Jump to content

Pyotr Bulakhov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by GoodDay (talk | contribs) at 01:47, 1 October 2018. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Pyotr Petrovich Bulakhov (Петр Петрович Булахов; 1822 in Moscow – 2 December 1885 in Kuskovo) was a Russian composer.[1]

His father: singer Pyotr Alexandrovich Bulakhov (ru: Петр Александрович Булахов, (1793?–1837), his brother: singer and composer Pavel Petrovich Bulakhov (ru: Павел Петрович Булахов, 1824–1875).

His daughter was the opera singer Yevgeniya Ivanovna Zbruyeva (1867?–1936).[2] (the composer did not formally issued a religious marriage with his wife, so both their daughters were officially daughters of their mother first husband and were under his name.)

Two of his songs were set as piano transcriptions by Franz Liszt. An unidentified "Bohemian Song" was arranged as "Chanson bohémienne", No. 2 of Deux Mélodies Russes, S.250 (1842–43). The song "You Will Not Believe" ("Ты не поверишь") was arranged for solo piano as Russischer Galop, S.478 (1843).[3]

Works

His many popular songs include:

  • Shine, Shine, My Star
  • Do Not Awaken Memories
  • Don't Wake Me Up
  • I Met You
  • In the Wide-Open Field
  • A dainty mouth pursed in anger
  • No, I Do Not Love You
  • On parting she spoke
  • Over the Fields, the Clean Fields
  • The Rendezvous
  • The Troika Speeds, the Troika Gallops

References

  1. ^ World literature today Volume 74 University of Oklahoma 2001 "The Gypsy romances of Russian composers such as Varlamov or Bulakhov were thus further "sullied" by the smell and stigma of beer or tobacco. Their brief (three minutes or less) tales of expansive passions were a godsend to the .."
  2. ^ Laura Williams Macy -The Grove book of opera singers - Page 547 2008 "Zbruyeva, Yevgeniya (Ivanova) (b Moscow, 24 or 26 Dec 1867/5 or 7 Jan 1868; d Moscow, 20 Oct 1936). Russian contralto. She was the daughter of the singer and composer Pyotr Bulakhov."
  3. ^ IMSLP: Versions of Works by Others (Liszt, Franz)