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Moysseï Samuilovitch Vainberg
Mieczysław Samuilowicz • Moiseï • Moishei • Моисей Самуилович • Mojsze [Mieczysław] | Weinberg • Wainberg • Vainberg • Вайнбер • Wajnberg |
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Liste des compositions
Musica lirica
Musica da camera
Musica sinfonica
Musica vocale
Musica sacra
Musica strumentale
Musica concertante
Compositions sorted on opus (if available)
154 numéros
Op. 1
Op. 2
Op. 3
Op. 4
Op. 5
Op. 6
Op. 7
Op. 8
Op. 9
Op. 10
Op. 11
Op. 12
Op. 13
Op. 14
Op. 15
Op. 16
Op. 17
Op. 18
Op. 19
Op. 20
Op. 21
Op. 22
Op. 23
Op. 24
Op. 25
Op. 26
Op. 27
Op. 28
Op. 28a
Op. 29
Op. 30
Op. 31
Op. 32
Op. 33
Op. 34
Op. 35
Op. 36
Op. 37
Op. 38
Op. 39
Op. 40
Op. 41
Op. 42
Op. 43
Op. 44
Op. 45
Op. 46
Op. 47
Op. 47/ 1
Op. 47/ 2
Op. 47/ 3
Op. 47/ 4
Op. 48
Op. 49
Op. 49bis
Op. 50
Op. 51
Op. 52
Op. 53
Op. 54
Op. 55
Op. 55a-d
Op. 56
Op. 57
Op. 58
Op. 59
Op. 60
Op. 61
Op. 62
Op. 63
Op. 64
Op. 65
Op. 66
Op. 67
Op. 68
Op. 69
Op. 70
Op. 71
Op. 72
Op. 73
Op. 74
Op. 75
Op. 76
Op. 77
Op. 78
Op. 79
Op. 80
Op. 81
Op. 82
Op. 83
Op. 84
Op. 85
Op. 86
Op. 87
Op. 88
Op. 89
Op. 90
Op. 91
Op. 92
Op. 93
Op. 94
Op. 95
Op. 96
Op. 97
Op. 98
Op. 99
Op.100
Op.101
Op.102
Op.103
Op.104
Op.105
Op.106
Op.107
Op.108
Op.109
Op.110
Op.111
Op.112
Op.113
Op.114
Op.115
Op.116
Op.117
Op.118
Op.119
Op.120
Op.122
Op.123
Op.124
Op.125
Op.126
Op.127
Op.128
Op.129/130
Op.131
Op.132
Op.133
Op.134
Op.135
Op.136
Op.137
Op.138
Op.139
Op.140
Op.141
Op.142
Op.143
Op.144
Op.145
Op.146
Op.147
Op.148
Op.150
Op.151
Op.153
Op.154
s.opus
Sheet music for Moyssei Samuilovitch Vainberg
Concerto : for cello and orchestra, op. 43 (Edition cello/piano) — Moisei Samuilovich Vainberg
cello and orchestra — solo part and piano reduction —
Kontsert : dlia violoncheli s orkestrom. Composed by Moisei Samuilovich Vainberg. Edited by Moisei Vainberg. String music. Solo part and piano reduction. Published by Noten Roehr (NR.76963).
Price: $98.00
Violin Concertos — Myaskovsky/Vainberg
— listening CD —
Composed by Myaskovsky/Vainberg. Naxos Classics. Listening CD. Published by Naxos (NX.8557194).
Price: $11.00
Pervaia sonata, soch. 82 ; Vtoraia sonata, soch. 95 ; Tret'ia sonata, soch. 126 : dlia skripki solo — Moisei Samuilovich Vainberg
violin solo — —
Sonatas no. 1-3 : for violin solo, opus 82, opus 95, opus 126. Composed by Moisei Samuilovich Vainberg. Edited by V. Pikaizen, M. Fikhtengol'ts. String music. Published by Noten Roehr (NR.93185).
