Dictionary Definition
Tchaikovsky n : important Russian composer whose
works are noted for their expressive melodies (1840-1893) [syn:
Peter
Tchaikovsky, Peter
Ilich Tchaikovsky, Pyotr
Tchaikovsky, Pyotr
Ilych Tchaikovsky]
Extensive Definition
Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky (, listen) (
– ) was a Russian composer of the Romantic
era. While not part of the nationalistic music group
known as "The Five",
Tchaikovsky wrote music which was distinctly Russian:
plangent, introspective, with modally-inflected
melody and harmony.
Tchaikovsky considered himself a professional composer. He
felt his professionalism in combining skill and high standards in
his musical works separated him from his colleagues in "The Five."
He shared several of their ideals, including an emphasis on
national character in music. His aim, however, was linking those
ideals with a professional standard high enough to satisfy European
criteria. His professionalism also fueled his desire to reach a
broad public, not just nationally but also internationally, which
he would eventually do.
Aesthetically, Tchaikovsky remained open to all
aspects of St
Petersburg musical life. He was impressed by Serov and
Balakirev
as well as the classical values upheld by the conservatory. Both
the progressive and conservative camps in Russian music at the time
attempted to win him over. Tchaikovsky charted his compositional
course between these two factions, retaining his individuality as a
composer as well as his Russian identity. A clear summation of
Tchaikovsky's approach can be found in Hermann Laroche's review of
Sleeping Beauty:
The Russian way in music ... is the issue at
hand.... The point is not in the local color, in the internal
structure of the music, above all in the foundation of the element
of melody. This basic element is undoubtedly Russian. It may be
said, without lapsing into contradiction, that the local color [in
Sleeping Beauty] is French, but the style is Russian.... One may
thank Pyotr Ilyich that his development has coincided with a time
when the influences of the soil became stronger among us, when the
Russian soul was inspired, when the word "Russian" ceases to be a
synonym of "peasant-like," and when the peasant-like itself was
recognized in its proper place, as but part of being Russian.
Life
Childhood
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in Votkinsk, a small town in present-day Udmurtia (at the time the Vyatka Guberniya of Imperial Russia). His father, Ilya Petrovitch, was the son of a government mining engineer. His mother, Alexandra, was a Russian woman of partial French ancestry and the second of Ilya's three wives. Pyotr was the older brother (by some ten years) of the dramatist, librettist, and translator Modest Ilyich Tchaikovsky.In 1843, Tchaikovsky acquired a French governess,
Fanny Dürbach. Her love and affection for her charge provided a
counter to Alexandra, a cold, unhappy, distant parent not given to
displays of physical affection. For all her undemonstrativeness,
however, Alexandra doted on Pyotr. Also, by her aloofness and
demeanor, she may have seeded her son's lifetime fascination and
sympathy for deprived, suffering or otherwise doomed women—one he
would later express musically in such works as
Romeo and Juliet, Swan Lake,
Francesca da Rimini and Pique
Dame.
Pyotr began piano lessons at age five with a
local woman. Musically precocious, he could read music as well as
his teacher within three years. However, his parents' passion for
his musical talent soon cooled. Feeling inferior due to their
humble origins, the family sent Pyotr in 1850 to a school for the
"lesser nobility" or gentry called the School
of Jurisprudence in St.
Petersburg to secure him a career as a civil servant. The
minimum age for acceptance was 12. For Pyotr, this meant two years
boarding at the School of Jurisprudence's preparatory school, from
his family. Pyotr adored Alexandra and was already hypersensitive
emotionally. He lacked self-confidence and often clung to his
mother's skirts. Her abandonment of him at the preparatory school
was extremely traumatic. It was to be the first of two brutally
symbolic departures.
Early manhood
The second brutal leave-taking came on June 25, 1854 with her death from cholera. This was such a harsh blow that Pyotr could not inform his former governness Fanny Dürbach of it until two years later. He reacted to her loss by turning to music; within a month of her death, he was making his first serious efforts at composition, a waltz in her memory. Several writers, including Poznansky, Holden, and Warrack, have claimed that the loss of his mother was formative on Tchaikovsky's sexual development, in particular because of the close emotional connection he had to her. Regardless, the same-sex practices widespread among students at the all-male School of Jurisprudence, became his norm. With these proclivities came friendships with fellow students, such as Alexei Apukhin and Vladimir Gerard, intense enough to make up for the loss of his mother and isolation from the rest of his family. Some of these friendships would last the rest of his life.While music was not considered a high priority at
the Institite, Tchaikovsky was taken to the theater and the opera
with classmates regularly. He was fond of works by Rossini,
Bellini,
Verdi and
Mozart.
