The Mighty Handful

Nevsky Prospect, 33, St. Petersburg, Russia, 191186

In the building that once housed the City Duma and now hosts the Rimsky-Korsakov Music School, meetings of the Balakirev Circle—a fellowship of Russian composers founded by Mily Balakirev—were held in the 1860s. Later, thanks to an article by music critic Vladimir Stasov, the circle was renamed the "Mighty Handful": "How much poetry, feeling, talent, and skill there is in this small but already mighty handful of Russian musicians." The center of the musical and educational activities of this group of young composers was the Free Music School they established, the successor of which is the modern educational institution.
In the building that once housed the City Duma (https://reveal.world/story/zdanie-gorodskoj-dumy-c-bashnej), and now is home to the Rimsky-Korsakov Music School, meetings of the Balakirev Circle—a fellowship of Russian composers founded by Mily Balakirev—were held in the 1860s. Later, thanks to an article by music critic Vladimir Stasov, the circle was renamed the "Mighty Handful": "How much poetry, feeling, talent, and skill there is in this small but already mighty handful of Russian musicians." The center of the musical and educational activities of this group of young composers was the Free Music School they opened, the successor of which is the modern educational institution.

The "Mighty Handful," the "New Russian Music School," or the Balakirev Circle. A community of Russian composers formed in the mid-19th century. The name "Mighty Handful" was popularized by the well-known music critic Vladimir Stasov—in Russia. In one of his articles, the critic noted: "How much poetry, feeling, talent, and skill there is in this small but already mighty handful of Russian musicians." The phrase became a catchphrase, and members of the musical community began to be called "the handful."
The composers of the "Mighty Handful" considered themselves heirs to the recently deceased Mikhail Glinka and dreamed of developing Russian national music. The spirit of democracy was in the air, and the Russian intelligentsia contemplated a cultural revolution without violence or bloodshed—exclusively through the power of art.
In Europe, the community of musicians was simply called the "Group of Five."
The first step toward the formation of the "Mighty Handful" was the arrival in 1855 in St. Petersburg of the gifted 18-year-old musician Mily Balakirev. With brilliant performances, the pianist attracted the attention not only of the discerning public but also of the most famous music critic of the time—Vladimir Stasov, who became the ideological inspirer of the composers' union. A year later, Balakirev met military engineer César Cui. In 1857, he met Modest Mussorgsky, a graduate of a military academy. In 1862, he met naval officer Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, and at the same time, common musical views were discovered with chemistry professor Alexander Borodin. Thus, the musical circle was formed. Balakirev introduced the novice musicians to the theory of composition, orchestration, and harmony. Together, the like-minded read Belinsky and Chernyshevsky, jointly opposed academic routine, and sought new forms—under the common idea of nationality as the main direction of music development.
Folk song as the basis for classical music. The handful collected folklore and studied Russian church singing. They organized entire musical expeditions. For example, Balakirev brought material from a trip along the Volga with poet Nikolai Shcherbina in 1860, which became the basis for an entire collection—"40 Russian Folk Songs."
Thanks to the efforts of the Balakirev circle, a free music school was opened for talented people of different social classes. The school hosted free concerts of works by the handful and like-minded composers. The school outlasted the Balakirev circle and operated until the revolution.
The 1870s separated the Balakirev circle. The "Mighty Handful" disbanded, but the five Russian composers continued to create. As Borodin wrote, individuality prevailed over the school, but "the common musical character, the common style inherent to the circle, remained": in the classrooms of the St. Petersburg Conservatory alongside Rimsky-Korsakov and in the work of successors—the Russian composers of the 20th century.

With the cessation of regular meetings of the five Russian composers, the growth, development, and living history of the "Mighty Handful" by no means ended. The center of the handful’s activity and ideology, mainly thanks to Rimsky-Korsakov’s pedagogical work, shifted to the classrooms of the St. Petersburg Conservatory, and starting from the mid-1880s, also to the "Belyayev Circle," where Rimsky-Korsakov was recognized as the head and leader for nearly 20 years. Then, at the beginning of the 20th century, he shared his leadership within a "triumvirate" with A. K. Lyadov, A. K. Glazunov, and a little later (from May 1907) N. V. Artsybushev. Thus, excluding Balakirev’s radicalism, the "Belyayev Circle" became a natural continuation of the "Mighty Handful."
Rimsky-Korsakov himself recalled this quite definitively in his "Chronicle of My Musical Life":
"Can the Belyayev Circle be considered a continuation of the Balakirev Circle? Was there a certain degree of similarity between the two, and what was the difference besides the change over time in its personal composition? The similarity, indicating that the Belyayev Circle is a continuation of the Balakirev Circle, besides the connecting links in the persons of myself and Lyadov, consisted in the common advanced and progressive nature of both; but the Balakirev Circle corresponded to a period of storm and pressure in the development of Russian music, while the Belyayev Circle was a period of calm progress; the Balakirev Circle was revolutionary, the Belyayev Circle was progressive..."

