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Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2011 9:00 pm
by alfor
RSL scan:

Edouard CONUS
La Pilule doree.
Grande Etude pour la main gauche
sue cinq notes a main posee en 40 variations sur un motif russe.
composee a l'usage des eleves les plus avancees
Oeuvre 23
Conus, E. Etude l.h .pdf

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2011 9:03 pm
by alfor
RLS scan:

Edouard CONUS
Six Polkas fantastiques op. 15
Conus, E. Polkas fantastiques op.15.pdf

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2011 9:15 pm
by mballan
alfor wrote:Thank you, Malcolm! Pleeeeeeaaaaase let us know how you managed to download it from the RSL website!
:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:

OK - I have to believe that it is NOT from the RSL website! But we do have quite a lot of computer experts, so who can tell us how to download the "blocked" (marked red) scores???
Actually I have an original copy of the Dianov, but realise its also been posted on IMSLP [see my revised note to that message].....the only score I've downloaded from RSl was the Akimenko which I discovered by accident. I'm sure most folk can now work their way around the RSl site and download any new files in future.

The "blocked" files on the RSL site are downloadable...you just have to download the viewing system the RSL use [there are links to download - think its call Defview - but I've yet to try]. But more recently they have started uploading in pdf, so hopefully they will add more scores to their ever growing list.

Malcolm

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2011 9:52 pm
by Jim Faston
mballan wrote:
alfor wrote:Thank you, Malcolm! Pleeeeeeaaaaase let us know how you managed to download it from the RSL website!
:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:

OK - I have to believe that it is NOT from the RSL website! But we do have quite a lot of computer experts, so who can tell us how to download the "blocked" (marked red) scores???
Actually I have an original copy of the Dianov, but realise its also been posted on IMSLP [see my revised note to that message].....the only score I've downloaded from RSl was the Akimenko which I discovered by accident. I'm sure most folk can now work their way around the RSl site and download any new files in future.

The "blocked" files on the RSL site are downloadable...you just have to download the viewing system the RSL use [there are links to download - think its call Defview - but I've yet to try]. But more recently they have started uploading in pdf, so hopefully they will add more scores to their ever growing list.

Malcolm

Has anyone gotten anywhere with this? Thanks.

http://diss.rsl.ru/?menu=infoblocken/in ... 4/&lang=en

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2011 10:31 pm
by Caprotti
Please, when you find the trick let us know. Apparently those files with the red link are only visible ... in Russia.

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Sat Jun 25, 2011 9:50 am
by mballan
Yuly Dmitriyevich Engel’. Born 1868, Berdyansk: died 1927 Tel-Aviv. Music critic and composer. Graduated in 1890 from the law department of Kharkov University. Encouraged to study at the Moscow Conservatoire (1893-1897) on the advice of Tchaikovsky, and studied with Ippolitov-Ivanov and Taneyev. Was a writer for ‘Russkiye vedomosti’ between 1897-1918, and helped to organise the People’s Conservatoire in Moscow (1906-10). In 1901 Engel edited and translated into Russian Riemann’s Lexicon, contributing to over 800 entires on figures in Russian Music. He later lived in Berlin from 1922-24 and founded the Yuval Publishing House devoted to the publications of works by Jewish composers. He immigrated to Palestine in 1924, where he continued his research on Jewish music, and taught at the Shulamit Conservatoie. As a composer and writer he was highly valued by his contemporieis and is best know for his incidental music to Ansky’s ‘Hadybbuk’ (1922) and for writing the first Jewish opera ‘Esther’.

I am aware the 10 Jewish Folksongs has been posted before, but this is a cleaner, stronger copy. Plus a new work - two Jewish Ballet Dances.

Malcolm

Ten Jewish Folksongs
Engel Y - Ten Jewish Foksongs.pdf
Two Jewish Ballet Dances
Engel Y - Two Jewish Ballet Dances.pdf

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Sat Jun 25, 2011 10:54 am
by mballan
For those who enjoy the piano music by Lyadov.......Brilliant Classics have just released a 5 CD set of the complete piano works: http://www.brilliantclassics.com/releas ... FM00392843

And yes, I did provide some of the lesser known scores :D

Malcolm

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Sun Jun 26, 2011 12:49 pm
by mballan
Two more works by Matvey Akimovich Gozenpud (1903-1961).

Just to be aware that Gozenpud also used other variations of his name - Hasen, Gazen, Gazenpud etc. Alfor kindly posted under Gozenpud - Op 32 Jewish Folksong Suite, Op 31 Sonata No. 3 and Op 53 Vol. 1 Preludes, and under the name Hasen, the Op 10 Sonata. I've posted as Gazen or Gozenpud, Op 5 Deux Poemes Op 11 Trois Morceaux, Op 19 Four Etudes, Op 22 Variations, Op 29 Poeme-Ballada and Four Easy Pieces on Ukrainian Themes Just to avoid any confusion, and if cataloguing any of these works - they are all the same composer.

Op 3 Trois Esquisses
Gozenpud M - Op 3 Trois Esquisses.pdf
Op 6 Deux Morceaux [1. Kazka, Ukrainian Dance 2. Capriccio]
Gozenpud M - Op 6 Deux Morceaux.pdf

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Sun Jun 26, 2011 1:36 pm
by alfor
mballan wrote:Two more works by Matvey Akimovich Gozenpud (1903-1961).

Just to be aware that Gozenpud also used other variations of his name - Hasen, Gazen, Gazenpud etc. Alfor kindly posted under Gozenpud - Op 32 Jewish Folksong Suite, Op 31 Sonata No. 3 and Op 53 Vol. 1 Preludes, and under the name Hasen, the Op 10 Sonata...they are all the same composer[/u].
Thank you for these!
I know that there is no "H" in the russian language - so Horowitz is Gorowitz, Haydn is Gaydn, etc. But it obviously takes a linguist to explain why "Gazen" (Hasen) is identical with "Gozenpud" ("Gazen" = "Gozen", but what about the ending "pud")??!!

Re: Russian & Soviet Composers - Part 3

Posted: Sun Jun 26, 2011 2:18 pm
by rob
alfor wrote:
mballan wrote:Two more works by Matvey Akimovich Gozenpud (1903-1961).

Just to be aware that Gozenpud also used other variations of his name - Hasen, Gazen, Gazenpud etc. Alfor kindly posted under Gozenpud - Op 32 Jewish Folksong Suite, Op 31 Sonata No. 3 and Op 53 Vol. 1 Preludes, and under the name Hasen, the Op 10 Sonata...they are all the same composer[/u].
Thank you for these!
I know that there is no "H" in the russian language - so Horowitz is Gorowitz, Haydn is Gaydn, etc. But it obviously takes a linguist to explain why "Gazen" (Hasen) is identical with "Gozenpud" ("Gazen" = "Gozen", but what about the ending "pud")??!!
I can't explain the specific question, but there is an amusing tale that on a Russian Map of the UK, the two places, Hull & Goole, both in Humberside and just a few miles apart, were both transliterated as "гул"!!