![]() Most notable is Balmont’s additions to the “Silver Bells” stanza, in which he adds a meditation on death as a “universal slumber-deep and sweet beyond compare” (retranslation by Fanny S. ![]() ![]() Rachmaninoff based his composition on a Russian translation of “The Bells” by Konstantin Balmont, which took several liberties with Poe’s poem. He completed his choral symphony (“The Bells”) in 1913 and later deemed it his personal favorite of all his compositions. Rachmaninoff read a Russian translation of “The Bells” and was won over. An admirer of Rachmaninoff and of Edgar Allan Poe, the student urged Rachmaninoff to set Poe’s poem, “The Bells,” to music. ![]() While vacationing in Rome in 1907, composer Sergei Rachmaninoff received an anonymous letter from a cello student whom he had never met. ![]()
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