A piano manufacturer, Franz Becker, made occasional visits as a
token music teacher and gave lessons. This was the only music
instruction Tchaikovsky received at school. In 1855, Ilya
Tchaikovsky funded private studies outside the Institute for his
son with Rudolph Kündinger, a well-known piano teacher from
Nuremberg.
Ilya also questioned Kündinger about a musical career for his son.
He replied that nothing suggested a potential composer or even a
fine performer. Tchaikovsky was told to finish his course work,
then try for a post in the Ministry of Justice.
Tchaikovsky graduated on May 25, 1859 with the
rank of titular counselor, the lowest rung of the civil service
ladder. On June 15, he was appointed to the Ministry of Justice.
Six months later he became a junior assistant to his department;
two months after that, a senior assistant. There Tchaikovsky
remained for the rest of his three-year civil service career. In
1861, he attended classes in music theory
taught by Nikolai
Zaremba through the Russian
Musical Society (RMS). The following year he followed Zaremba
to the new
St Petersburg Conservatory. Tchaikovsky followed but did not
give up his civil service post until his father agreed to support
him. From 1862 to 1865, he studied harmony, counterpoint and fugue with Zaremba. Anton
Rubinstein, director and founder of the Conservatory, taught
him instrumentation and composition. Rubinstein was impressed by
Tchaikovsky's talent.
Anton Rubinstein's younger brother
Nikolai asked Tchaikovsky after graduation to become professor
of harmony, composition, and the history of
music at the Moscow
Conservatory. Tchaikovsky gladly accepted the position as Ilya
had retired and lost his property.
Dealing with the Five
see also Tchaikovsky and the Five As Tchaikovsky studied with Zaremba at the Western-oriented St. Petersburg Conservatory, critic Vladimir Stasov and composer Mily Balakirev espoused a nationalistic, less Western-oriented and more locally ideomatic school of Russian music. Stasov and Balakirev recruited what would be known as The Mighty Handful or kuchka (better known in English as "The Five") in St. Petersburg. Balakirev considered academicism to be not a help but a threat to musical imagination. Along with Stasov, he attacked Rubinstein and the Conservatory relentlessly in print as well as verbally at every opportunity.Since Tchaikovsky became Rubinstein's best known
student, he was initially considered by association as a natural
target for attack, especially as fodder for Cesar Cui's criticism.
This attitude changed slightly when Rubinstein exited the St.
Petersburg musical scene in 1867. Tchaikovsky entered into a
working relationship with Balakirev. The result was Tchaikovsky's
first masterpiece, the fantasy-overture
Romeo and Juliet, a work the kuchka wholeheartedly embraced.
When Tchaikovsky wrote a positive review of Nikolai
Rimsky-Korsakov's
Fantasy on Serbian Themes, he was welcomed into the circle
despite concerns about his academic background.
He remained friendly but never intimate with most
of the Five, ambivalent about their music; their goals and
aesthetics did not match his. He took pains to insure his musical
independence from them as well as from the conservative faction at
the Conservatory—a course of action facilitated by his accepting
the professorship at the Moscow Conservatory offered to him by
Nikolai Rubinstein. When Rimsky-Korsakov was offered a
professorship at the St. Petersburg Conservatory after Zaremba had
left, it was Tchaikovsky to whom he turned for advice and guidance.
Later, Tchaikovsky enjoyed closer relations with Alexander
Glazunov, Anatoly
Lyadov and, at least on the surface, the elder
Rimsky-Korsakov.
