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Mikhail Vielgorsky

Count[1] Mikhail Vielgorsky[2] (Polish: Michał Wielhorski, Russian: Михаил Юрьевич Виельгорский) (1788-1856) was a Russian official and composer of Polish descent. He composed romances, symphonies, an opera and was an amateur singer, violinist, and patron of the arts.[1] He is considered to be one of the major influences on the musical arts in Russia during the 19th-century[3] because of his salons, responsible with bringing the string quartet to Russia.[citation needed] Along with his brother Matvey Vielgorsky, they were considered the "brothers of harmony" for their intrepid and comprehensive patronage of the musical arts.[4]

Mikhail Yuryevich Vielgorsky
Михаил Юрьевич Виельгорский
Born22 November 1788
Saint Petersburg, Russia
Died21 September 1856
Moscow
NationalityRussian
Occupation(s)Chamberlain and Musician
Spouses
  1. с 1812 Yekaterina Biron (1793-1813)
  2. с 1816 Biron, Louisa Karlovina (1791-1853)
Children2 sons and 4 daughters
Parents
  • Yuri Mikhailovich Vielgorsky (1753-1807) (father)
  • Sophia Dmitryevna Matyushkina (1755-1796) (mother)

Vielgorsky was a friend of Ludwig van Beethoven and an admirer of his music; the Russian premiere of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony took place at Vielgorsky's home in Saint Petersburg in 1836. The same year, Mikhail Glinka rehearsed parts of his new opera A Life for the Tsar at Vielgorsky's home, accompanied by the enserfed orchestra of Prince Yusupov. In the 1830s and 1840s, as Richard Stites notes, Vielgorsky's salon "played host to the most celebrated musical visitors to mid-century Russia: Liszt, Berlioz, the Schumanns, and Pauline Viardot among others ... Because of the attendance of Gogol, Zhukovsky, Vyazemsky, Lermontov, Odoevsky, Glinka, Dargomyzhsky, and Bryullov, a contemporary dubbed Vielgorsky's home "a lively and original multifaceted academy of the arts.' Berlioz called it 'a little ministry of fine arts.'"[1]

Vielgorsky presided over his salons with remarkable informality, donning simple garments and entertaining various different classes of guests in expert ease.[1]

Childhood

Vielgorsky was the son of Polish szlachcic [envoy] Jerzy Wielhorski, and the brother of Maciej Wielhorski (Matvey Valigorsky, 1794-1866[1][5]), an amateur cellist who founded the Society of Lovers of Music with Prince Nikolai Borisovich Galitzin (also a friend of Beethoven) in 1828.[5][6][7]

Education

Mikhail Vielgorsky's special passion was music and was known to be an excellent performer and composer. And although an amateur, according to Schumann's opinion, he was "a genius amateur."[8] He also had said that Vielgorsky was "the most ingenious dilettante I have ever known."[9] Already in childhood, he showed outstanding musical abilities: he played the violin well and tried to compose. Vielgorski received a versatile musical education and studied music theory and harmony with the Spanish composer V. Martin-y-Soler, as well as composition with the German conductor and pianist Wilhelm Taubert. Back in 1804, when the whole family lived in Riga, Vielgorsky took part in family music-making in the evenings: the part of the first violin was performed by his father, the viola - by himself, and the cello part - by his brother Matvey, another outstanding musician-performer. Not limiting himself to the knowledge he had acquired, Vielgorsky continued his studies of composition in Paris with Luigi Cherubini, the famous Italian composer and Music Theorist.

Profession

Mikhail Vielgorsky, alongside his compositional work and musicianship, acted as the Actual Privy Councilor to Catherine II or Catherine The Great.[4]

Musician

Experiencing a great interest in everything new, Vielgorsky met Ludwig van Beethoven in Vienna and was among the first eight listeners to perform his Symphony No.6 called the "Pastoral" symphony. Throughout his life, he remained an ardent admirer of the seminal, German composer.

He was one of the first in Russia to master large sonata-symphonic forms, writing two symphonies (the first was performed in 1825 in Moscow), a string quartet, and two overtures. He also created variations for Cello and Orchestra, pieces for piano, romances, vocal ensembles, as well as a number of choral works. Vielgorsky's romances became very popular in Russia and one of his romances ("I Loved") was readily performed by Mikhail Glinka. Vielgorsky noted that his opera "Gypsies" was based on a plot related to the events of the Patriotic War of 1812 (libretto by V. Zhukovsky and V. Sollogub).

