Daniel Jaffé discovers the best recordings of Borodin’s Symphony No. 2, a bravely experimental and colourful work that changed the course of orchestral music

By Daniel Jaffé

Published: Friday, 18 August 2023 at 11:37 AM


Composed 1869-76 then revised several times up to the composer’s death in 1887, Borodin’s Second has long been recognised as the first great Russian symphony.

Much of its pioneering originality can be ascribed to its being the wild offspring of an already accomplished symphonist – Borodin was prompted to compose it by the warm public reception given the premiere of his very fine, totally unprogrammatic First Symphony – and a would-be epic opera composer.

Prompted by Vladimir Stasov, effectively godfather of the so-called ‘Kuchka’ (‘Mighty Handful’) group of composers, Borodin had already started work on his opera, Prince Igor, on a scenario by Stasov based on the old Slavic poem The Lay of Igor’s Campaign: this concerns the medieval prince and his failed campaign in 1185 against the Polovtsy, a fierce tribe of warriors who had settled in the Don River valley.

Though initially intrigued, by early 1870 Borodin was disenchanted with Stasov’s ‘undramatic’ scenario. Still, his imagination had been stirred, so Borodin promised Stasov that although intending to abandon the opera (he in fact resumed it in 1874) he would incorporate music he’d written for it into his new symphony.

We named Borodin one of the best Russian composers of all time

A guide to the music of Borodin’s second symphony