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Posted by Romy the Cat on
02-04-2026
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One of the most brilliant examples of a psychologically engineered music is the
celebrated by Russians Slavic Farewell by Agapkin. Nowadays it has various political
unfortunate connotations, but I would like to void all it and to stay purely in
musical merit. I know that it is considered a super cool military march in minor
key (good lich to find more!) but I hear a fugue. That was a tip. Now is the
question:
What connects those 3 works:
Agapkin’s Slavic Farewell
Sibelius’ Finlandia
Bach’s Ricercar a 6
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Posted by steverino on
04-20-2026
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Notes
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Posted by alex on
04-21-2026
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All three are used by Tarkovski in Solars ?
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Posted by steverino on
04-21-2026
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From the fount of all knowledge - accuracy not guaranteed
The soundtrack of Solaris features Johann Sebastian Bach's chorale prelude for organ Ich ruf' zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, BWV 639, played by Leonid Roizman [ru], and an electronic score by Eduard Artemyev. The prelude is the central musical theme. Tarkovsky initially wanted the film to be devoid of music and asked Artemyev to orchestrate ambient sounds as the score; the latter proposed subtly introducing orchestral music. The classical music used for Earth's theme stands in counterpoint to the fluid electronic music used as the theme for the planet Solaris. The character Hari has her own subtheme, a cantus firmus based on Bach's music featuring Artemyev's music atop it; it is heard at Hari's death and at the story's end.
Logically speaking works aren't connected by something or someone other than the works themselves. I think Romy will have to clear up this mini mystery.
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Posted by alex on
04-21-2026
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Maybe in Zerkalo (The mirror), not sure....
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Posted by steverino on
04-21-2026
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of your suggestions. but I think Romy is saying that there is some musical interconnection between these 3 works. He said a "fugue was a hint" which is both obvious and puzzling as the Bach Ricercar is of course a fugue. I don't think there is a fugue in the other two works. I took a look at the Russian March and did not see any fugue like passage. Simple imitation is not a fugue.
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Posted by alex on
04-21-2026
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Otherwise I have no clue what could be common between Fugue, Tone Poem and Military March. The only other fact, unrelated to Bach and Dvorak comes to mind, in Soviet time the "spacial" overnight train Kharkiv-Moscow (yes, that Kharkiv that now bombed daily by Moscow) was leaving platform with PA system played Agapkin’s Slavic Farewell.
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