Vielgorsky's house always became a kind of musical center. True connoisseurs of music gathered there and many compositions were performed for the first time. In Vielgorsky's home, Franz Liszt played for the first time from the sheet (from the score) Ruslana and Lyudmila by Glinka. Poet Dmitry Venevitinov called Vielgorsky's house "the academy of musical taste", while famous French composer Hector Berlioz, who came to Russia only twice,[10] called his home "a small temple of fine arts".[citation needed] Vielgorsky managed to attract many musicians to his Luizino estate in the Kursk province, far from the life of the capital. In the 1820s, all nine of Beethoven's symphonies were performed on his estate during his evening salons.[11] Vielgorsky highly appreciated Glinka's music and considered his opera Ivan Susanin, later more commonly named A Life for the Tsar, a masterpiece.[3]

Vielgorsky provided support to many progressive figures in Russia. So, in 1838, together with the poet Vladimir Zhukovsky, he organized a lottery, the proceeds from which went to the ransom from the serfdom of the Ukrainian poet and outspoken political figure Taras Grigorovich Shevchenko.

Mikhail Vielgorsky died on September 9, 1856, in Moscow. His son-in-law Count V. Sollogub made an account of his mild and unassuming personality:[12]

"Count Vielgorsky passed unnoticed in Russian life; even in the society in which he lived, he was appreciated by only a few. He did not seek fame, shied away from the struggle and, despite the fact - or, perhaps, precisely because, - he was an extraordinary person: a philosopher, critic, linguist, physician, theologian, hermeticist, honorary member of all Masonic lodges, the soul of all societies, a family man , epicurean, courtier, dignitary, artist, musician, comrade, judge, he was a living encyclopedia of the deepest knowledge, an example of the most tender feelings and the most playful mind. "

He is buried in the Lazarevskoye Cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra in St. Petersburg.

Friendship with Maria Sergeyevna Durnovo

Mikhail Vielgorsky knew Maria Sergeyevna Durnovo (Griboyedova), skilled piano performer and sister of famous Russian writer Alexander Griboyedov. According to the memoirs of Maria Durnovo: "Very often, the writer came to the sister's room. In the spring of 1823, whereas famed comedy remained a secret to public and majority of friends, Mikhail Vielgorsky, stumbled on several sheets of poem, written by the hand of Alexander Griboyedov, while assembling pages of sheet music on the piano of Maria Sergeyevna. Maria wanted to hide the accidentally discovered pages, but it was too late. The news of the new comedy rapidly spread around Moscow from the mouth of the well-known at the time musician". That poem was Woe from Wit, still considered to be "golden classic" in Russia and other Russian-speaking countries.[13]

Family

The first wife of Mikhail Vielgorsky was the maid of honor Catherine Biron (1793-1813), the niece of the last Duke of Courland. This marriage was facilitated by Empress Maria Feodorovna. The wedding took place in February 1812 in the Great Church of the Winter Palace. This marriage strengthened Vielgorsky's position at court.

In the memoirs of a contemporary, Ekaterina Biron is described as a sweet, naive child who loved lace and outfits. After the wedding, the Vielgorskys moved to Moscow, and soon Patriotic War began. Fleeing from the enemy, they left for one of their estates. In January 1813, the Vielgorskys decided to return to St. Petersburg. Catherine was in her last pregnancy. Their path lay through burnt-out Moscow. Having hardly reached Moscow, the Vielgorskys settled in the house of Prince Golitsyn, where Catherine died as a result of childbirth. Their relative wrote about this tragedy.[14]

The fate of poor Katisha can serve as a lesson for those who want to take advantage of it. Fearing to give birth far from Petersburg, that is, without the help of weak medicine, she embarked on a journey that cost her her life. The Vielgorskys drove out into the very muddy road, so Katisha arrived in Ryazan completely broken. During the ride, she felt the greatest suffering ... Even healthy men, arriving from Moscow, complain that they were all shaken. The unfortunate Vielgorsky had a very bad time. They somehow made it to Moscow, where the unfortunate woman suffered for forty hours and finally gave birth to a daughter. The day after the birth, she became delirious ... For six days she suffered and died without communion ... It is a pity for Michel, especially since he ascribes his misfortune to himself.

