In the first ten years after graduating from the
Saint Petersburg Conservatory in 1865, Tchaikovsky completed
three symphonies. After that he started five more symphony projects, four of which led to a completed symphony premiered during the composer's lifetime. 's portrait by
Ilya Repin. Stasov initially wrote the program for
Manfred for Hector Berlioz to use. encouraged Tchaikovsky to write the
Manfred Symphony. During his second and final trip to Russia in the winter of 1867–68, the French composer
Hector Berlioz conducted his program symphony
Harold en Italie. The work caused a considerable stir. Its subject was very much to the tastes of its audiences, whose enthusiasm for the works of
Lord Byron had not exhausted itself as it had begun to do in Europe. Berlioz's use of a four-movement structure for writing
program music intrigued many Russian musicians. One immediate consequence was
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's four movement suite
Antar, written in 1868. Around the same time as Rimsky-Korsakov composed
Antar, critic
Vladimir Stasov wrote a scenario for a sequel to
Harold, this time based on Byron's poem
Manfred and sent it to the nationalist composer
Mily Balakirev. Balakirev did not feel attracted to the idea, so he forwarded the program to Berlioz, only hinting it was not entirely his own. A little over a year later, Berlioz had died, and by 1872 Balakirev was embroiled in a personal crisis that silenced him creatively. Tchaikovsky's entrance into this story was strictly by circumstance. He finished his final revision of his fantasy-overture
Romeo and Juliet in 1880, a work on which he and Balakirev had worked tirelessly together a decade earlier, and which was dedicated to Balakirev. Since Balakirev had dropped away from the music scene in the intervening time, Tchaikovsky asked the publisher Bessel to send a copy of the printed score to Balakirev, thinking he would have a current address. He presented Stasov's detailed plan, explaining it was not in his character to engage in such composition. As he explained in a letter to Tchaikovsky in October 1882, "this magnificent subject is unsuitable, it doesn't harmonise with my inner frame of mind". When Tchaikovsky showed polite interest, Balakirev sent a copy of Stasov's program, which he had amended with suggested
key signatures for each movement and representative works which Tchaikovsky had already written to give some idea of what Balakirev had in mind. Balakirev also gave warning to avoid "vulgarities in the manner of German fanfares and
Jägermusik," plus instructions about the layout of the flute and percussion parts. So did Tchaikovsky's rereading
Manfred for himself while tending to his friend
Iosif Kotek in
Davos,
Switzerland, nestled in the same
Alps in which the poem was set. Once he returned home, Tchaikovsky revised the draft Balakirev had made from Stasov's programme and began sketching the first movement. Tchaikovsky may have found a subject in
Manfred for which he could comfortably compose. However, there was a difference between placing a personal program into a symphony and writing such a work in a literary program. He wrote to his friend and former student
Sergei Taneyev, "Composing a program symphony, I have the sensation of being a charlatan and cheating the public; I am paying them not hard cash but rubbishy bits of paper money." However, he later wrote to Emilia Pavlovskaya, "The symphony has turned out to be huge, serious, difficult, absorbing all my time, sometimes to utter exhaustion; but an inner voice tells me that my labor is not in vain and that this work will perhaps be the best of my symphonic works." Instead of following Balakirev's instructions slavishly, Tchaikovsky wrote it in his own style. Initially, he considered it to be one of his best compositions, but wanted a few years later to destroy the score, though that intention was never carried out. The
Manfred Symphony was first performed in
Moscow on 23 March 1886, with
Max Erdmannsdörfer as conductor. It is dedicated to Balakirev. ==Key signatures==