Dostoyevskian turmoil in music
see also Antonina Miliukova Beginning with his Fourth Symphony, Tchaikovsky's music became an intense psychic outlet, allowing him to voice frustrations and emotions previously kept bottled up. The importance of Tchaikovsky's homosexuality and its consequences on the personal expression in his compositions cannot be underestimated. Tchaikovsky's gayness in itself has been known to the West for at least 75 years, gathered from the composer's own writings as well as those of his brother Modest, who was also gay. More debatable is how well he accepted his sexuality or was comfortable with it.Timely benefactress
see also Nadezhda von Meck Four months prior to Antonina's first letter came another at least as significant. Nadezhda von Meck, wealthy widow of a Russian railway tycoon and an influential patron of the arts, wanted to commission some chamber pieces. She eventually paid Tchaikovsky an annual subsidy of 6,000 rubles. This would also allow him to resign from the Moscow Conservatory in October 1878 and concentrate primarily on composition. With von Meck's patronage came a relationship that, at her insistence, was mainly epistolary. They exchanged over 1,200 letters, some of them quite lengthy, between 1877 and 1890. For both of them, these letters would become a solace and a safety valve, filled with details extraordinary for two people who would never meet. Tchaikovsky was more open to von Meck about much of his life and his creative processes than to any other person.Some could claim legitimately that Tchaikovsky
and von Meck's friendship rose to a level similar to that of his
future attachment to his nephew, Vladimir "Bob" Davydov. This
arrangement can often take place between a woman and a gay man who
is spiritually and artistically oriented. A parallel relationship
would be the platonic affair between
Michelangelo and Vittoria
Colonna, marchioness of Pescara. Like von
Meck, Vittoria was a mature widow. She withdrew into a convent,
from which she exchanged passionate sonnets with Michelangelo. Von
Meck remained a fully dedicated supporter of Tchaikovsky and all
his works. She took the place of the mother figure he had lost—and
more. She also became a vital enabler in his day-to-day existence.
As he explained to her,
There is something so special about our
relationship that it often stops me in my tracks with amazement. I
have told you more than once, I believe, that you have come to seem
to me the hand of Fate itself, watching over me and protecting me.
The very fact that I do not know you personally, while feeling so
close to you, accords you in my eyes the special status of an
unseen but benevolent presence, like a benign Providence.
Tchaikovsky and von Meck also became related by
marriage. One of her sons, Nikolay, married Tchaikovsky's niece
Anna Davydova in 1884. However, after 13 years von Meck suddenly
ended the relationship. She claimed bankruptcy. Tchaikovsky, now a
success throughout Europe, no longer needed her money. Her
friendship and encouragement were another matter. Losing that
companionship devastated him.
Later career
Tchaikovsky returned to Moscow Conservatory in the fall of 1879. He had been away from Russia a year after his marriage disintegrated. Shortly into that term, however, he resigned. He settled in Kamenka yet travelled incessantly. Assured of a regular income from von Meck, he wandered around Europe and rural Russia. Not staying long in any one place, he lived mainly alone, avoiding social contact whenever possible. This may have been due partly to troubles with Antonina. She alternately accepted and refused divorce and at one point exacerbated matters by moving into the apartment directly above her husband's. Perhaps understandably, his music suffered in quality. Except for his piano trio, which he wrote upon the death of Nikolai Rubinstein, his best work from this period is found in genres which did not depend heavily on personal expression.While Tchaikovsky's reputation grew rapidly
outside Russia, "it was considered obligatory [in progressive
musical circles in Russia] to treat Tchaikovsky as a renegade, a
master overly dependent on the West," Alexandre
Benois wrote in his memoirs. In 1880, this assessment changed
practically overnight. During commemoration ceremonies for the
Pushkin
Monument in Moscow, Dostoyevsky called for the Russian "to become
brother to all men, uniman, if you will." Dostoyevsky had been a
fervent nationalist. Like Tchaikovsky, though, he also had what
Osip
Mandelstam termed "a longing for world culture." Focusing on
the "European" essence of Pushkin's work, Dostoyevsky's charged
that the poet had given a prophetic call to Russia for "universal
unity" with the West An unprecedented acclaim for Dostoyevsky's
message rushed throughout Russia. Disdain for Tchaikovsky's music
dissipated. He even drew a cult following among the young
intelligentsia of St. Petersburg, including Benois, Leon Bakst and
Sergei
Diaghilev.