— A letter from M. A. Volkova to V. I. Lanskoy (1812-1818)

Second Marriage

In 1816, Mikhail Vielgorsky secretly married the elder sister of his first wife Louise Biron (1791-1853), the maid of honor of the Empress Maria. Such a marriage according to church rules was considered illegal. By this, he incurred disgrace and was forced to leave for his estate Luizino in the Kursk province. The Vielgorskys lived in this estate for several years. Their children were born here:

  • Joseph Mikhailovich (1817-1839), a friend of Gogol, died of consumption in Rome, his short life is devoted to the book[15] and an excerpt of Gogol "Nights at the Villa."
  • Apollinaria Mikhailovna (05.11.1818-1884), baptized on November 8, 1818, in the Church of the Ascension, goddaughter of Count GI Chernyshev and VI Lanskoy;[16] since 1843 she has been married to A.V. Venevitinov, brother of the poet D.V. Venevitinov.
  • Sofya Mikhailovna (1820-1878), since 1840 the wife of the writer V. A. Sollogub.
  • Mikhail Mikhailovich (1822-21.11.1855), state councilor, full member of the Red Cross Society, from 1853 by the Imperial decree was called Count Vielgorsky-Matyushkin. Died of brain inflammation in Simferopol.[17]
  • Anna Mikhailovna (1823-1861), since 1858 the wife of Prince Alexander Ivanovich Shakhovsky (1822-1891). According to some memoirists, N.V. Gogol was in love with her. Gogol allegedly wanted to marry her, but knowing that L.K.Vielgorskaya would not agree to an unequal marriage for his daughter, he did not make an offer.

Compositions

Vocal Works

  • 1885-1887: Collection of Russian Romances, for voice and piano[18]
  • Бывало, for voice and piano
  • Люблю я, for voice and piano
  • Два романса, for voice and piano[19]
  • «Старый муж, грозный муж, for voice and piano[20]
  • Ворон к ворону летит, for voice and piano[20]
  • Чёрная шаль, for voice and piano[20]
  • Кто при звёздах, кто при луне, for voice and piano[20]

Opera

Symphonies

  • Symphony No. 1 [?][4]
  • Symphony No.2 [?][4]

Instrumental

  • String Quartet [?]

Choral

  • Canon in honor of Mikhail Glinka "Sing in ecstasy, Russian choir"[21][22][23]

Orchestral works

  • Theme and Variations, for cello and orchestra[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Stites, Richard (2005). Serfdom, Society, and the Arts in Imperial Russia: The Pleasure and the Power. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
  2. ^ "Биография Михаила Юрьевича Виельгорского". www.c-cafe.ru. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  3. ^ a b Kozhevnikova, L. "Михаил Юрьевич Виельгорский (Mikhail Vielgorsky) | Belcanto.ru". www.belcanto.ru. Retrieved 2021-07-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ a b c d e "Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia". www.encspb.ru. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  5. ^ a b Walden, Valerie (1998). One Hundred Years of Violoncello: A History of Technique and Performance Practice, 1740-1840. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  6. ^ Mikaberidze, Alexander (2005). The Russian Officer Corps in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, 1792-1815. New York: Savas Beatie.
  7. ^ Sargeant, Lynn (2011). Harmony and Discord: Music and the Transformation of Russian Cultural Life. New York: Oxford University Press.
  8. ^ Famous Russians of the 18-19th centuries. Biography and portraits. - SPb .: Lenizdat, 1996 .-- P. 833
  9. ^ "Альт Антонио Страдивари". www.muzcentrum.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  10. ^ "The Hector Berlioz Website - Berlioz in Russia". www.hberlioz.com. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  11. ^ Sinkevich, G. (2020). "VIOLINISTS FRANZ, JOSEPH AND LUDWIG BÖHM, SOLOISTS AND PEDAGOGUES OF 19th CENTURY" (PDF). Mathematics. The Scientific Heritage. 51: 3–14 – via Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering.
  12. ^ V. A. Sollogub. Memories, 1998.
  13. ^ (in Russian). Department of Culture, Sports, Tourism and Youth Policy of the MO. Archived from the original on 2016-01-31. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  14. ^ Письма М. А. Волковой к В. И. Ланской (1812—1818) // Вестник Европы. 1874. Т.4. С.573—574.
  15. ^ "Rank, Joseph McArthur (1918–1999), industrialist and philanthropist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004-09-23. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/72110. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  16. ^ "Fragebogen". Im OP. 3 (4): 187. 2013-06-21. doi:10.1055/s-0033-1348457. ISSN 1611-7905.
  17. ^ "Антонович И.В., Романова Н.Н., Гладышева Я.Д., Щербинина А.О. Анализ основных направлений деятельности сестер милосердия в Алтайском крае (на примере Александро-Невского храма г. Барнаула)". Социодинамика. 12 (12): 282–289. December 2019. doi:10.25136/2409-7144.2019.12.31233. ISSN 2409-7144.
  18. ^ "Romances (Wielhorski, Michał) - IMSLP: Free Sheet Music PDF Download". imslp.org. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  19. ^ "Концерт К 225-летию М.Ю. Виельгорского". Соборная палата (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  20. ^ a b c d sobolev. "И "НОЧЬ МУЗЕЕВ" – ПОВОД К РАЗГОВОРУ… — Интернет-газета "Культура-Воронежа. рф"" (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  21. ^ "Russian romance of the first half of the 19th century. Composers-'dilettantes'". bolshoi.ru. Retrieved 2021-07-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  22. ^ "Канон в честь М. И. Глинки — Викитека". ru.wikisource.org (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  23. ^ Ерофеева, Антонина (2017-02-15). ""Уж не Глинка, а фарфор". Неизвестные факты о последних годах композитора". smol.aif.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  24. ^ "Alexander Rudin". www.mariinsky.ru. Retrieved 2021-07-07.

