Chimes: Upon Reading V. M. Shukshin
Appearance
Chimes | |
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Upon Reading V. M. Shukshin | |
Choral symphony by Valery Gavrilin | |
Text | Russian folk texts, Albina Shulgina, and Valery Gavrilin |
Language | Russian |
Composed | 1978–1982 |
Dedication | To Vladimir Nikolayevich Minin |
Published | 1985 |
Publisher | Sovietsky kompozitor Kompozitor Sankt-Peterburg |
Duration | ca. 85 minutes |
Movements | 20 |
Scoring | Oboe, percussion, 2 solo singers, speaker, and SATB choir |
Chimes: Upon Reading V. M. Shukshin (Russian: Перезвоны — По прочтении В. М. Шукшина, romanized: 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 .
Instrumentation
[edit]The instrumentation for Chimes is as follows:
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Movements
[edit]- Cheerful in Spirit (Russian: Весело на душе, romanized: Veselo na dushe)
- Death of a Bandit (Russian: Смерть разбойника, romanized: Smert' razboynika)
- Little Reed Pipe (Russian: Дудочка, romanized: Dudochka)
- Nonsense (Russian: Ерунда, romanized: Yerunda)
- Little Reed Pipe
- Hangout (Russian: Посиделки, romanized: Posidelki)
- Little Reed Pipe
- Ti-ri-ri (Russian: Ти-ри-ри, romanized: Ti-ri-ri)
- Little Reed Pipe
- Evening Music (Russian: Вечерняя музыка, romanized: Verchernyaya muzyka)
- Little Reed Pipe
- Sunday (Russian: Воскресенье, romanized: Voskresen'ye)
- Little Reed Pipe
- Tell Me, Tell Me, Darling (Russian: Скажи, скажи, голубчик, romanized: Skazhi, skazhi, golubnik)
- Ugly Lady (Russian: Страшенная баба, romanized: Strashennaya baba)
- White-White Snow (Russian: Белы-белы снеги, romanized: Bely-bely snegi)
- Prayer (Russian: Молитва, romanized: Molitva)
- Mother River (Russian: Матка-река, romanized: Matka-reka)
- Little Reed Pipe
- The Road (Russian: Дорога, romanized: Doroga)
References
[edit]- ^ 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."