Tchaikovsky died on November 6, 1893, nine days
after the premiere of his
Sixth Symphony, the Pathétique. His death has traditionally
been attributed to cholera, most probably
contracted through drinking contaminated water several days
earlier. However, some have theorized his death was a suicide. In
one variation of the theory, a sentence of suicide was imposed in a
"court of honor" by Tchaikovsky's fellow alumni of the St.
Petersburg School of Jurisprudence, as a censure of the composer's
sexual preferences.
Tchaikovsky's life in media
Films
- Song of
My Heart (1948, US).
- Directed by Benjamin
Glazer.
- Screenplay by Benjamin Glazer.
- allmovies.com link.
- Screenplay by Benjamin Glazer.
- Directed by Benjamin
Glazer.
- Tchaikovsky
(1969, Russia).
- Directed by Igor
Talankin.
- Screenplay by Yuri Nagibin.
- Nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
- allmovies.com link
- Screenplay by Yuri Nagibin.
- Directed by Igor
Talankin.
- The Music
Lovers (1970, UK).
- Directed by Ken Russell.
- Screenplay by Melvyn Bragg.
- Based on Beloved Friend, a collection of personal correspondence edited by Catherine Drinker Bowen and Barbara von Meck.
- allmovies.com link
- Screenplay by Melvyn Bragg.
- Directed by Ken Russell.
Television
- Pride or Prejudice (1993, UK).
- BBC documentary.
- Various theories investigated regarding Tchaikovsky's death.
- BBC documentary.
- Tchaikovsky: Fortune and Tragedy (2007, UK).
- Two-part docudrama
on the composer's life.
- Part of BBC series The Tchaikovsky Experience.
- Two-part docudrama
on the composer's life.
Music
- Shameful Vice
- Opera by English composer Michael
Finnissy.
- Libretto focuses on Tchaikovsky's last days and death.
- Opera by English composer Michael
Finnissy.
Music
Characteristics
Tchaikovsky demonstrated the Romantic ideals of color, emotional expressiveness, and dramatic intensity. Tchaikovsky was also typically Romantic in his choice of subject matter in his operas and symphonic poems. He leaned toward doomed lovers and heroines — Romeo and Juliet, Francesca and Paolo (Francesca da Rimini), Tatiana (Eugene Onegin), even the title character from his abandoned opera Undina. Sometimes, as in his final opera, Iolanta, and in his final tone poem, The Voyevode, the love music could outshine the rest of the composition, especially if the music or story was otherwise sub-standard.Tchaikovsky stood out from many of his
contemporaries in his great fund of melody and quality of that
melody—sweet and at times bittersweet in tone, sensuous in the
undulations of the melodic line, and lush in texture, yet providing
a clear periodic structure. That structure can be obscured by the
sheer expansiveness of the musical phrase, as well as by its
sequential
extension. The love theme in Romeo and Juliet is an example.
The theme starts as an eight-bar phrase, the second half a free
sequence
of the first. This sequence establishes a principle of growth which
is used on the theme's recurrence to expand freely and
unpredictably. Unlike The Five's work,
folk songs and folk-like melodies appear only sporadically in
Tchaikovsky's work.
Tchaikovsky was also extremely imaginative in
orchestration; he never stopped seeking new timbral combinations. This
penchant was drilled into him early, through Anton Rubinstein's
exercises at the St. Petersburg Conservatory. It also caused him to
run afoul of Rubinstein, choosing instruments his conservative
teacher would never use himself.
The major leap Tchaikovsky made in terms of
orchestral skill was through the first three orchestral suites.
Through these works two changes took place. First, Tchaikovsky's
orchestration became tremendously subtler and more sophisticated
when needed. Second, he allowed the instrumental sound he desired
to dictate the music he would write, instead of vice versa. There
would still be touches of novelty, such as his using four
accordions in the Second Orchestral Suite and, much later, the
celesta solos in
The
Nutcracker and
The Voyevoda. More often, though, his ability to conjure an
atmosphere or scene with the colors he chose would become
increasingly keener and further ranging, allowing him to expand
into the various degrees of fantasy which would incorporate some of
his finest work.