Price: $59.00
Orchestral
- Symphonic Poem for orchestra Op.6, 1941
- Symphony No. 1 Op.10, 1942
- Suite for small orchestra Op.26, 1939-1945
- Symphony No. 2 for string orchestra Op.30, 1946
- "Festive Scenes" for orchestra Op.36, 1946-1947
- Two Ballet Suites for orchestra Op.40, 1947
- Sinfonietta No. 1 Op.41, 1948
- Concertino for violin and string orchestra Op.42, 1948
- Concerto for cello and orchestra in C minor Op.43, 1948
- Greetings Overture for orchestra Op.44, 1949
- Symphony No. 3 Op.45, 1949 revised in 1959
- Rhapsody on Moldavian Themes for orchestra Op.47-1, 1949
- "Polish Tunes" for orchestra Op.47-2, 1949
- Moldavian Rhaspsody for violin and orchestra Op.47-3, 1949
- Serenada for orchestra Op.47-4, 1949
- Fantasy for cello and orchestra Op.52, 1951-1953
- Suite No. 1 from the ballet "The Golden Key" Op.55-A, 1964
- Suite No. 2 from the ballet "The Golden Key" Op.55-B, 1964
- Suite No. 3 from the ballet "The Golden Key" Op.55-C, 1964
- Suite No. 4 from the ballet "The Golden Key" Op.55-D, 1964
- "Morning-Red", symphonic poem for orchestra Op.60, 1957
- Symphony No. 4 in A minor Op.61, 1957 revised in 1961
- Concerto for violin and orchestra in G minor Op.67, 1959
- Symphonic Songs for orchestra Op.68, 1959 (First version in 1951)
- Sinfonietta No. 2 Op.70, 1960
- Sinfonietta No. 2 for string orchestra and timpani Op.74, 1960
- Concerto for flute and string orchestra Op.75, 1961
- Symphony No. 5 in F minor Op.76, 1962
- Symphony No. 6 Op.79, after L. Kvitko, S. Galkin and M. Lukonin for boys’ chorus and orchestra, 1962-1963
- Symphony No. 7 in C major for strings and harpsichord Op.81, 1964
- Symphony No. 8 "Flowers of Poland" Op.83, after J. Tuvim for tenor, mixed chorus and orchestra, 1964
- Symphony No. 9 "Everlasting Times" Op.93, after J. Tuvim and V. Bronievsky for narrator, chorus and orchestra, 1940-1967
- Concerto for trumpet and orchestra in B flat major Op.94, 1966-1967
- Symphony No. 10 in A minor Op.98, 1968
- Symphony No. 11 "Festive Symphony" Op.101, after various revolutionary poets for chorus and orchestra, 1969
- Concerto for clarinet and string orchestra Op.104, 1970
- Six Ballet Scenes for orchestra Op.113, 1973-1975
- Symphony no. 12 Op.114, 1975-1976
- Symphony no. 13 Op.115, 1976
- Symphony No. 14 Op.117, 1977
- Symphony No. 15 "I Believe in This Earth" Op.119, after M. Dudin for soprano, baritone, women’s chorus and orchestra, 1977
- Symphony no. 16 Op.131, 1981
- Symphony No. 17 "Memory" Op.137, 1984
- Symphony No. 18 "War, there is no word more cruel" Op.138, 1986
- Symphony No. 19 "The Bright May" Op.142, 1986
- "The Banners of Peace" Op.143, symphonic poem, 1986
- Flute Concerto No. 2 Op.148, 1987
Opera
- "The Traveller" Op.97, opera in two acts, 1967-1968
- "The Madonna and the Soldier" Op.105, opera in three acts afrter A. Medvedev, 1970
- "The Love of d’Artagnan" Op.109, opera after A. Dumas, 1971
- "I congratulate" Op.111, opera in one act after S. Alechem, 1975
- "Lady Magnesia" Op.112, opera in one act after G.B. Shaw, 1975
- "The Portrait" Op.128, opera in eight scenes after N. Gogol, 1980
- "The Idiot" Op.144, opera after F. Dostoyevsky, 1985
Ballet
- The Golden Key Op.55, ballet in six scenes after A. Tolstoi, 1954-1955
- The White Chrysantheme Op.64, ballet in three acts after A. Rumnev and J. Romanovich, 1958
Piano
- Lullaby for piano Op.1, 1935
- Piano Sonata No. 1 Op.5, 1940
- Piano Sonata No. 2 Op.8, 1942
- Children’s Notebook No. 1 Op.16, 1944
- Children’s Notebook No. 2 Op.19, 1944
- Children’s Notebook No. 3 Op.23, 1945
- Piano Sonata No. 3 Op.31, 1946
- Twenty-One Easy Pieces for piano Op.34, 1946
- Sonatina for piano Op.49, 1951
- Partita for piano Op.54, 1954
- Piano Sonata No. 4 in B minor Op.56, 1955
- Piano Sonata No. 5 Op.58, 1956
- Piano Sonata No. 6 Op.73, 1960
Chamber
- String Quartet No. 1 Op.2, 1937
- String Quartet No. 2 Op.3, 1940
- Aria for string quartet Op.9, 1942
- Capriccio for violin and piano Op.11, 1943
- Sonata No. 1 for violin and piano Op.12, 1943
- String Quartet No. 3 Op.14, 1944
- Sonata No. 2 for violin and piano Op.15, 1944
- Piano Quintet Op.18, 1944
- String Quartet No. 4 Op.20, 1945
- Sonata No. 1 for cello and piano in C major Op.21, 1945
- Piano Trio Op.24, 1945
- String Quartet No. 5 Op.27, 1945
- Twelve Miniatures for flute and piano Op.29, 1946
- String Quartet No. 6 Op.35, 1946
- Violin Sonata No. 3 Op.37, 1947
- Violin Sonata No. 4 Op.39, 1947
- Sonatina for violin and piano in D major Op.46, 1949
