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In Search of a Soviet Pioneer: Nikolai Roslavets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2010

Extract

At centenaries we usually invite those who have special knowledge of a given figure to attempt a statement of a career, and argue for revaluation. At the very least the ordinary music-lover is usually given the opportunity to hear a range of unfamiliar music and make a personal decision. (Furthermore, with the modern phenomenon of home tape-recording, unofficial tapes get into circulation which ensure that judgements, whether right or wrong, are never again merely the handing-down of prejudiced statements from one writer to the next.) However, the centenary which falls on 5 January is particularly worthy of note, for it is that of a composer potentially of great interest—the subject of innumerable footnotes in reference books—but almost totally unheard, owing to a long history of suppression of his art in his native Russia. I refer to Nikolai Andreievitch Roslavets, one of the most advanced composers of his time: an early investigator of serial techniques, whose musical revolutionary passion was strongly linked to his support for the proletarian revolution, and who ultimately had to sublimate his musical tenets in order to accord with political developments with which it would appear he was not musically at ease.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

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References

1. Gojowy, Detlef: ‘Nikolaj Andreevic Roslavec, ein früher ZwölftonkomponistDie Musikforschung XII (1969)pp. 2238 Google Scholar; the catalogue starts at p. 36.

2. B V Hasst records (025) (Tweede Oosterparkstraat 243, Amsterdam, Holland)

3. Sabaneyeff, Leonid: Modern Russian Composers (NY, International Publishers, 1927) p.205 Google Scholar.

4. Schwarz, Boris: Music and Musical Life in Soviet Russia 1917–1970. (Barrie & Jenkins, 1972) p.454 Google Scholar.

5. Gojowy Detlef: Dissertation, Gottingen, 1966.

6. Gojowy, Detlef: ‘Sowjetische Avantgardisten’ Musik und Bildung, 12 1969, pp.537–42Google Scholar.

7. Schwarz, Boris op cit., citing Braudo, E. in Die Musik (04 1928) p.553 Google Scholar.

8. Schwarz, op cit p.86 Google Scholar.