Aleksandr Scriabin, in full Aleksandr Nikolayevich Scriabin, Scriabin also spelled Skriabin, or Skryabin,
(born Dec. 25, 1871 [Jan. 6, 1872, New Style], Moscow, Russia—died
April 14 [April 27], 1915, Moscow), Russian composer of piano and
orchestral music noted for its unusual harmonies through which the
composer sought to explore musical symbolism.
Scriabin was trained as a soldier at the Moscow Cadet School from 1882
to 1889 but studied music at the same time and took piano lessons. In
1888 he entered the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied the piano with
V.I. Safonov and composition with Sergey Taneyev and Anton Arensky. By
1892, when he graduated from the conservatory, he had composed the piano
pieces that constitute his opuses 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7. In 1897 he married
the pianist Vera Isakovich and from 1898 until 1903 taught at the
Moscow Conservatory. He then devoted himself entirely to composition and
in 1904 settled in Switzerland. After 1900 he was much preoccupied with
mystical philosophy, and his Symphony No. 1, composed in that year, has
a choral finale, to his own words, glorifying art as a form of
religion. In Switzerland he completed his Symphony No. 3, first
performed under Arthur Nikisch in Paris in 1905. The literary “program”
of this work, devised by Tatiana Schloezer, with whom he had formed a
relationship after abandoning his wife, was said to represent “the
evolution of the human spirit from pantheism to unity with the
universe.” Theosophical ideas similarly provided the basis of the
orchestral Poem of Ecstasy (1908) and Prometheus (1911), which called
for the projection of colours onto a screen during the performance.
From 1906 to 1907 Scriabin toured the United States, where he gave
concerts with Safonov and the conductor Modest Altschuler, and in 1908
he frequented theosophical circles in Brussels. In 1909 he was
encouraged by the conductor Serge Koussevitzky, who both performed and
published his works, to return to Russia. By then he was no longer
thinking in terms of music alone; he was looking forward to an
all-embracing “Mystery.” This work was planned to open with a
“liturgical act” in which music, poetry, dancing, colours, and scents
were to unite to induce in the worshipers a “supreme, final ecstasy.” He
wrote the poem of the “Preliminary Action” of the “Mystery” but left
only sketches for the music.
Scriabin’s reputation stems from his grandiose symphonies and his
sensitive, exquisitely polished piano music. His piano works include 10
sonatas (1892–1913), an early concerto, and many preludes and other
short pieces. Although Scriabin was an idolater of Frédéric Chopin in
his youth, he early developed a personal style. As his thought became
more and more mystical, egocentric, and ingrown, his harmonic style
became ever less generally intelligible. Meaningful analysis of his work
only began appearing in the 1960s, and yet his music had always
attracted a devoted following among modernists.