External links

mikhail, vielgorsky, count, polish, michał, wielhorski, russian, Михаил, Юрьевич, Виельгорский, 1788, 1856, russian, official, composer, polish, descent, composed, romances, symphonies, opera, amateur, singer, violinist, patron, arts, considered, major, influe. Count 1 Mikhail Vielgorsky 2 Polish Michal Wielhorski Russian Mihail Yurevich Vielgorskij 1788 1856 was a Russian official and composer of Polish descent He composed romances symphonies an opera and was an amateur singer violinist and patron of the arts 1 He is considered to be one of the major influences on the musical arts in Russia during the 19th century 3 because of his salons responsible with bringing the string quartet to Russia citation needed Along with his brother Matvey Vielgorsky they were considered the brothers of harmony for their intrepid and comprehensive patronage of the musical arts 4 Mikhail Yuryevich VielgorskyMihail Yurevich VielgorskijBorn22 November 1788Saint Petersburg RussiaDied21 September 1856MoscowNationalityRussianOccupation s Chamberlain and MusicianSpousess 1812 Yekaterina Biron 1793 1813 s 1816 Biron Louisa Karlovina 1791 1853 Children2 sons and 4 daughtersParentsYuri Mikhailovich Vielgorsky 1753 1807 father Sophia Dmitryevna Matyushkina 1755 1796 mother Vielgorsky was a friend of Ludwig van Beethoven and an admirer of his music the Russian premiere of Beethoven s Ninth Symphony took place at Vielgorsky s home in Saint Petersburg in 1836 The same year Mikhail Glinka rehearsed parts of his new opera A Life for the Tsar at Vielgorsky s home accompanied by the enserfed orchestra of Prince Yusupov In the 1830s and 1840s as Richard Stites notes Vielgorsky s salon played host to the most celebrated musical visitors to mid century Russia Liszt Berlioz the Schumanns and Pauline Viardot among others Because of the attendance of Gogol Zhukovsky Vyazemsky Lermontov Odoevsky Glinka Dargomyzhsky and Bryullov a contemporary dubbed Vielgorsky s home a lively and original multifaceted academy of the arts Berlioz called it a little ministry of fine arts 1 Vielgorsky presided over his salons with remarkable informality donning simple garments and entertaining various different classes of guests in expert ease 1 Contents 1 Childhood 2 Education 3 Profession 4 Musician 5 Friendship with Maria Sergeyevna Durnovo 6 Family 6 1 Second Marriage 7 Compositions 7 1 Vocal Works 7 2 Opera 7 3 Symphonies 7 4 Instrumental 7 5 Choral 7 6 Orchestral works 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksChildhood EditVielgorsky was the son of Polish szlachcic envoy Jerzy Wielhorski and the brother of Maciej Wielhorski Matvey Valigorsky 1794 1866 1 5 an amateur cellist who founded the Society of Lovers of Music with Prince Nikolai Borisovich Galitzin also a friend of Beethoven in 1828 5 6 7 Education EditMikhail Vielgorsky s special passion was music and was known to be an excellent performer and composer And although an amateur according to Schumann s opinion he was a genius amateur 8 He also had said that Vielgorsky was the most ingenious dilettante I have ever known 9 Already in childhood he showed outstanding musical abilities he played the violin well and tried to compose Vielgorski received a versatile musical education and studied music theory and harmony with the Spanish composer V Martin y Soler as well as composition with the German conductor and pianist Wilhelm Taubert Back in 1804 when the whole family lived in Riga Vielgorsky took part in family music making in the evenings the part of the first violin was performed by his father the viola by himself and the cello part by his brother Matvey another outstanding musician performer Not limiting himself to the knowledge he had acquired Vielgorsky continued his studies of composition in Paris with Luigi Cherubini the famous Italian composer and Music Theorist Profession EditMikhail Vielgorsky alongside his compositional work and musicianship acted as the Actual Privy Councilor to Catherine II or Catherine The Great 4 Musician EditExperiencing