Talk:Leonid Hrabovsky
This article must adhere to the biographies of living persons (BLP) policy, even if it is not a biography, because it contains material about living persons. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libellous. If such material is repeatedly inserted, or if you have other concerns, please report the issue to this noticeboard.If you are a subject of this article, or acting on behalf of one, and you need help, please see this help page. |
This article is rated Stub-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Untitled
[edit]Hrabovs'ky [Grabovsky], Leonid Oleksandrovych
(b Kiev, 28 Jan 1935). Ukrainian composer. While an economics student at Kiev University (1951–6) he entered the conservatory there, studying composition with Lyatoshyns'ky and Revuts'ky. He graduated in 1959 and his diploma was secured with the Four Ukrainian Songs for chorus and orchestra (1959) which won first prize in an all-union competition, and about which Shostakovich wrote: ‘the Ukrainian Songs by Hrabovs'ky pleased me immensely … his arrangements attracted me by the freedom of treatment and good choral writing’. During the early 1960s Hrabovs'ky taught theory and composition at the Kiev Conservatory. It was in this period that he, together with Hodzyats'ky, Huba and Sil'vestrov, formed the so-called Kiev avant garde. These composers (later joined by Stankovych and Zahortsev), following the models of Stravinsky and Bartók, added the heritage of Schoenberg, the Polish postwar avant garde and other trends generated by post-serialism to cause a musical revolution in Ukraine. Of all of the Soviet composers who emerged on the international scene in the mid-1960s, Hrabovs'ky has gained the reputation of being the most adventurous, outrageous and, at the same time, most interested in formal experimentation which made liberal use of dissonant counterpoint, polytonal chordal complexes and polyrhythms. Although he began employing a neo-classical style tempered by a contemporary approach to ethnographic material, after completing two chamber operas (The Bear in 1963 and The Marriage Proposal in 1964) he broke with this style. Between 1962 and 1964 he had written a number of works that were bringing him closer to 12-tone aesthetics; at the same time he was studying not only the Second Viennese School but also the Polish avant garde, the ideas of Stockhausen and Xenakis, the music of Cage, Feldman, Lutosławski and Varèse. This gestation period resulted in a group of compositions written in 1964 in a phenomenal burst of activity. These compositions espoused the post-Webernian aphoristic manner alongside aleatory rhythms, spatial notation and exploitation of unusual timbres. Although many of these works were highly conceptual and appear skeletal on paper, they sound weighty and very colourful (even the Microstructures for solo oboe of 1964), in part because the gestures, although formally precise and ‘classically’ transparent, are so fitted that they result in a series of very long and complex lines that create a mood of spaciousness. The culmination of this stylistic stage was La mer (begun in 1964 but finished in 1970), in many ways Hrabovs'ky's most ambitious work of that period, which was first performed during the Gaudeamus Music Week in 1971. At about this time, with a cycle entitled Homoeomorphia I–III for piano (1968–9), Homoeomorphia IV for orchestra (1970) and A Little Chamber Music no.2 (1971), Hrabovs'ky began to develop a style that can be described as structural minimalism: this involved an algorithmic method of dealing with random numbers which reached full maturity in the Concerto misterioso for nine instruments of 1977. His music later began also to exhibit a complex synthesis of various styles. In 1981 he moved to Moscow, and in 1987 joined the editorial staff of the journal Sovetskaya muzïka. In 1990, at the invitation of the Ukrainian Music Society, He moved to the USA, where several performances of his works have taken place. He was composer-in-residence at the Ukrainian Institute of America in New York (1990–94) and now lives in Brooklyn, working as a church organist. WORKS
(selective list)
Chbr ops: Medved' [The Bear] (after A.P. Chekhov), 1963; Predlozheniye [The Marriage Proposal] (after Chekhov), 1964
Vocal: 4 Ukrainian Songs, chorus, orch, 1959; From Japanese Haiku, T, pic, bn, xyl, 1964, rev. 1975; Pastels (P. Tychyna), S, vn, va, vc, db, 1964, rev. 1975; La mer (melodrama, after St John Perse), spkr, 2 choruses, org, orch, 1964–70; Epitaph for Rainer Maria Rilke, S, hp, cel, gui, chimes, 1965, rev. 1975; Marginalien zu Heissenbuettel (H. Heissenbuettel), spkr, 2 tpt, trbn, 1 perc, 1967, rev. 1975; Kogda [When] (introduction and 9 miniatures, V. Khlebnikov), Mez, cl, vn/va, perc, pf, str, 1987; Temnere mortem (cant., after H. Skovoroda), chbr chorus, 1991; Peredvistia svitla [Omen of Light] (6 poems, V. Barka), S, cl, vn, pf/synth, 1992; I bude tak [And it Will Be] (8 poems, M. Vorobyov), Mez, cl, vn, perc, pf/synth, 1993
Inst: Sonata, vn, 1959; 5 Character Pieces, pf, 1962; 4 Two-Pt Inventions, pf, 1962; Costanti [Constants], vn, 6 perc, 4 pf, 1964, rev. 1966; Microstructures, ob, 1964, rev. 1975; Trio, vn, db, pf, 1964, rev. 1975; 4 Inventions, chbr orch, 1965 [arr. of pf inventions]; A Little Chbr Music no.1, 15 str, 1966; Homoeomorphia I–II, pf, 1968; Homoeomorphia III, 2 pf, 1969; Vizerunky [Ornamentations], ob, va, hp/gui, 1969, rev. 1981; Homoeomorphia IV, orch, 1970; A Little Chbr Music no.2, ob, hp, 12 str, 1971; 2 Pieces, str, 1972; Bucolic Strophes, org, 1975; On St John's Eve, sym. legend, orch, 1976 [after N.V. Gogol]; Conc. misterioso, 9 insts, 1977; Concorsuono, hn, 1977; Homages, gui, 1981; Night Blues, gui, 1981; Für Elise zur Erinnerung [Keepsake for Elissa], pf, 1988; Hlas I, vc, 1990; Vorzel, sym. elegy, 3 orch groups, 1992; Hlas II, b cl, 1994
Film scores BIBLIOGRAPHY
CC1 (G. McBurney)
V. Baley: ‘Die Avantgarde von Kiew: ein Retrospektive auf halbem Weg’, Melos/NZM, ii (1976), 185–92
V. Tsenova and V. Barsky, ed.: Muzïka s bïvshego SSSR [Music from the former USSR] (Moscow, 1994)
VIRKO BALEY
External links modified
[edit]Hello fellow Wikipedians,
I have just modified one external link on Leonid Hrabovsky. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20060522040021/http://www.ukrainianmusicians.com/html/musicians-g.html to http://www.ukrainianmusicians.com/html/musicians-g.html
When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
This message was posted before February 2018. After February 2018, "External links modified" talk page sections are no longer generated or monitored by InternetArchiveBot. No special action is required regarding these talk page notices, other than regular verification using the archive tool instructions below. Editors have permission to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the RfC before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template {{source check}}
(last update: 5 June 2024).
- If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with this tool.
- If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with this tool.
Cheers.—InternetArchiveBot (Report bug) 02:21, 21 December 2017 (UTC)
- Biography articles of living people
- Stub-Class biography articles
- Stub-Class biography (musicians) articles
- Unknown-importance biography (musicians) articles
- Musicians work group articles
- WikiProject Biography articles
- Start-Class articles with conflicting quality ratings
- Start-Class Soviet Union articles
- Low-importance Soviet Union articles
- WikiProject Soviet Union articles