Witches, sorcery, and the literal devil aren’t often part of the tales we hear around Christmas time. But when it comes to Russian fairy tales, it seems, nothing is off the table — not even on Christmas Eve.
Based on a fanciful short story by Nikolai Gogol, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s opera “Christmas Eve” follows a small 18th-century Ukrainian town through an eventful, well, Christmas Eve.
The story gets a little too complex to detail here; suffice it to say that deals with the devil are made and broken, local men are thrown into burlap sacks and carried around, and a sorceress actually manages to steal the moon — and it all ends with a gift from the empress, a happy engagement, and a fantastical tale to tell during the festive days that follow.
He composed the opera in 1894 and 1895, and, following its success, composed operas nearly every 18 months.
Christmas Eve Orchestral Suite
The concert suite, composed in 1904, takes the best music from the opera and condenses it into 20-plus minutes of perfectly cinematic orchestration.
Rimsky-Korsakov’s orchestral works are always lush and melodic — think of Scheherazade, with its ever-shifting textures and its soaring melodies.
I often use the word “cinematic” to describe Rimsky-Korsakov’s music — that’s because it feels like the very best film scores do, with each note perfectly attuned to its moment in the story.
You can hear Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Christmas Eve Suite” on the Holiday Classical Mix stream, right here on Classical.Org!