a great interest in everything new Vielgorsky met Ludwig van Beethoven in Vienna and was among the first eight listeners to perform his Symphony No 6 called the Pastoral symphony Throughout his life he remained an ardent admirer of the seminal German composer He was one of the first in Russia to master large sonata symphonic forms writing two symphonies the first was performed in 1825 in Moscow a string quartet and two overtures He also created variations for Cello and Orchestra pieces for piano romances vocal ensembles as well as a number of choral works Vielgorsky s romances became very popular in Russia and one of his romances I Loved was readily performed by Mikhail Glinka Vielgorsky noted that his opera Gypsies was based on a plot related to the events of the Patriotic War of 1812 libretto by V Zhukovsky and V Sollogub Vielgorsky s house always became a kind of musical center True connoisseurs of music gathered there and many compositions were performed for the first time In Vielgorsky s home Franz Liszt played for the first time from the sheet from the score Ruslana and Lyudmila by Glinka Poet Dmitry Venevitinov called Vielgorsky s house the academy of musical taste while famous French composer Hector Berlioz who came to Russia only twice 10 called his home a small temple of fine arts citation needed Vielgorsky managed to attract many musicians to his Luizino estate in the Kursk province far from the life of the capital In the 1820s all nine of Beethoven s symphonies were performed on his estate during his evening salons 11 Vielgorsky highly appreciated Glinka s music and considered his opera Ivan Susanin later more commonly named A Life for the Tsar a masterpiece 3 Vielgorsky provided support to many progressive figures in Russia So in 1838 together with the poet Vladimir Zhukovsky he organized a lottery the proceeds from which went to the ransom from the serfdom of the Ukrainian poet and outspoken political figure Taras Grigorovich Shevchenko Mikhail Vielgorsky died on September 9 1856 in Moscow His son in law Count V Sollogub made an account of his mild and unassuming personality 12 Count Vielgorsky passed unnoticed in Russian life even in the society in which he lived he was appreciated by only a few He did not seek fame shied away from the struggle and despite the fact or perhaps precisely because he was an extraordinary person a philosopher critic linguist physician theologian hermeticist honorary member of all Masonic lodges the soul of all societies a family man epicurean courtier dignitary artist musician comrade judge he was a living encyclopedia of the deepest knowledge an example of the most tender feelings and the most playful mind He is buried in the Lazarevskoye Cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra in St Petersburg Friendship with Maria Sergeyevna Durnovo EditMikhail Vielgorsky knew Maria Sergeyevna Durnovo Griboyedova skilled piano performer and sister of famous Russian writer Alexander Griboyedov According to the memoirs of Maria Durnovo Very often the writer came to the sister s room In the spring of 1823 whereas famed comedy remained a secret to public and majority of friends Mikhail Vielgorsky stumbled on several sheets of poem written by the hand of Alexander Griboyedov while assembling pages of sheet music on the piano of Maria Sergeyevna Maria wanted to hide the accidentally discovered pages but it was too late The news of the new comedy rapidly spread around Moscow from the mouth of the well known at the time musician That poem was Woe from Wit still considered to be golden classic in Russia and other Russian speaking countries 13 Family EditThe first wife of Mikhail Vielgorsky was the maid of honor Catherine Biron 1793 1813 the niece of the last Duke of Courland This marriage was facilitated by Empress Maria Feodorovna The wedding took place in February 1812 in the Great Church of the Winter Palace This marriage strengthened Vielgorsky s position at court In the memoirs of a contemporary Ekaterina Biron is described as