I have been wondering what the state of Russian orchestras was in the 19th Century. It seems to me that a considerable amount of 19th Century orchestral music from Russia has an opulence of sound which other European music of the period does not have. One possibility is that since orchestras are very flexible "instruments" that there was no difference between Russian orchestras and orchestras elsewhere, and that the sound of much 19th Century Russian music comes simply from the orchestration, which somehow Russian composers managed very differently from composers in Germany, France etc.
The other possibility is that Russia really did have some magnificent orchestras during the 19th Century, and they had a sound which composers wrote for. From what I know of Russian history, which is not a lot, I suspect that much of Russia was rather poor, yet at the top - in the courts - there was lavish expenditure. By the 19th Century in other parts of Europe, music was moving away from Royal or State patronage towards public support. Public concerts were becoming popular and made musical performances viable. Perhaps this move towards public concerts did not arrive until rather later in Russia, or even if it did come at the same time as elsewhere, there may still have been reasons why orchestras might have been more "well padded" than orchestras in other countries.
Also, in some countries ballet and opera may have been very popular, and clearly these would require orchestras. It may have been that some orchestras were in existence primarily to support opera and ballet, and that orchestral concerts were less popular, but emerged because the fairly large orchestras which were capable of playing lavish orchestral music were already in existence. The question of how orchestras, ballet and opera were funded during the 19th Century is an interesting one.
Perhaps, with no TV and radio to watch and listen to, people really did attend live events, though it is surely questionable about what proportion of each society would want to, or could afford to.
The other possibility is that Russia really did have some magnificent orchestras during the 19th Century, and they had a sound which composers wrote for. From what I know of Russian history, which is not a lot, I suspect that much of Russia was rather poor, yet at the top - in the courts - there was lavish expenditure. By the 19th Century in other parts of Europe, music was moving away from Royal or State patronage towards public support. Public concerts were becoming popular and made musical performances viable. Perhaps this move towards public concerts did not arrive until rather later in Russia, or even if it did come at the same time as elsewhere, there may still have been reasons why orchestras might have been more "well padded" than orchestras in other countries.
Also, in some countries ballet and opera may have been very popular, and clearly these would require orchestras. It may have been that some orchestras were in existence primarily to support opera and ballet, and that orchestral concerts were less popular, but emerged because the fairly large orchestras which were capable of playing lavish orchestral music were already in existence. The question of how orchestras, ballet and opera were funded during the 19th Century is an interesting one.
Perhaps, with no TV and radio to watch and listen to, people really did attend live events, though it is surely questionable about what proportion of each society would want to, or could afford to.
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