home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Here is the complete Pictures at an Exhibition. It consists of 8 files
- which must be played in the correct order as I have listed below. They
- should be played sequentially by a juke box type of midi player. This
- was recorded using a Yamaha Clavinova, and a similar electronic piano
- or synthesizer with 32 note polyphony is required, with a fair amount
- of reverberation.
-
- I have combined the promenades into other files where the next piece
- must follow without a delay. This is the order in which they should be
- played:
-
- pm1gnome.mid : Introduction, Gnomus
- pmcastle.mid : promenade 2, The Old Castle
- pmtuiler.mid : promenade 3, Tuileries
- bydlo.mid : Bydlo (Old Polish Cart)
- pmchick.mid : promenade 4, Ballet of Chickens
- shmuyle.mid : Samuel Goldenberg and Shmuyle
- pmarkcat.mid : promenade 5, Marketplace at Limoges, Catacombs, Skulls
- babakiev.mid : Baba Yaga's Hut on Fowl's Legs, Great Gate of Kiev.
-
- Mussorgsky wrote these pieces in 1874 after seeing an exhibition of
- water colour paintings and drawings by the architect Hartmann, a friend
- of his. Before each piece there is a "promenade" interlude consisting
- of a main theme with variations.
-
- "The Gnomus" represents a dwarf who staggers around on crooked feet.
- "The Old Castle" is a castle in Italy dating back to the middle ages,
- and a minstrel is singing a song.
- "Tuileries" describes childern playing in the Tuileries garden in Paris
- and arguing amongst themselves and their nurses.
- "Bydlo" describes an old Polish wagon drawn by oxen.
- "Ballet of Unhatched Chicks" describes chicks hatching from their eggs.
- "Samuel Goldenberg and Shmuyle" describes two Polish Jews, one rich,
- the other poor.
- "Marketplace at Limoges" describes French women quarelling at the
- market.
- "Catacombs" portrays Hartmann exploring the underground tombs in Paris
- by the light of a lantern.
- "Con Mortuis in Lingua Mortua" (Skulls) describes the skulls which glow
- faintly in the dark.
- "The Hut of Baba Yaga" describes the hut on fowl's legs where the witch
- Baba Yaga (from Russian folklore) lived. The hut was in the form of a
- clock and the music describes the witch's departure.
- "The Great Gate of Kiev" describes Hartmann's drawing of this massive
- gate at the entrance to the town of Kiev. It was Slavonic in style and
- had a helmet-shaped cupola.
-
- This is the original piano version. Many others have orchestrated this
- including Maurice Ravel (one of the best) and the conductor Leopold
- Stokowski. There are also very good arrangements for brass band.
-
- I hope you enjoy them.
-
- Robert Finley.
- ROBERTFINLEY@delphi.com
-