a sweet naive child who loved lace and outfits After the wedding the Vielgorskys moved to Moscow and soon Patriotic War began Fleeing from the enemy they left for one of their estates In January 1813 the Vielgorskys decided to return to St Petersburg Catherine was in her last pregnancy Their path lay through burnt out Moscow Having hardly reached Moscow the Vielgorskys settled in the house of Prince Golitsyn where Catherine died as a result of childbirth Their relative wrote about this tragedy 14 The fate of poor Katisha can serve as a lesson for those who want to take advantage of it Fearing to give birth far from Petersburg that is without the help of weak medicine she embarked on a journey that cost her her life The Vielgorskys drove out into the very muddy road so Katisha arrived in Ryazan completely broken During the ride she felt the greatest suffering Even healthy men arriving from Moscow complain that they were all shaken The unfortunate Vielgorsky had a very bad time They somehow made it to Moscow where the unfortunate woman suffered for forty hours and finally gave birth to a daughter The day after the birth she became delirious For six days she suffered and died without communion It is a pity for Michel especially since he ascribes his misfortune to himself A letter from M A Volkova to V I Lanskoy 1812 1818 Second Marriage Edit In 1816 Mikhail Vielgorsky secretly married the elder sister of his first wife Louise Biron 1791 1853 the maid of honor of the Empress Maria Such a marriage according to church rules was considered illegal By this he incurred disgrace and was forced to leave for his estate Luizino in the Kursk province The Vielgorskys lived in this estate for several years Their children were born here Joseph Mikhailovich 1817 1839 a friend of Gogol died of consumption in Rome his short life is devoted to the book 15 and an excerpt of Gogol Nights at the Villa Apollinaria Mikhailovna 05 11 1818 1884 baptized on November 8 1818 in the Church of the Ascension goddaughter of Count GI Chernyshev and VI Lanskoy 16 since 1843 she has been married to A V Venevitinov brother of the poet D V Venevitinov Sofya Mikhailovna 1820 1878 since 1840 the wife of the writer V A Sollogub Mikhail Mikhailovich 1822 21 11 1855 state councilor full member of the Red Cross Society from 1853 by the Imperial decree was called Count Vielgorsky Matyushkin Died of brain inflammation in Simferopol 17 Anna Mikhailovna 1823 1861 since 1858 the wife of Prince Alexander Ivanovich Shakhovsky 1822 1891 According to some memoirists N V Gogol was in love with her Gogol allegedly wanted to marry her but knowing that L K Vielgorskaya would not agree to an unequal marriage for his daughter he did not make an offer Louuis Karlovna Vielgorskaya Apollinaria Mikhailovna Sofia Mikhailovna Mikhail Mikhailovich Vielgorsky Anna Mikhailovich VielgorskyAncestry of Mikhail Yurievich Vielgorsky16 8 Vielgorsky Igants17 4 Vielgorsky Mikhail 1730 1794 18 9 Liudvika Zamoiskaya19 2 Vielgorsky Yuri Mikhailovich 1753 1807 20 Oginski Kasimir Dominik 1660 1773 10 Oginski Yuzyer Yan Tadyeyush 1700 1736 21 Voina Eleanour 1738 5 Oginskaya Elzhbeta 1731 1771 22 Vishnevetsky Mikhail Servatsi 1680 1744 11 Vishnevetskaya Anna 1700 1732 23 Dolskaya Yekaterina 1725 1 Vielgorsky Mikhail Yurievich 1787 1788 1856 24 Matushkin Afanasy Ivanovich 1676 12 Matushkin Mikhail Afanasevich 1725 1800 25 6 Matushkin Dmitri Mikhailovich 1725 1800 26 13 27 3 Matushkina Sofia Dmitrievna 1755 196 28 Gagarin Matvei Petrovich 1696 1721 14 Gagarin Alexi Matyevich29 7 Matushkina Anna Alekseevna 1722 1804 30 Shafirov Piotr Pavlovich 1669 1739 15 Shafirova Anna PetrovnaCompositions EditVocal Works Edit 1885 1887 Collection of Russian Romances for voice and piano 18 Byvalo for voice and piano Lyublyu ya for voice and piano Dva romansa for voice and piano 19 Staryj muzh groznyj muzh for voice and piano 20 Voron k voronu letit for voice and piano 20 Chyornaya shal for voice and piano 20 Kto pri zvyozdah kto pri lune for voice and piano 20 Opera Edit The