Short as this post is, it raises more questions than it answers, as well as leaving the original one unanswered.
To deal with these in that order, firstly the question is raises, which are
1. "Fired" by whom?
2. "Fired" from what?
3. "Fired" for what reason?
Next, the "unanswered question" (albeit not the one by Ives).
I had questioned another contributor's reference to Skryabin's Seventh Sonata (a splendid work, undoubtedly) as an "atonal" work - which it plainly is not. Whilst "tonality" and "tonal reference" are matters of degree, it is generally understood that a work cannot be sensibly classified as "atonal" if it contains reasonable quantities of traditional tonal harmony - i.e. major and minor, augminished and demented (as my old aural training master used to say). For all that Skryabin's musical language - like the languages of some of his contemporaries - developed in the direction of the weakeneing of tonal strangleholds, this development represents if anything a heightened sense of expanded tonality rather than the rejection of tonality. The nearest that Skryabin ever got to anythying approaching atonality was in his final work, the Five Preludes, Op. 74 - and even these can hardly be described as "atonal".
Best - whether or not it is deemed by you or anyone else to be good enough, bad enough or even Rakhmanenough,
Alistair
Indeed Skrjabin's music has little to do with atonality. And one should also keep
in mind, that even a work such as Prométhée, his forward-looking Op.60 and the
third one in his output which is entirely built on the "mystic chord" (a-b-c#-d#-f#-g),
ends in pure f-sharp major!
Unfortunately, we will never know how his musical language would have developed,
perhaps he would have left tonality (tonality as Alistair defines it above) in order to
find a music that would have fit his plans for his ultimate work (and probably also
mankinds ultimate work, if had suceeded): the Mysterium. The 12-tone chord that
appears in the few surviving sketches of "L'act préalable" and the break of the
"unio mystica"* of melody and harmony in Op. 74, might also suggest such a thing.
---
*In Skrjabin's own words: "There is no difference between melody and harmony.
They are one and the same." The difference between the chromatism of the
melodic line and harmonies in Op. 74 is quite obvious, I think. Best wishes,
--ElGreco