Imperial style
Tchaikovsky's musical cosmopolitanism made him especially adept in writing in a Italo-Franco "Imperial style." This style was favored by Tsar Alexander III and the Russian upper classes over the "Russian" harmonies of Mussorgsky, Borodin and Rimsky-Korsakov.Imperial style was symbolized by the polonaise, imported into
Russia near the end of the 18th century by Jozef Kozlowski, a
Polish composer who served in the Russian Army. Kozlowski's
greatest musical successes were with his polonaises. He wrote a
triumphal polonaise on a text by Derzhavin, "Thunder of Victory,
Resound," to celebrate the Russian victory over the Turks in the
Ukraine. After that, the polonaise became the preeminent ceremonial
gesture in Russia. It became an expression of tsarist patriotism
and imperialism. With this cachet came both an opulence and
importance in the dance's use:
[T]he polonaise became the supreme courtly form
and the most brilliant of all the ballroom genres. The polonaise
came to symbolize the European brilliance of eighteenth-century
Petersburg [then the capital of Russia] itself. In Eugene
Onegin Pushkin
(like Tchaikovsky) used the polonaise for the climactic entry of
Tatiana at the ball in Petersburg. Tolstoy used
the polonaise at the climax of the ball in War and
Peace, where the Emperor makes his appearance and Natasha
dances with Andrei.
From 1885, Tchaikovsky also enjoyed the direct
patronage of Alexander III. The tsar asked personally for a new
production of Eugene Onegin to be staged in St. Petersburg. The
opera had previously been seen only in Moscow, produced by a
student ensemble from the conservatory. He had Onegin staged not at
the Mariyinsky Theater but in the Bolshoi kamennïy theater. This
act served notice that Tchaikovsky's music was replacing Italian
opera as the official imperial art. Thanks to Vsevolozhsky,
Tchaikovsky received a lifetime pension of 3000 rubles per year
from the tsar. This essentially made him the premier court
composer, at least in practice if not in actual title.
Russia's society was paternalistic.
Members of the higher classes patronized
those of the lower. Tchaikovsky could therefore count on the
support of the higher ranks of the aristocracy. An essential
feature of this artistic patronage was that patron and artist were
considered equals. While it is well-known that Tchaikovsky and von
Meck discussed a variety of subjects as equals, he and Konstantin
Konstantonovich enjoyed a similarly straightforward (though less
intimate) relationship. Dedications of works to patrons were not
gestures of humble gratitude but expressions of artistic
partnership. The dedication of the Fourth Symphony to von Meck is
known to be a seal on their friendship. His relationship with
Konstantin Konstantinovich bore creative fruit in the Six Songs,
Op. 63, for which the grand duke wrote the words.
As his career advanced, Tchaikovsky increasingly
became the embodiment of the artistic values cherished by the
aristocracy. For Tchaikovsky, there was no conflict between the
artist and his public. Highly sensitive to external circumstances
and expectations, he searched constantly for new ways of reaching
the public. He saw no harm in playing on the tastes of particular
audiences. The patriotic themes and stylization of 18th-Century
melodies in his works lined up with the values of the Russian
aristocracy; and using the polonaise, the musical symbol of Russian
patriotism, as a finale was one of Tchaikovsky's recepes for
success.
Tchaikovsky's idea of music was to a large extent
based on its aesthetic impact. He felt the high demands of Wagner's
music on its audiences conflicted with this criterion. His
objections to Brahms were similar. He felt Brahms's music lacked
what was most important—beauty. He sought tne expressive value in
music that was immediately comprehensible and appreciable—in other
words, what was apparent on the surface. He admired Bizet's
Carmen for
exactly this reason. "This music has no pretensions to profundity,
but it is so charming in its simplicity, so vigorous, not contrived
but instead sincere, that I learned all of it from beginning to end
almost by heart." Mozart aroused tremendous fascination in
Tchaikovsky. While he loved Mozart's music, it was also a mystery
to him, especially in the way Mozart combined simplicity with
profundity.
While many may immediately think of
self-expression when they hear the name "Tchaikovsky", it was not
necessarily central to him. In a letter to von Meck dated December
5, 1878, he explained there were two kinds of inspiration for a
symphonic composer, a subjective and an objective one:
In the first instance, [the composer] uses his
music to express his own feelings, joys, sufferings; in short, like
a lyric poet he pours out, so to speak, his own soul. In this
instance, a program is not only not necessary but even impossible.
