Poeme tragique, Op. 34

by Alexander Scriabin

Modern Character Piece Advanced
Key B major
Tempo Andante
Composed 1903
Published 1904
Duration 2m 30s

Instrumentation

Piano

Collections

Musical Terms (5)

  • aile French
    Winged — light and free, as if floating above the instrument.
    One of Scriabin's most characteristic late-period markings. The fingers should barely graze the keys; the sound floats upward rather than projecting outward.
  • avec une volupte radieuse French
    With radiant ecstasy — Scriabin's characteristic late-period instruction for mystical, transcendent passages.
    Scriabin's late music is saturated with mystical ecstasy. These passages should feel as if they are dissolving into pure light; the sound must float, and the harmonies must shimmer rather than resolve.
  • lumineux French
    Luminous — a bright, glowing, radiant tone quality.
    Scriabin uses lumineux for passages that should sound like light itself. High registers, soft touch, and pedal resonance combine to create a shimmering, incandescent effect.
  • mystic chord English
    Scriabin's characteristic harmonic formation: a quartal chord built in fourths (C–F♯–B♭–E–A–D) that generates most of the harmonic language of his late works.
    The mystic chord is not resolved in the traditional sense; it simply is. Its ambiguous tonal centre creates the floating, directionless harmonic world of Scriabin's late style.
  • mystique French
    Mystical — the dominant atmosphere of Scriabin's late piano works.
    Unlike 'mysterious' (which implies concealment), Scriabin's mystique implies revelation — but a revelation hovering just out of reach. The tone should be luminous and suspended.

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