- String Trio Op.48, 1950
- Violin Sonata No. 5 Op.53, 1953
- String Quartet No. 7 Op.59, 1957
- Sonata for cello and piano No. 2 in C major Op.63, 1958-1959
- String Quartet No. 8 Op.66, 1959
- Sonata for two violins Op.69, 1959
- String Quartet No. 9 Op.80, 1963
- String Quartet No. 10 Op.85, 1964
- String Quartet No. 11 Op.89, 1965-1966
- String Quartet No. 12 Op.103, 1969-1970
- String Quartet No. 13 Op.118, 1977
- String Quartet No. 14 Op.122, 1978
- String Quartet No. 15 Op.124, 1979
- Trio for flute, harp and viola Op.127, 1979
- String Quartet No. 16 Op.129, 1981
- String Quartet No. 1 Op.141, 1986 (recomposition of opus 2)
- Chamber Symphony No. 1 Op.145, 1987
- String Quartet No. 17 Op.146, 1987
- Chamber Symphony No. 2 Op.147, 1987
- Chamber Symphony No. 3 Op.151, 1991
- Chamber Symphony No. 4 Op.153
Cantata and Chorus Works
- "In the Homeland" Op.51, cantata after poems of Soviet children for boys-alto, boys chorus mixed chorus and orchestra, 1952
- "The Diary of Love" Op.87, cantata after S. Vygodski for tenor, boys’ chorus and chamber orchestra, 1965
- "Piotr Plaksin" Op.91, cantata after J. Tuvim for tenor, alto and nineteen instruments, 1965
- "Hiroshima" Op.92, cantata after Fukagava for mixed chorus and orchestra, 1966
- Requiem Op.96, after D. Kedrin, M. Dudin, F. Lorca, Fukagava and others for children’s chorus, mixed chorus and orchestra, 1965-1967
- "Nobody did have known ......" Op. 102, poem after D. Bedny for soprano, chorus and orchestra, 1970
Vocal
- "Acacias" Op.4, six romances after J. Tuvim for singer and piano, 1940
- Three Romances Op.7, after J. Rivina and A. Prokofiev, 1941
- Children’s Songs Op.13, after I. Perez for singer and piano, 1943
- Jewish Songs Op.17, after S. Galkin, 1944
- Three Romances after A. Mickiewich for singer and piano Op.22, 1945
- Six Romances after F. Tutchev for singer and piano Op.25, 1945
- Elegy after F. Schiller for baritone and piano Op.32, 1946
- Six Sonettes after W. Shakespeare for bass and piano Op.33, 1946
- Four Romances after M. Ryslky and G. Nikolayeva for singer and piano Op.38, 1947
- "At the Source of the Past", song cycle after A. Blok for mezzo-soprano and piano Op.50, 1951
- "Bible of the Gypsies" Op.57, seven romances after J. Tuvim for mezzo-soprano and piano, 1956
- "Memories" Op.62, after J. Tuvim for middle-voice and piano, 1957-1958
- "In the Armenian Mountains" Op.65, after O. Tumanian for singer and piano, 1958
- Seven Romances after various poets for singer and piano Op.71, 1960
- "Old Letters" after J. Tuvim for soprano and piano Op.77, 1962
- Three romances Op.78, after V. Sosnora, J. Vinokurov and A. Yashin for singer and piano, 1962
- "Oh, Grey Fog" Op.84, romance after J. Tuvim for bass and piano, 1964
- "The Profile" Op.88, song cycle after S. Vydodski for bass and piano, 1965
- "Words in Blood" Op.90, song cycle after J. Tuvim for tenor and piano, 1965
- "Triptychon" after L. Staff for bass and orchestra Op.99, 1968
- "When I sing this child asleep" Op.110, song cycle after G. Mistral for soprano and piano, 1973
- "From the Lyrics of Shukovsky" Op.116, song cycle after V. Shukovsky for bass and piano, 1976
- Three Palmtrees" Op.120, after M. Lermontov for soprano and string quartet, 1977
- "From the Lyrics of Baratinsky" Op.125, song cycle after J. Baratinsky for bass and piano, 1979
- "The Relic", recitative for bass and piano Op.132
- "From Afanasy Fet’s Poetry", songs for bass and piano Op.134
- Six Children’s Songs for voice and piano Op.139, 1986
Other Works
- Clarinet Sonata Op.28, 1945
- Sonata No. 1 for cello solo Op.72, 1960
- Sonata No. 1 for violin solo Op.82, 1964
- Sonata No. 2 for cello solo Op.86, 1965
- Sonata No. 2 for violin solo Op.95, 1967
- Twenty-four Preludes for cello solo Op.100, 1968
- Sonata No. 3 for cello solo Op.106, 1971
- Sonata No. 1 for viola solo Op.107, 1971
- Sonata No. 1 for double-bass solo Op.108, 1971
- Sonata No. 2 for viola solo Op.123, 1978
- Sonata No. 3 for violin solo Op.126, 1979
- Sonata No. 3 for viola solo Op.135
- Sonata No. 4 for viola solo Op.136
- Sonata No. 4 for cello solo Op.140, 1986
Mieczyslaw Samuilowicz Weinberg was one of the twentieth century’s most powerful and prolific composers, and one of its least well known, certainly outside of his adoptive Russia. His death in Moscow on 26 February, 1996, at the age of 76, brings to an end to a life that was far from easy but which was borne with the fortitude that gives his music its toughness and strength.
