Near the start of today's RR there was an gorgeous extract from Tcherepnin's ballet Narcissus and Echo. Andrew mentioned that it was a quirk of music history that Tcherepnin was not one of the 'greats'. However, I'm dreadfully confused about which Tcherepnin. Andrew said it was Nikolai. The RR website says Alexander. I've looked them up and have found:
1. Alexander Nikolayevitch (1899 - 1977)
2. Nikolai Nikolayevich Tcherepnin (1878 -1945)
(There must have been several Nikolais lurking in the Tcherepnin family tree.)
I think the website must be wrong, because I think it was the elder (No 2) above who wrote the ballet, i.e. NOT Alexander.
My reason for confusion was that as a kid I played a wonderful piece entitled Andante pour Tuba et Piano a la Mémoire de mom Cher Père.
This was presumably the younger (No 1)...but the style was uber-Romantic, presumably a deliberate piece of pastiche.
I found it on Youtube, but alas it is such a dreadful performance I'm not going to give tubas a bad name by posting it up.
I'd be interested to hear about the Tcherepnins (or Tchérépnines as the French would have it)from anyone who knows about them.
1. Alexander Nikolayevitch (1899 - 1977)
2. Nikolai Nikolayevich Tcherepnin (1878 -1945)
(There must have been several Nikolais lurking in the Tcherepnin family tree.)
I think the website must be wrong, because I think it was the elder (No 2) above who wrote the ballet, i.e. NOT Alexander.
My reason for confusion was that as a kid I played a wonderful piece entitled Andante pour Tuba et Piano a la Mémoire de mom Cher Père.
This was presumably the younger (No 1)...but the style was uber-Romantic, presumably a deliberate piece of pastiche.
I found it on Youtube, but alas it is such a dreadful performance I'm not going to give tubas a bad name by posting it up.
I'd be interested to hear about the Tcherepnins (or Tchérépnines as the French would have it)from anyone who knows about them.
Comment