But it is another matter when a musician, reading a poetic work or
struck by a scene in nature, wishes to express in musical form that
subject that has kindled his inspiration. Here a program is
essential.... Program music can and must exist, just as it is
impossible to demand that literature make do without the epic
element and limit itself to lyricism alone.
This meant program
music such as
Francesca da Rimini or the Manfred
Symphony was as much a part of their composer's artistic credo
as the expression of his "lyric ego." While he could feel a great
deal of sympathy for his subjects, sympathy does not necessarily
mean identification. Labeling all his works based on literary
subjects as confessional music would be unwarranted. The character
of Hermann in Pique Dame has sometimes been mentioned as an
expression of the composer's morbidity and suicidal tendencies.
Tchaikovsky's letters and diary entries disprove this notion,
showing that he did not identify with Hermann. His diary entry for
March 2, 1890, when he had just completed the opera, shows a
characteristic mixture of empathy and detachmant. "Wept terribly
when Hermann breathed his last. The result of exhaustion, or maybe
it is truly good."
There is also a group of compositions which fall
outside the dichotomy of program music versus "lyrical ego," where
he hearkens toward pre-Romantic aesthetics. Works in this group
include the orchestral suites, Capriccio
Italien and the
Serenade for Strings. He displays his clearest link to
pre-Romantic sensitivities in retrospective works such as the
Variations on a Rococo Theme and
Mozartiana, a collection of orchestrations based on Mozart
piano pieces and a Liszt transcription of a Mozart work. The
Violin Concerto also looks back to pre-Romantic aesthetics.
While Tchaikovsky does not follow classical practice, most notably
in the lack of a double exposition
in the first movement, he also does not follow the conventions of
other 19th-Century violin concertos. It is not written as a
virtuosic work for virtuosity's sake, like Paganini's
concertos, nor virtuosity used to express a symphonic concept, as
in the Brahms Violin Concerto. The tone of the orchestral
introduction could almost be considered classicist; the
same is true for the transparent orchestration, with the orchestra
itself relegated for the most part to background for the
soloist.
Few compositions are as far removed from the idea
of Tchaikovsky as musical confessor as the orchestral suites, yet
they are entirely true to his pre-Romantic ideal. They were an
outgrowth of a trend beginning in Germany following the
rediscovering of Bach's orchestral suites, and he valued the genre
for formal freedom as well as its unrestricted musical fantasy.
Capriccio italien, an urban tableau evoking Italian urban folklore,
was the continuation of a tradition begun with Haydn and Mozart.
The Serenade for Strings was intended as a tribute to Mozart. While
not copying any style, Tchaikovsky attempts to convert the spirit
of the Classicl approach into his own compositional idiom. The
Serenade's unique tone comes from a subtle balance between
Tchaikovsky's lyrical sentimentality and his attention to classical
measure and clarity.
Tchaikovsky may have best summed his perception
of music himself to von Meck: "It alone clarifies, reconciles, and
consoles. But it is not a straw just barely clutched at. It is a
faithful friend, protector, and comforter, and for its sake alone,
life in this world is worth living."
Media
See also
References
Bibliography
- Brown, David, ed. Stanley Sadie, The New Grove Encyclopedia of Music and Musicians (London: MacMillian, 1980), 20 vols. ISBN 0-333-23111-2.
- Brown, David, Tchaikovsky: The Early Years, 1840-1874 (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1978). ISBN 0-393-07535-2.
- Brown, David, Tchaikovsky: The Crisis Years, 1874-1878, (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1983). ISBN 0-393-01707-9.
- Brown, David, Tchaikovsky: The Years of Wandering, 1878-1885, (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1986). ISBN 0-393-02311-7.
- Brown, David, Tchaikovsky: The Final Years, 1885-1893, (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1991). ISBN 0-393-03099-7.
- Brown, David, Tchaikovsky: The Man and His Music (New York: Pegasus Books, 2007). ISBN 0-571-23194-2.
- Cooper, Martin, ed Abraham, Gerald, Music of Tchaikovsky (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1946). ISBN n/a.
- Figes, Orlando, Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2002). ISBN 0-8050-5783-8 (hc.).
- Hanson, Lawrence and Hanson, Elisabeth, Tchaikovsky: The Man Behind the Music (New York: Dodd, Mead & Company). Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 66-13606.
