence
and artistry of the chapel choir under Bortniansky's direction is
evidenced by the fact that in 1824, at the express wish of the composer
himself, Ludwig van Beethoven's Missa Solemnis was premiered in
St. Petersburg by the Imperial Chapel Choir.
Dmytro Bortniansky created an entire epoch in Ukrainian choral
music. His mastery of Italian and European compositional techniques
was irreproachable, but he did not merely imitate Western European
examples. Instead, Bortniansky created original compositions constructed
on a foundation of national Ukrainian melodic principles.
With his sacred choral concertos, Bortniansky renewed his efforts
to create large, cyclical works in his own unique style - characterized
by a natural simplicity, brightness and harmony, a rare melodiousness,
and deep emotional expression. The French composer Hector Berlioz
characterized Bortniansky's music as displaying a rare expertise
in the grouping of vocal masses, and a wonderful understanding of
nuance and full sounding harmony. Berlioz also marvelled at Bortniansky's
incredible ease in the laying out of choral parts, and his disdain
for the mere conventions employed both by his predecessors and his
contemporaries especially those of the Italian school, whose student
Bortniansky considered himself.
Dmytro Bortniansky was an erudite and cultured man who spoke five
languages: Ukrainian, Italian, French, German and Russian. He was
a noted community leader, a conductor of great repute, and a composer
whose works are among the greatest classics of Ukrainian music.
He died in St. Petersburg on September 28, 1825. His legacy is a
significant cultural and artistic contribution to the music of the
eighteenth century. His finest works reach the heights of excellence
of the musical culture of the world. |