Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953)
Overture on Hebrew Themes, Op. 34, 1919
Sergei Prokofiev has proven to be one of the great 20th century composers with outstanding masterworks in nearly every genre from opera, ballet and symphonies to chamber works, music for children (e.g. Peter and the Wolf) and numerous virtuosic works featuring the piano highlighting his own abilities as a concert pianist. Spending most of his life in Russia and the Soviet Union, Prokofiev spent nearly two decades living aboard beginning with a short, financially and professional unsuccessful sojourn in the United States from August 1918 through April 1920. While living in America, Prokofiev was commissioned by an ensemble of Russian Jewish immigrants called Zimro for some new music to be based on themes from a notebook of Jewish folksongs and scored for their specific ensemble: clarinet, string quartet and piano. At first resisting, Prokofiev accepted the commission and quickly completed a ten-minute overture that he debuted as pianist with Zimro in 1920. While Prokofiev remained rather unimpressed with the work (which he later orchestrated), the Overture on Hebrew Themes has remained one of his most cherished chamber compositions.
The early decades of the 20th century witnessed a profound migration of Eastern European Jews to the United States bringing the Ashkenazic, Yiddish "shtetl" (i.e. village) culture particularly to the New York boroughs. One of the Yiddish words for an itinerant professional musician was klezmer and during a much later renaissance of the related Yiddish or Jewish musical culture in the mid 1970's, the genre acquired the title Klezmer Music, an equally apt title for Prokofiev's piece. The instrumental dance music of Eastern European Jewry spans a long tradition over hundreds of years incorporating influences from Russian, Greece, Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania and the Gypsies ultimately rooted in the chanting of the Torah by synagogue cantors. The music is famous for its blend of melancholy joy ("laughing through the tears") characterized by exotic scales, piquant rhythms and expressive "cantillations" improvised on prominent solo instruments like the clarinet and the fiddle. All of these elements feature prominently in Prokofiev's Overture. In addition, the mesmerizing piano figurations in the slower, lyrical sections undoubtedly mimic the hammered dulcimer or tsimbl, another characteristic instrument in the traditional Klezmer ensemble.