- Holden, Anthony, Tchaikovsky: A Biography (New York: Random House, 1995). ISBN 0-679-42006-1.
- Maes, Francis, tr. Arnold J. Pomerans and Erica Pomerans, A History of Russian Music: From Kamarinskaya to Babi Yar (Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of Ca.ilfornia Press, 2002). ISBN 0-520-21815-9.
- Mochulsky, Konstantin, tr. Minihan, Michael A., Dostoyevsky: His Life and Work (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1967). Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 65-10833.
- Poznansky, Alexander Tchaikovsky: The Quest for the Inner Man (New York: Schirmer Books, 1991). ISBN 0-02-871885-2.
- Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolai, Letoppis Moyey Muzykalnoy Zhizni (St. Petersburg, 1909), published in English as My Musical Life (New York: Knopf, 1925, 3rd ed. 1942). ISBN n/a.
- Schonberg, Harold C. Lives of the Great Composers (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 3rd ed. 1997).
- Steinberg, Michael, The Symphony (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995).
- Tchaikovsky, Modest, Zhizn P.I. Chaykovskovo [Tchaikovsky's life], 3 vols. (Moscow, 1900-1902).
- Tchaikovsky, Pyotr, Perepiska s N.F. von Meck [Correspondence with Nadzehda von Meck], 3 vols. (Moscow and Lenningrad, 1934-1936).
- Tchaikovsky, Pyotr, Polnoye sobraniye sochinery: literaturnïye proizvedeniya i perepiska [Complete Edition: literary works and correspondence], 17 vols. (Moscow, 1953-1981).
- Volkov, Solomon, tr. Bouis, Antonina W., St. Petersburg: A Cultural History (New York: The Free Press, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1995). ISBN 0-02-874052-1.
- Warrack, John, Tchaikovsky Symphonies and Concertos (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1969). Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 78-105437.
- Warrack, John, Tchaikovsky (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1973). SBN 684-13558-2.
- Wiley, Roland John, Tchaikovsky's Ballets (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1985). ISBN 0-198-16249-9.
Further reading
- Greenberg, Robert "Great Masters: Tchaikovsky -- His Life and Music"
- Kamien, Roger. Music : An Appreciation. Mcgraw-Hill College; 3rd edition (August 1, 1997). ISBN 0-07-036521-0.
- ed. John Knowles Paine, Theodore Thomas, and Karl Klauser (1891). Famous Composers and Their Works, J.B. Millet Company.
- Meck Galina Von, Tchaikovsky Ilyich Piotr, Young Percy M. Tchaikovsky Cooper Square Publishers; 1st Cooper Square Press ed edition (October, 2000) ISBN 0-8154-1087-5.
- Meck, Nadezhda Von Tchaikovsky Peter Ilyich, To My Best Friend: Correspondence Between Tchaikovsky and Nadezhda Von Meck 1876-1878 (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993) ISBN 0-19-816158-1.
- Poznansky, Alexander & Langston, Brett The Tchaikovsky
Handbook: A guide to the man and his music. (Indiana University
Press, 2002).
- Vol. 1. Thematic Catalogue of Works, Catalogue of Photographs,
Autobiography. ISBN 0-253-33921-9.
- Vol. 2. Catalogue of Letters, Genealogy, Bibliography. ISBN 0-253-33947-2.
- Vol. 1. Thematic Catalogue of Works, Catalogue of Photographs,
Autobiography. ISBN 0-253-33921-9.
- Poznansky, Alexander, Tchaikovsky's Last Days, (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), ISBN 0-19-816596-X.
- Poznansky, Alexander. Tchaikovsky through others' eyes. (Bloomington: Indiana Univ. Press, 1999). ISBN 0-253-33545-0.
External links
- Tchaikovsky Research (active site)
- Istituto Musicale Tchaikovsky (Italy) (active site)
- Tchaikovsky (inactive site)
- Tchaikovsky page (inactive site)
- PBS Great Performances biography of Tchaikovsky
- Tchaikovsky cylinder recordings, from the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara Library.
