Vasily Zolotarev

Vasily Andreyevich Zolotarev, also romanized as Zolotaryov (Russian: Василий Андреевич Золотарёв; February 24, 1872 in Taganrog – May 25, 1964 in Moscow),[1] was a Russian (Soviet) composer, music teacher, and People's Artist of Russia.

Biography

Vasily Zolotarev was born in the city of Taganrog in 1872. Studied music at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory under direction of Mily Balakirev (1893–1898) in the class of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1898–1900), graduating in 1900. Zolotarev lectured at Moscow Conservatory (1909–1918), at the Belarus State Academy of Music (Белорусская государственная консерватория им. А. В. Луначарского) in 1933–1941, and other conservatories. Among his students in Tashkent was Mieczysław Weinberg.[2]

Vasily Zolotarev is author of three operas, seven symphonies (1902–1962), three concerti, six string quartets, songs and other works.

Rhapsodie hébraïque

The New York Times wrote of Zolotarev's Rhapsodie hébraïque that it was "based on Hebrew melodies now used in Russia among the Jewish families of the lower classes. [Zolotarev] found that upon a Hebrew racial idiom there had been grafted some of the characteristic of Russian music just as the irreducible language of the Jews in any country is overlaid by a few words or modes of expression belonging to the land of their environment. Thus the melodies are the musical equivalent of Yiddish." They described the melodies as "built upon an Oriental scale [whose] earmark is an augmented interval instead of that found in the diatonic scale between the third and fourth notes.[3]

Selected works

Stage
Orchestral
Concertante
Chamber music
Piano
Choral
Vocal
Literary

Awards

References

  1. Slonimsky, Nicolas (1978). "Zolotarev, Vasily". Baker's Biographical dictionary of musicians. (6th ed.). New York: Schirmer Books. p. 1951. ISBN 0-02-870240-9.
  2. Anderson, Martin. (2014). BBC Radio 3 Weinberg Composer of the Week Segment, Weinberg biography.
  3. "Musical Notes: Concerts, Recitals and Church Choir News", New York Times , 1905-12-17, p. X1.

External links

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