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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TOO-TUM |
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TSCHAIKOVSKY, PETER ILICH (1840-1893) , Russian composer, born at Votkinsk, in the province of Vyatka, on the 7th of May 184o, was the son of a mining engineer, who shortly after the boy's birth removed to St Petersburg
amateur
Petersburg
chief
St Petersburg rejecting his Undine. In 187r Tschaikovsky was busy on his cantata for the opening of the exhibition in celebration of the bicentenary of Peter the Great, his opera The Oprischnik, and a textbook of harmony, which latter was adopted by the Moscow Conservatorium authorities. At Moscow in 1873 his incidental music to the Snow Queen failed, but some success came next year with the beautiful quartet in F. During these years Tschaikovsky was musical critic for two journals, the Sovremennaya Lietopis and the Russky Vestnik. On the death of Serov he competed for the best setting of Polovsky's Wakula the Smith, and won the first two prizes. Yet on its production at St Petersburg in November 1876 this work gained only a succes d'estime. Since then it has been much revised, and is now known as The Little Shoes. Meanwhile the Second Symphony and the Tempest fantasia had been heard, and the pianoforte concerto in B flat minor completed. This was first played by von Billow in Boston, Massachusetts, some time later, and was entirely revised and republished in 1889. At last something like success came to Tschaikovsky with the production of The Oprischnik, in which he had incorporated much of the best of The Vojevoda. The Thirdor PolishSymphony, four sets of songs, the E-flat quartet (dedicated to the memory of Lamb), the ballet " The Swan Lake," and the " Francesca da Rimini " fantasia, all belong to the period of the late
Meanwhile the more personal side of the composer's career had been given a romantic touch by his acquaintance with his lifelong benefactress, Mme von Meck, and his deplorable fiasco of a marriage. In 1876 he had aroused the interest
standing
With his brother, Tschaikovsky went to Clarens to recuperate. He remained abroad for many months, moving restlessly from one place to another. In 1878 he accepted (but later resigned) the post of director of the Russian . musical department at the Paris Exhibition, completed his Fourth Symphony and the Italian Capriccio, and worked hard at his " 181s " overture, more songs, the second pianoforte concerto, and his " Liturgy of St Chrysostom," an interesting contribution to the music of the Eastern Church. The work was confiscated for some time by the intendant of the imperial chapel, on the ground that ithad not received the imprimatur of his predecessor Bortniansky in due accordance with a ukaz of Alexander I. Bortniansky was dead, but his successor was obstinate. Finally the work was saved from destruction by an official order: Tschaikovsky returned only for a short time to Moscow. Thence he went to Paris. In 1879 he wrote his Maid of Orleans (produced in 188o) and his first suite for orchestra. In 1881 died Nickolas Rubinsteinto whose memory Tschaikovsky dedicated the trio in A minor. During the next five years Tschaikovsky travelled, and worked at Manfred and Hamlet, the operas Mazeppa and Charodaika, the Mozartian suite and the fine Fifth Symphony. During a great part of the time he lived in retirement at Klin, where his generosity to the poor made him beloved. His operas The Queen of Spades and the one-act lolanthe were feeble by comparison with his earlier works; more effective, however, were the ballets Sleeping Beauty and Casse-noisette. In 1893 Tschaikovsky sketched his Sixth
Cambridge on the occasion of his receiving the honorary degree of Doctor
Tschaikovsky's work is unequal. In dramatic compositions he lacked point precisely as Anton Rubinstein lacked point. But in the invention of broad, sweeping melody Tschaikovsky was far ahead of his compatriot. Among his songs and smaller pianoforte works, as in his symphonies and quartets, are passages of exquisite beauty. The best of Tschaikovsky's work is more distinctly Russian than that of most of his compatriots; it is not German music in disguise, as is so much of the music by Rubinstein and Glazounow, and it is not incoherently ferocious, like so much of the music by Balakirev. See Mrs Rosa Newmarch's Tchaikovsky (1900) supplemented in 1906 by her condensed English edition of the Life and Letters, which appeared in Russian in 1901 in three volumes, edited by Modeste Tschaikovsky, the composer's brother. End of Article: TSCHAIKOVSKY, PETER ILICH (1840-1893) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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