- Tchaikovsky's sacred works by Polyansky
- Biography of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Public Domain Sheet Music:
- www.kreusch-sheet-music.net Free Scores by Tchaikovsky
- Mutopia Project Tchaikovsky Sheet Music at Mutopia
tchaikovsky in Arabic: بيتر إليتش
تشايكوفسكي
tchaikovsky in Aragonese: Piotr Ilich
Chaikovski
tchaikovsky in Azerbaijani: Pyotr
Çaykovski
tchaikovsky in Bosnian: Petar Iljič
Čajkovski
tchaikovsky in Breton: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Bulgarian: Пьотър Чайковски
tchaikovsky in Catalan: Piotr Ilitx
Txaikovski
tchaikovsky in Chuvash: Чайковский Пётр
Ильич
tchaikovsky in Czech: Petr Iljič
Čajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Welsh: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Danish: Pjotr Iljitj
Tjajkovskij
tchaikovsky in German: Pjotr Iljitsch
Tschaikowski
tchaikovsky in Estonian: Pjotr Tšaikovski
tchaikovsky in Modern Greek (1453-): Πιότρ
Τσαϊκόφσκι
tchaikovsky in Spanish: Piotr Ilich
Chaikovski
tchaikovsky in Esperanto: Pjotr Iljiĉ
Ĉajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Basque: Piotr Ilitx
Txaikovski
tchaikovsky in Persian: پیوتر ایلیچ
چایکوفسکی
tchaikovsky in Extremaduran: Piotr Ilich
Chaikovski
tchaikovsky in French: Piotr Ilitch
Tchaïkovski
tchaikovsky in Manx: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Korean: 표트르 일리치 차이콥스키
tchaikovsky in Armenian: Պյոտոր Իլյիչ
Չայկովսկի
tchaikovsky in Croatian: Petar Iljič
Čajkovski
tchaikovsky in Indonesian: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Icelandic: Pjotr Iljitsj
Tsjaíkovskíj
tchaikovsky in Italian: Pëtr Il'ič
Čajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Hebrew: פיוטר איליץ'
צ'ייקובסקי
tchaikovsky in Georgian: პეტრე ჩაიკოვსკი
tchaikovsky in Swahili (macrolanguage): Pyotr
Ilyich Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Latin: Petrus Tchaikovski
tchaikovsky in Latvian: Pēteris Čaikovskis
tchaikovsky in Luxembourgish: Pjotr Iljitsch
Tschaikowski
tchaikovsky in Lithuanian: Piotras
Čaikovskis
tchaikovsky in Hungarian: Pjotr Iljics
Csajkovszkij
tchaikovsky in Macedonian: Петар Илич
Чајковски
tchaikovsky in Maltese: Pëtr Il'ič
Čajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Marathi: प्यॉतर इल्यिच
त्चैकोव्स्की
nah:Pyotr
Ilyich Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Dutch: Pjotr Iljitsj
Tsjaikovski
tchaikovsky in Japanese: ピョートル・チャイコフスキー
tchaikovsky in Norwegian: Pjotr
Tsjajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Norwegian Nynorsk: Pjotr
Tsjajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Polish: Piotr Czajkowski
tchaikovsky in Portuguese: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Romanian: Piotr Ilici
Ceaikovski
tchaikovsky in Quechua: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Russian: Чайковский, Пётр
Ильич
tchaikovsky in Scots: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Albanian: Pjotr Çajkovski
tchaikovsky in Simple English: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Slovak: Piotr Iľjič
Čajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Slovenian: Peter Iljič
Čajkovski
tchaikovsky in Serbian: Петар Иљич
Чајковски
tchaikovsky in Serbo-Croatian: Pjotr Iljič
Čajkovski
tchaikovsky in Finnish: Pjotr Tšaikovski
tchaikovsky in Swedish: Pjotr Tjajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Tagalog: Pëtr Čajkovskij
tchaikovsky in Tatar: Pótr İlyiç Çaykovski
tchaikovsky in Thai: ปีเตอร์ อิลิช
ไชคอฟสกี
tchaikovsky in Vietnamese: Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
tchaikovsky in Turkish: Peter İlyiç
Çaykovski
tchaikovsky in Ukrainian: Чайковський Петро
Ілліч
tchaikovsky in Volapük: Pyotr Ilyic
Caykovskiy
tchaikovsky in Contenese: 柴可夫斯基
tchaikovsky in Chinese:
彼得·伊里奇·柴可夫斯基