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Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Aug 16, 2012 4:11 pm
by pianojay
isokani wrote:I have a feeling KONSTANTIN wrote two.
His son Oleg, however, wrote 12!
Yes, of course. That will teach me to not take at face value any random information source I might have in front of me, the most recent being one that indicated that Konstantin had written 12 and son Oleg had written 14.
N'importe quoi, as they say in French. :))
P.S. And MANY thanks for the Obukhov Tableaux Psychologiques!

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Aug 16, 2012 4:31 pm
by isokani
It would be much better if Konstantin had written twelve ...
Tell me if you see sthg strange in the TABLEAUX ... I did my best ...

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Aug 16, 2012 4:43 pm
by alfor
isokani wrote:It would be much better if Konstantin had written twelve ...
Tell me if you see sthg strange in the TABLEAUX ... I did my best ...
Thank you for Obukhov! I feel the urge to re-write some pieces in order to reduce "blackness" ;) .
Eiges: Teichmüller-Hermann do not call him Konstantin but Karl ! They list:
op. 12 Zwei Märchen
op. 14 Vier Stücke
op. 15 Sonata-Poema
op. 19 Deux Poèmes

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Wed Sep 05, 2012 10:41 am
by feinberg
Hi, Dear Members.
Please Help Me to get these Three Works;
Samuil Feinberg
Tale(Сказка) and Procession(Шествие) for Piano, Op.33 [Published by Sovetsky Kompozitor Tale-1947 Procession-1946(?)]
Rhapsody on Kabardino-Balkarian Themes, Op.45 [Published by Sovetsky Kompozitor(Part of Концертный репертуар пианиста) in 1962]

please, please help me!
Thank you!

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2012 8:54 am
by feinberg
Finally, I had found Samuil Feinberg's 'Procession'. (many thanks for the pianist Mikhail Lidsky)
Last three bars of Page 1 are hidden, but we can guess hidden left hand....

By the way, opus number on this score is op.31, no.2
Onno van rijen's soviet composers site and his worklist (http://www.skfe.com/aifs/aifs/Feinberg_catalogue.html) say that these two works are op.33.

Is this an error?

Anyway, If anyone has S.Feinberg's Tale or Rhapsody, Op.45, please upload here!

Thank You.
Feinberg Op.31 No.2 Procession.pdf

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2012 3:08 pm
by caostotale
Has anyone posted Golubev's later piano sonatas 7, 8, 9, or 10 (or any of his quartets)? If not, I might be able to get those up in the near future.

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Sun Sep 23, 2012 1:52 pm
by mballan
caostotale wrote:Has anyone posted Golubev's later piano sonatas 7, 8, 9, or 10 (or any of his quartets)? If not, I might be able to get those up in the near future.
I posted the earlier sonatas...but the later sonatas would be very welcomed.

Malcolm

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Sep 27, 2012 9:22 pm
by caostotale
Here they are...

I will working on the string quartets (and other chamber works) in the near future.

Evgeny GOLUBEV
Piano Sonata no. 7, op. 65 (1975)
Piano Sonata no. 8, op. 71 (197?)
Piano Sonata no. 9, op. 72 (197?)
Golubev - Piano Sonatas 7,8, and 9 (1979).pdf
Piano Sonata no. 10, 'Quasi toccata', op. 74 (1977)
Golubev - Piano Sonata no. 10 'Quasi toccata', op. 74 (1980).pdf

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 12:46 am
by fleubis
alfor wrote:
isokani wrote:I do indeed have both Eiges sonatas -- and will be practising both today! I am recording them next week, with lots of his other pieces. I don't have a scanner unfortunately.
Good luck!
Please don't buy a scanner. It is an device of altruism - I never scanned a single page for my personal use!! (Husbands and fathers have a broad field of altruism anyway :mrgreen: ).
A DIN A3 printer is a different matter. Together with toned 120gr paper and a paper-cutting-machine this might be quite useful. But you should consult fleubis in advance who can tell you how to hire a "cutting lady" :P .
Indeed managing all the printing, cutting and binding can be quite a chore even if one just prints out half the scores that Alfor posts! And I quite agree about scanners--in the US, what passes for a scanner is 8.5" X 11" or 8.5" X 14" which are pretty much useless for scanning music scores. A DIN A3 scanner is not cheap in the US nor are they widely available. A3 paper is rare--so rare that I have to get mine cut for me. Alas, i do not know what 120gr paper is, but in the US, paper thickness is graded by 'weight' which is the weight of 500 sheets (but of what size?) And good paper is hard to come by. Sometimes the cheap paper I'm forced to print on turns to dust on a single erasure.

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 12:53 am
by fleubis
Dear caostotale, thank you for posting the more recent Golubev sonatas. It is interesting to see the composers progress through these sonatas.