Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (May 7, 1840–November 6, 1893 (N.S.), April 25, 1840–October 25, 1893 (O.S.)) was a Russian composer of the Romantic era.
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Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.) Tchaikovsky married Antonina Milyukova, who had written to him declaring her love, on July 18, 1877. The marriage was hasty, and he quickly found he could not bear his wife. After an attempt at suicide, he fled to St. Petersburg a nervous wreck, and was separated from his wife after only six weeks. This episode only served to confirm Tchaikovsky's homosexuality. A far more influential woman in Tchaikovsky's life was a wealthy widow, Nadezhda von Meck, with whom he corresponded from 1877 to 1890. At her insistence they never met; they did encounter each other on two occasions, purely by chance, but did not converse. As well as financial support of 6000 rubles a year, she expressed her interest in his musical career and admiration for his music. However she abruptly cut off her support for the composer, which is believed to have happened when she was informed of his sexual preference. It is possible she was planning to marry off one her daughters to Tchaikovsky, as she also tried unsuccessfully to marry one of them to Debussy, who had lived in Russia for a time as music teacher to her family. Just nine days after the first performance of his Sixth Symphony, Pathétique, in 1893, Tchaikovsky died. It is generally accepted that his death was by suicide, although the manner (commonly claimed to be from cholera brought about by drinking infected water, although arsenic poisoning is more likely) and circumstances are uncertain. One suggestion is that a group of his former classmates encouraged him to commit suicide to avoid the scandal of an alleged affair with the nephew of a member of the Russian aristocracy. Tchaikovsky was interred in Tikhvin Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery, St Petersburg. His life, somewhat embroidered, is the subject of Ken Russell's motion picture The Music Lovers.
Tchaikovsky's first ballet, Swan Lake, Op. 20, was composed during 1875 and 1876, and first performed (with some omissions) at the Bolshoi in Moscow in 1877. The work which Tchaikovsky considered to be one of his best was the ballet Sleeping Beauty, Op. 66. It was written some 13 years later in 1888 and 1889, with its first performance in 1890 at the Mariinsky Theatre in St Petersburg. Tchaikovsky himself was less satisified with his last ballet, The Nutcracker, Op. 71, which was composed in 1891 and 1892.
No. 1 in G minor, op. 13, Winter Daydreams (1866)
The so-called "Third Piano Concerto in E flat major" has a curious history. It was commenced after the 5th symphony, and was intended to be his next symphony, ie. his 6th. However he abandoned work on this score and instead directed his efforts towards what we now know as the Sixth Symphony, which is a completely different work. After Tchaikovsky's death, the composer Taneyev re-worked the abandoned symphony, added a piano part, and published it as "Third Piano Concerto by Tchaikovsky". However, a more accurate title would be "An unfinished symphony by Tchaikovsky, realised for piano and orchestra by Taneyev". Interestingly, the unfinished symphony has also been completed—as a symphony—by a Soviet composer. This was published as "Symphony No. 7 in E flat major", and recorded by the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy. His Violin Concerto in D major (op. 35) was composed in less than a month during March and April 1878, but its first performance was delayed until 1881 because Leopold Auer, the violinist to whom Tchaikovsky had intended to dedicate the work, refused to perform it.
His many other compositions include works for choir as well as many sets of songs, chamber music and music for solo piano. Some of the better-known of these other works are: String Quartet No. 1 in D major, Op. 11
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