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Chimes: Upon Reading V. M. Shukshin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chimes
Upon Reading V. M. Shukshin
Choral symphony by Valery Gavrilin
TextRussian folk texts, Albina Shulgina, and Valery Gavrilin
LanguageRussian
Composed1978–1982
DedicationTo Vladimir Nikolayevich Minin [ru]
Published1985
PublisherSovietsky kompozitor [ru]
Kompozitor Sankt-Peterburg [ru]
Durationca. 85 minutes
Movements20
ScoringOboe, percussion, 2 solo singers, speaker, and SATB choir

Chimes: Upon Reading V. M. Shukshin (Russian: Перезвоны — По прочтении В. М. Шукшина, tr. Perezvony — Po prochtenii V. M. Shukshina) is a choral symphony by Valery Gavrilin. It was composed between 1978 and 1982, and premiered in 1984. The texts, inspired after a reading of Vasily Shukshin, are compiled from folk poetry, Albina Shulgina, and Gavrilin himself. The premiere in 1984 was seen as a turning away from European themes to Russian themes in Gavrilin's output.[1] The work was recorded by Melodiya in 1988, with the soloists Natalia Gerasimova, Svetlana Beloklokova, Ludmila Slepneva, Anatoly Lyubimov, and the Moscow Chamber Choir, conducted by Vladimir Minin [ru].

Instrumentation

The instrumentation for Chimes is as follows:

Movements

  1. Cheerful in Spirit (Russian: Весело на душе, tr. Veselo na dushe)
  2. Death of a Bandit (Russian: Смерть разбойника, tr. Smert' razboynika)
  3. Little Reed Pipe (Russian: Дудочка, tr. Dudochka)
  4. Nonsense (Russian: Ерунда, tr. Yerunda)
  5. Little Reed Pipe
  6. Hangout (Russian: Посиделки, tr. Posidelki)
  7. Little Reed Pipe
  8. Ti-ri-ri (Russian: Ти-ри-ри, tr. Ti-ri-ri)
  9. Little Reed Pipe
  10. Evening Music (Russian: Вечерняя музыка, tr. Verchernyaya muzyka)
  11. Little Reed Pipe
  12. Sunday (Russian: Воскресенье, tr. Voskresen'ye)
  13. Little Reed Pipe
  14. Tell Me, Tell Me, Darling (Russian: Скажи, скажи, голубчик, tr. Skazhi, skazhi, golubnik)
  15. Ugly Lady (Russian: Страшенная баба, tr. Strashennaya baba)
  16. White-White Snow (Russian: Белы-белы снеги, tr. Bely-bely snegi)
  17. Prayer (Russian: Молитва, tr. Molitva)
  18. Mother River (Russian: Матка-река, tr. Matka-reka)
  19. Little Reed Pipe
  20. The Road (Russian: Дорога, tr. Doroga)

References

  1. ^ Solomon Volkov - St Petersburg: A Cultural History 2010 - Page 546 1451603150 "A sensation was caused by the premiere in Petersburg of Bell Chimes, a nationalistic "symphony-ritual" (as the composer called it) by Valery Gavrilin, a follower of Georgy Sviridov, a leading Slavophile musician (and former student of Shostakovich) and composer of the Petersburg Songs."


This page was last edited on 25 September 2023, at 17:03
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