Composed for Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, The Rite of Spring
premiered in 1913 at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées in Paris. Igor
Stravinsky's harmonically adventurous score--along with a scenario of
pagan sacrifice and Vaslav Nijinsky's unconventional
choreography--excited both opposition and support, and the event's
climax in a near-riot remains among the most notorious premieres in
music history.
Stravinsky created a version of the orchestral score for piano four
hands, and it was in this form that the piece was first published in
1913; the full score was unavailable in print until 1921. World War I's
disastrous effects permeated every aspect of European life, and there
were few performances of the work in the years following its
composition--which made this arrangement the primary introduction to the
work. Scaled down for rehearsal purposes, this reduction provides a
practical opportunity for two pianists to perform the complete work, or
for listeners to delve inside the structure behind Stravinsky's landmark
opus.