Gypsy 4 Symphonies Edit Symphony No 1 4 Symphony No 2 4 Instrumental Edit String Quartet Choral Edit Canon in honor of Mikhail Glinka Sing in ecstasy Russian choir 21 22 23 Orchestral works Edit Theme and Variations for cello and orchestra 24 See also EditList of Russian composers 19th century in Russia Russian classical musicReferences Edit a b c d e Stites Richard 2005 Serfdom Society and the Arts in Imperial Russia The Pleasure and the Power New Haven and London Yale University Press Biografiya Mihaila Yurevicha Vielgorskogo www c cafe ru Retrieved 2021 07 07 a b Kozhevnikova L Mihail Yurevich Vielgorskij Mikhail Vielgorsky Belcanto ru www belcanto ru Retrieved 2021 07 07 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d e Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia www encspb ru Retrieved 2021 07 07 a b Walden Valerie 1998 One Hundred Years of Violoncello A History of Technique and Performance Practice 1740 1840 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Mikaberidze Alexander 2005 The Russian Officer Corps in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars 1792 1815 New York Savas Beatie Sargeant Lynn 2011 Harmony and Discord Music and the Transformation of Russian Cultural Life New York Oxford University Press Famous Russians of the 18 19th centuries Biography and portraits SPb Lenizdat 1996 P 833 Alt Antonio Stradivari www muzcentrum ru in Russian Retrieved 2021 07 07 The Hector Berlioz Website Berlioz in Russia www hberlioz com Retrieved 2021 07 07 Sinkevich G 2020 VIOLINISTS FRANZ JOSEPH AND LUDWIG BOHM SOLOISTS AND PEDAGOGUES OF 19th CENTURY PDF Mathematics The Scientific Heritage 51 3 14 via Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering V A Sollogub Memories 1998 The visit of Alexander Sergeyevich Griboyedov to the village of Spasskoe Krivtsovo Chernsky County in Russian Department of Culture Sports Tourism and Youth Policy of the MO Archived from the original on 2016 01 31 Retrieved 22 July 2020 Pisma M A Volkovoj k V I Lanskoj 1812 1818 Vestnik Evropy 1874 T 4 S 573 574 Rank Joseph McArthur 1918 1999 industrialist and philanthropist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 09 23 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 72110 Subscription or UK public library membership required Fragebogen Im OP 3 4 187 2013 06 21 doi 10 1055 s 0033 1348457 ISSN 1611 7905 Antonovich I V Romanova N N Gladysheva Ya D Sherbinina A O Analiz osnovnyh napravlenij deyatelnosti sester miloserdiya v Altajskom krae na primere Aleksandro Nevskogo hrama g Barnaula Sociodinamika 12 12 282 289 December 2019 doi 10 25136 2409 7144 2019 12 31233 ISSN 2409 7144 Romances Wielhorski Michal IMSLP Free Sheet Music PDF Download imslp org Retrieved 2021 07 07 Koncert K 225 letiyu M Yu Vielgorskogo Sobornaya palata in Russian Retrieved 2021 07 07 a b c d sobolev I NOCh MUZEEV POVOD K RAZGOVORU Internet gazeta Kultura Voronezha rf in Russian Retrieved 2021 07 07 Russian romance of the first half of the 19th century Composers dilettantes bolshoi ru Retrieved 2021 07 07 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Kanon v chest M I Glinki Vikiteka ru wikisource org in Russian Retrieved 2021 07 07 Erofeeva Antonina 2017 02 15 Uzh ne Glinka a farfor Neizvestnye fakty o poslednih godah kompozitora smol aif ru in Russian Retrieved 2021 07 07 Alexander Rudin www mariinsky ru Retrieved 2021 07 07 External links EditCampbell Stuart 21 July 1994 Russians on Russian Music 1830 1880 An Anthology Cambridge University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 521 40267 5 Retrieved 3 July 2013 Category Wielhorski Michal IMSLP Free Sheet Music PDF Download imslp org Retrieved 2021 07 06 Soloviev N F Vielgorsky Mikhail Yurievich Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary in 86 volumes 82 volumes and 4 additional SPb 1890 1907 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mikhail Vielgorsky amp oldid 1128448437, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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