Mieczyslaw Samuilowicz Weinberg was born on 8 December 1919 in Warsaw, into a musical family: his father was a composer and violinist in a Jewish theatre there. He made his first public appearance as a pianist at the age of ten, and two years later became a student at the Warsaw Academy of Music, then under the direction of Szymanowski, where he took piano lessons from Josef Turczynski. His graduation in 1939 was soon followed by Hitler’s invasion: when his entire family was killed, burned alive, Mieczyslaw flied eastwards, taking shelter first in Minsk, where he studied composition with Vassily Zolotaryov. Two years later, as Hitler now pushed into Russia, Weinberg again had to flee, this time finding work at the opera house in Tashkent, in Uzbekistan. It was there, in 1943, that he took the action that was perhaps to be the most decisive in his life: he sent the manuscript of his newly completed First Symphony to Shostakovich in Moscow. Shostakovich’s response was typically helpful and immediate: Weinberg received an official invitation to travel to Moscow, where he was to spend the rest of his life, living largely by his compositions, though he also made many appearances as a pianist.
Having only just escaped the Nazis with his life, Weinberg was not to find matters much easier under Stalin. During the night of 12 January 1948 (the day before the opening of the infamous "Zhdanov" congress at which Shostakovich, Prokofieff and several other composers were denounced as "formalists"), Solomon Mikhoels, Weinberg’s father-in-law and the perhaps the foremost actor in the Soviet Union, was murdered on Stalin’s orders, an early victim of the anti-Semitic campaign that was to be a feature of his last years in power. When, in February 1953, Weinberg himself was arrested, it seemed that he, too, might "disappear"; fortune intervened and Stalin’s death on 5 March removed the imminent danger. (In the meantime Shostakovich had acted true to form, taking the step, one of almost foolhardy generosity and courage, of writing to Stalin’s police chief Beriya to protest Weinberg’s innocence.) A month later Mikhoels was posthumously rehabilitated in the Soviet press, and soon after Weinberg himself was released.
Weinberg’s association with Shostakovich was not based only on mutual personal esteem. Shostakovich often spoke very highly of Weinberg’s music (calling him "one of the most outstanding composers of the present day"); he dedicated his Tenth String Quartet to him; and in February/March 1975, although terminally ill (he was to die on 9 August), he found the energy to attend all the rehearsals for the premiere of Weinberg’s opera The Madonna and the Soldier. Weinberg’s identification with Shostakovich’s musical language was such that to the innocent ear the best of his own music might also pass muster as very good Shostakovich. Weinberg was quite unabashed, stating with unsettling directness that "I am a pupil of Shostakovich. Although I have never had lessons from him, I count myself as his pupil, as his flesh and blood". But there is much more to Weinberg than these external similarities of style, although his music -- some of which achieves greatness — has yet to have the exposure that will allow his individuality to be fully recognised. It also embraces folk idioms from his native Poland, as well as Jewish and Moldavian elements; and towards the end of his career he found room for dodecaphony, though usually set in a tonal framework. His evident taste for humour, from the light and deft to biting satire, was complemented by a natural feeling for the epic: his Twelfth Symphony, for instance, dedicated to the memory of Shostakovich, effortlessly sustains a structure almost an hour in length; and Symphonies Nos. 17, 18 and 19 form a vast trilogy entitled On the Threshold of War.
The list of Weinberg’s compositions is enormous and deserves serious investigation both by musicians and record companies: there are no fewer than 26 symphonies (the last to be completed, Kaddish, is dedicated to the memory of the Jews who perished in the Warsaw Ghetto, Weinberg donating the manuscript to the Yad va-Shem memorial in Israel.
He spent his last days confined to bed by ill health, often in considerable pain and afflicted by a deep depression occasioned by the wholesale neglect of his music — an unworthy end to a career the importance of which has yet to be recognised.
(Contribution by Ron de Leeuw <cavecanem1981@hotmail.com>.)
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