Peter and the Wolf
Composed by Sergei
Prokofiev
Performed by the
Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzsky, conductor
Richard Hale,
narrator
Recorded 1939
24:24
Holy
cow! I was asked by the Library of Congress to write about this piece, which I
did in 2019. My explanatory essay sits at the National Recording Registry
website, which you can read
here.
The
official term for music that educates is pedagogic music, and most of it is as
awful as that sounds. Official culture in every society seeks to inculcate its
values, moral and aesthetic, in each of its young generations, and many a child
has been bored to tears by something earnest and condescending it is thought
they “should” like. It’s a rare piece of music that remains as fresh and
persuasive as Peter and the Wolf.
In
classical music, there are a number of designated “kid-friendly” pieces that
serve as gateways to Western art music, the symphonic world. Saint-Saen’s Carnival of the Animals, Britten’s Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra.
There are inadvertently famous classical riffs as well, and some children
graduate into a love of the classical music they only heard snatches of. The
Lone Ranger’s signature music is eventually understood as the overture to
Rossini’s opera, Giullaume Tell, and
the grand three-note opening theme from 2001:
A Space Odyssey becomes Richard Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathustra (especially as taught by kid-friendly
composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein at one of his televised Young People’s
Concerts).
One
of the most successful of these compositions is Russian composer Sergei
Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf, a
“symphonic fairy tale for children” written in the Soviet Union but first
recorded in America, by Serge Koussevitzsky and the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
Since its premiere, it’s been recorded more than 400 times, in a dozen
languages.
The
young and enterprising Prokofiev left the fledgling Soviet Union in May, 1918;
after many successes, he returned permanently in 1936. There, educator Natalya
Sats asked him to write a piece that would teach instruments of the orchestra
to children, for her Central Children’s Theatre.
The
official culture of the day in the USSR was socialist realism, a style that
featured idealistic depictions of the common man, depictions that were
mandated, reviewed, critiqued, and censored by the central government. A useful
work of art taught a moral lesson and reinforced Soviet values. For a libretto,
Prokofiev started with a rhyming narrative by popular Soviet children’s writer
Antonina Sakonyskaya, about a Young Pioneer (the Soviet equivalent of a Boy
Scout) challenging an adult mired in reactionary, pre-Revolutionary thinking.
Dissatisfied,
Prokofiev tossed the original poem aside and wrote his own story in prose.
Turning to the music, he completed the piano score in less than a week, and the
orchestration in another. Peter and the
Wolf debuted on May 2, 1936 at a children’s concert by the Moscow
Philharmonic. The American premiere took place in Boston in March, 1938, due to
the presence there of Koussevitzsky.
Serge
Koussevitzsky was another Russian, but one who chose life in the West after the
Russian Revolution. A respected bassist and composer, his financial situation
enabled him to advance his career by doing such things as hiring the Berlin
Philharmonic for his conducting debut and forming a dominating music-publishing
company that printed the work of composers such as Scriabin, Rachmaninoff,
Stravinsky, and . . . Prokofiev. Koussevitzsky led the ensemble during a period
of artistic greatness. (The primary performance space at the BSO’s legendary
summer concert venue Tanglewood bears the name of the Koussevitzsky Music
Shed.)
According
to Koussevitzsky biographer Moses Smith, “Prokofiev appeared as a soloist and
guest conductor for a program of his own music which included ‘Peter and the
Wolf’ in its first American performance. In a pre-concert interview with
newspapermen he had pointedly alluded to the bad reception Boston had
previously accorded his more ‘serious’ works, which he was accordingly omitting
from the forthcoming program.” Prokofiev biographer Simon Morrison adds,
“Prokofiev informed a Time magazine
reporter that because audiences in Boston could not grasp his ‘serious music,’
he was obliged to pander to them with ‘simple things.’”
Despite
the composer’s deprecating comments, the simplicity of the composition is not
to be confused with a lack of quality. It’s the story of young Peter, who,
defying his Grandfather’s words of warning, defeats and captures a hungry wolf,
with the aid of a few animal friends. Each character has a dedicated instrument
and a distinct theme — what Wagnerians would call a leitmotif. Peter is voiced
by the strings, and there is his grumpy Grandfather (bassoon), a bird (flute),
a duck (oboe), a cat (clarinet), and the wolf himself (French horns). With
precision and economy, Prokofiev sketches out the characters thematically as he
moves the story along.
The
role of the Narrator in the performance is key, and the debut recording
features Richard Hale as such. The respected baritone was a frequent
concert-hall performer; in later years he turned to character acting in films,
becoming a familiar face in fare such as To
Kill a Mockingbird (1962). Hale gives the reading a directness and
emotional force absent in many other renditions of the role. In Hale’s
performance, the story is thrilling and vital.
After
the premiere in Boston, Prokofiev toured America in 1938. He made a point of
going to Hollywood and playing Peter and
the Wolf for Walt Disney, in the hopes he would craft an animated film
based on the score. Disney nearly added a Peter
and the Wolf segment to his animated/classical music anthology Fantasia (1940), but eventually produced
it as a segment of the anthology Make
Mine Music in 1946.
The
premiere recording exists as a six-part set of 78-rpm records bound together
(these bulky, heavy folders gave us the phrase “record album”). The initial
release was wildly popular, and soon recording followed recording, sporting
narrators as varied as Boris Karloff, David Bowie, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Alice
Cooper. Peter and the Wolf is popular
— and sturdy — enough to endure hundreds of renditions.
The National
Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the
recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: Charlie
Christian plays ‘Rose Room.’
SOURCES
Koussevitzsky
Moses
Smith
Muriwai
Books
2017
(1947)
Serge
Koussevitzsky
Hugo
Leichtentritt
Harvard
University Press
1946
The
People’s Artist: Prokofiev’s Soviet Years
Simon
Morrison
Oxford
University Press
2009