Sources:
https://www.classicalmusicnews.ru/articles/mighty-handful-10-facts/
https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Могучая_кучка
https://adresaspb.com/news/peterburgskie-adresa-rimskogo-korsakova/


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More stories from Great Composers: Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov

Place of birth of Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov

12 Rimsky-Korsakov St., Tikhvin, Leningrad Region, Russia, 187552

Tikhvin is the birthplace of the great Russian composer Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov. He was born here, and here he took his first steps in music. Nikolai Andreyevich spent only 12 years in Tikhvin. But these were his early childhood years, when a person, often without realizing it, absorbs everything he sees, hears, and touches, when tastes, views, and character are formed... Much of what he saw and heard in Tikhvin later found reflection in his work – an interest in folk rituals and customs, in folk musical creativity, certain features of historical and fairy-tale works, maritime and starry themes, and unsurpassed soundscapes – all originating from his Tikhvin childhood.

Studies at the Naval Cadet Corps

Lieutenant Schmidt Embankment, 17, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

In the noble family of the Rimsky-Korsakovs, naval service was a tradition – the boy’s great-great-grandfather was a rear admiral under Empress Elizabeth Petrovna, his uncle was a rear admiral, and later his older brother became one as well. And little Nika, who aspired to emulate him, entered the Naval Cadet Corps in Petersburg in 1956 at the age of 12. He studied with pleasure, easily, and tried to have grades no lower than 10 points (the maximum being 12 points).

Professor at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory

Teatralnaya Square, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

In 1871, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov received an invitation to teach from the director of the Azanchevsky Conservatory and became a professor at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory, which would later bear his name. He taught classes in practical composition, theory of composition, and orchestration, and was the head of the orchestral class (1871–1908); a first-degree professor (1881), and an honored professor (1904–1908). During these years, he also began teaching at the Free Music School, which had been organized, and in 1874 he became its director. However, he soon realized that he lacked the knowledge necessary for teaching. Rimsky-Korsakov recalled: "What helped me was that none of my students at first could imagine that I knew nothing, and by the time they could start to figure me out, I had already learned quite a bit."

The Wedding Ceremony of Nadezhda Purgold and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov

37HX+F3 Vyborgsky District, Saint Petersburg, Russia

The wedding of Nadezhda Purgold and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov took place on June 30 (now this date can be remembered as July 12, according to the new style) 1872 in the Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul, located in a picturesque spot — on a hill by a pond, in Shuvalov Park near Pargolovo. Architect Bryullov designed the building in the Gothic style, unusual for an Orthodox church. The elegant structure, whose construction took 10 years and was completed in 1841, was crowned with an openwork copper spire. It was lost during the Soviet era, along with much of the appearance of this remarkable church, cherished by the entire Rimsky-Korsakov family.

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PXM4+FC Holiday Home "Luga", Leningrad Region, Russia

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Work and Residence of Rimsky-Korsakov in the Court Singing Chapel

Bolshaya Konyushennaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

In 1883, Mily Alexeyevich Balakirev was appointed director of the Court Singing Chapel, and his assistant was confirmed as Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov. The latter taught the orchestral class at the music school and managed it so well that gradually the school's graduates became the leading musicians of the orchestra. The joint work of Balakirev and Rimsky-Korsakov over 10 years was an entire era in the development of performance, educational, and training activities in the Chapel.

Museum-Apartment of N.A. Rimsky-Korsakov

Zagorodny Prospekt, 28, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002

The Rimsky-Korsakov Apartment Museum is currently the only composer’s museum in Saint Petersburg. The museum is located in the five-story courtyard wing of house 28, apartment 39, where Rimsky-Korsakov lived with his family from 1893 until his final days in 1908. Here, 11 of the composer’s 15 operas were created, including *Sadko*, *The Tale of Tsar Saltan*, and *The Tsar’s Bride*.

The Memorial Museum-Estate of Rimsky-Korsakov consists of two estates – Vechasha

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The Memorial Museum-Estate of Rimsky-Korsakov consists of two estates – Vechasha and Lyubensk – and represents a corner of wonderful Russian nature, inseparably connected with the life and work of one of the geniuses of Russian culture of the 19th-20th centuries, Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov. Vechasha is located 14 km from the Plyussa railway station, 6 km from the Saint Petersburg–Kiev highway (at the 186th km from Saint Petersburg).

The Memorial Museum-Estate of Rimsky-Korsakov consists of two estates – Lyubensk

CJ23+84 Lyubensk, Pskov Oblast, Russia

The Lyubensk Estate is located 15 km from the Plyussa railway station. It is now the main memorial complex of the Rimsky-Korsakov Museum-Reserve. Rimsky-Korsakov first came to Lyubensk with his family for the summer in 1907, when he was 63 years old. They rented a house from Alexandra Viktorovna Bukharova, who by that time was considering selling the estate. This charming little place was loved by all family members. A typical small modest Russian estate with wooden residential houses and outbuildings (except for the stable, built from rough stone), it was established in the mid-19th century.

Grave of Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov

pl. Alexander Nevsky, 1zh, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191167

Marble cross with relief modeled after Novgorod tombstones. Artist Roerich, sculptor Andreoletti. The ashes and monument were transferred from the Novodevichy Cemetery in 1936.