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PETER ILICH TSCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 349 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PETER ILICH TSCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)  ,
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Russian composer, born at
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Votkinsk, in the province of Vyatka, on the 7th of May 184o, was the son of a
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mining engineer, who shortly after the boy's birth removed to St
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Petersburg to assume the duties of director of the Technological Institue there . While studying in the school of jurisprudence, and later, while holding office in the
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ministry of justice, Tschaikovsky picked up a smattering of musical knowledge sufficient to qualify him as an adept amateur performer . But the seriousness of his musical aspiration led him to enter the newly founded Conservatorium of St Petersburg under Zaremba, and he was induced by Anton Rubinstein, its
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principal, to take up
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music as a profession . He therefore resigned his
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post in the ministry of justice . On quitting the Conservatorium he was awarded a
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silver medal for his thesis, a cantata on Schiller's " Ode to Joy." In 1866 Tschaikovsky became practically the first chief of the recently founded Moscow Conservatorium, since Serov, whom he succeeded, never took up his appointment . In Moscow Tschaikovsky met Ostrovskiy, who wrote for him his first operatic libretto, The Vojevoda . After the Russian Musical Society had rejected a concert overture written at Rubinstein's
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suggestion, Tschaikovsky in 1866 was much occupied on his Winter Day Dreams, a symphonic poem, which proved a failure in St Petersburg but a success at Moscow . In 1867 he made an unsuccessful debut as conductor . Failure still dogged his steps, for in
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January 1869 his Vojevoda disappeared off the boards after ten performances, and subsequently Tschaikovsky destroyed the score . The Romeo and Juliet overture has been much altered since its production by the Russian Musical Society in 1870, in which
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year the composer once more attempted unsuccessfully an operatic production, St Petersburg rejecting his Undine . In 187r Tschaikovsky was busy on his cantata for the opening of the
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exhibition in celebration of the bicentenary of Peter the
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Great, his opera The Oprischnik, and a textbook of harmony, which latter was adopted by the Moscow Conservatorium authorities . At Moscow in 1873 his incidental music to the Snow Queen failed, but some success came next year with the beautiful quartet in F .

During these years Tschaikovsky was musical critic for two

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journals, the Sovremennaya Lietopis and the Russky Vestnik . On the
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death of Serov he competed for the best setting of Polovsky's Wakula the Smith, and won the first two prizes . Yet on its production at St Petersburg in November 1876 this
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work gained only a succes d'estime . Since then it has been much revised, and is now known as The Little Shoes . Meanwhile the Second
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Symphony and the Tempest fantasia had been heard, and the pianoforte concerto in B flat minor completed . This was first played by von Billow in Boston, Massachusetts, some time later, and was entirely revised and republished in 1889 . At last something like success came to Tschaikovsky with the production of The Oprischnik, in which he had incorporated much of the best of The Vojevoda . The Third—or Polish—Symphony, four sets of songs, the E-flat quartet (dedicated to the memory of Lamb), the
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ballet " The Swan Lake," and the " Francesca da
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Rimini " fantasia, all belong to the period of the
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late 'seventies—the last being made up of operatic fragments . Tschaikovsky in 1877 first began to work on the opera of Eugen Onegin . With the production of this work at the Moscow Conservatorium in March 1879 real success first came to him . The story, by Pushkin, was a familiar one, and the music of Tschaikovsky was not so extravagant in its demands as had been the music of his earlier operas . Meanwhile the more
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personal side of the composer's career had been given a romantic touch by his acquaintance with his lifelong benefactress, Mme von Meck, and his deplorable fiasco of a
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marriage .

In 1876 he had aroused the

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interest of Nadezhda Filaretovna von Meck (1831-1894), the wife (
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left a widow in 1876) of a wealthy railway engineer and contractor . She had a large fortune and she began by helping the composer financially in the shape of commissions for work, but in 1877 this took the more substantial shape of an
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annual allowance of £600 . The
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romance of their association consisted in the fact that they never met, though they corresponded with one another continually . In 1890 Mme von Meck .(who died two months after the composer, of progressive
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nervous decline), imagining herself—apparently a pure delusion—to be ruined, discontinued the allowance; and though Tschaikovsky was then no longer really in need of it, he failed to appreciate the pathological reason underlying Mme von Meck's condition of mind, and was deeply hurt . The wound remained unhealed, and the correspondence broken, though on his death-bed her name was on his lips . Her connexion with his
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life was one of its dominating features . His marriage was only a brief and misguided incident . Tschaikovsky married Antonina Ivanovna Milyukova on the 6th of
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July 1877, but the marriage rapidly
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developed into a catastrophe, through no fault of hers but simply through his own abnormality of temperament; and it resulted in separation in
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October . He had become taciturn to moroseness, and -finally quitted Moscow and his friends for St Petersburg . There he fell
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ill, and an attempt to commit suicide by
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standing
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chin-high in the
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river in a frost (whereby he hoped to catch his death from exposure) was only frustrated by his
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brother's
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tender care . With his brother, Tschaikovsky went to Clarens to recuperate . He remained abroad for many months, moving restlessly from one place to another .

In 1878 he accepted (but later resigned) the post of director of the Russian . musical

department at the Paris Exhibition, completed his
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Fourth Symphony and the
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Italian Capriccio, and worked hard at his " 181s " overture, more songs, the second pianoforte concerto, and his " Liturgy of St
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Chrysostom," an interesting contribution to the music of the Eastern Church . The work was confiscated for some time by the intendant of the imperial
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chapel, on the ground that ithad not received the imprimatur of his predecessor Bortniansky in due accordance with a ukaz of Alexander I . Bortniansky was dead, but his successor was obstinate . Finally the work was saved from destruction by an official order: Tschaikovsky returned only for a short time to Moscow . Thence he went to Paris . In 1879 he wrote his Maid of Orleans (produced in 188o) and his first suite for orchestra . In 1881 died Nickolas Rubinstein—to whose memory Tschaikovsky dedicated the trio in A minor . During the next five years Tschaikovsky travelled, and worked at Manfred and
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Hamlet, the operas Mazeppa and Charodaika, the Mozartian suite and the
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fine Fifth Symphony . During a great
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part of the time he lived in retirement at Klin, where his generosity to the poor made him beloved . His operas The Queen of Spades and the one-act lolanthe were feeble by comparison with his earlier
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works; more effective, however, were the ballets Sleeping Beauty and Casse-noisette . In 1893 Tschaikovsky sketched his
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Sixth Symphony, now known as the Pathetic, a work that has done more for his fame in
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foreign lands than all the rest of his works . This was the year in which the composer conducted a work of his own at Cambridge on the occasion of his receiving the honorary degree of Doctor of Music .

In the same year, on the 6th of November, he died from an attack of

cholera at St Petersburg . Tschaikovsky's work is unequal . In dramatic compositions he lacked point precisely as Anton Rubinstein lacked point . But in the invention of broad, sweeping melody Tschaikovsky was far ahead of his compatriot . Among his songs and smaller pianoforte works, as in his symphonies and quartets, are passages of exquisite beauty . The best of Tschaikovsky's work is more distinctly Russian than that of most of his compatriots; it is not German music in disguise, as is so much of the music by Rubinstein and Glazounow, and it is not incoherently ferocious, like so much of the music by Balakirev . See Mrs Rosa Newmarch's Tchaikovsky (1900) supplemented in 1906 by her condensed
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English edition of the Life and Letters, which appeared in Russian in 1901 in three volumes, edited by Modeste Tschaikovsky, the composer's brother .

End of Article: PETER ILICH TSCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
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