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Mykola Kolessa

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Birth name
  
Mykola Kolessa

Role
  
Composer

Name
  
Mykola Kolessa


Instruments
  
piano

Origin
  
Lviv, Ukraine

Parents
  
Filaret Kolessa


Occupation(s)
  
composer, conductor, professor

Died
  
June 8, 2006, Lviv, Ukraine

Awards
  
Shevchenko National Prize in Music

Similar People
  
Stanyslav Lyudkevych, Lubka Kolessa, Mykola Lysenko, Solomiya Krushelnytska, Viktor Kosenko

Dmytro sukhovienko prelude hutsulsky 1975 by mykola kolessa


Mykola Filaretovich Kolessa (6 December 1903 – 8 June 2006) was a prominent Ukrainian composer and conductor, born in the village of Sambir near Lviv.

Contents

His father Filaret was a prominent Ukrainian ethnomusicologist and composer and his cousin was the celebrated pianist Lubka Kolessa. He graduated from Lysenko Higher Musical Institute, then studied in Prague under Vítězslav Novák and Otakar Ostrčil, and taught at Lviv Conservatory. His works include two symphonies (1949 and 1966), symphonic variations (1931), a 'Ukrainian Suite' (1928), all for orchestra, and 'In the Mountains' for string orchestra (1972), and a number of chamber and incidental works as well as some song cycles. His composition style was tonal and conservative and has been linkened to that of Alexander Glazunov, although influences from Bartok and the early 20th-century French school can be heard as well. As a conductor he worked with world-famous ensembles such as the Lviv Philharmonic Orchestra, the Ballet Theater, the NRCU Symphony Orchestra, and the Trembita Choir, becoming the founder of the Lviv conducting school.

Mykola kolessa symphony 2 allegro moderato 1966


References

Mykola Kolessa Wikipedia