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.
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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!