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Pylyp Kozytskiy

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Nationality
  
Ukrainian

Name
  
Pylyp Kozytskiy


Role
  
Composer

Resting place
  
Baikove Cemetery

Pylyp Kozytskiy

Full Name
  
Pylyp Omelyanovych Kozytskiy

Born
  
23 November 1893 (
1893-11-23
)
Letychivka

Occupation
  
Composer, Musicologist, Educator

Known for
  
Founder of the Leontovych Musical Society.

Died
  
April 27, 1960, Kiev, Ukraine

Pylyp Omelyanovych Kozytskiy (Ukrainian: Пилип Омелянович Козицький; 23 November [O.S. 11 November] 1893), Letychivka — 27 April 1960, Kiev) was a Ukrainian composer, musicologist, professor, head of the department of history of music at the Kiev Conservatory, and Honored Artist of Ukraine SSR (1943).

Contents

Pylyp Kozytskiy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Greatly influenced by expressionism, Kozytsky's musical works are a mixture of elements of Ukrainian folk music with social and patriotic characteristics, strongly rooted to the national school of classical music of Ukraine established by Mykola Lysenko.

Life

Kozytskiy studied at the Kiev Theological Academy from 1917 and at the Kiev Conservatory from 1920, under Boleslav Yavorsky and Reinhold Glière. Between 1918-1924, he taught at the Lysenko Music and Drama Institute in Kiev, the Kharkiv Music and Drama Institute from 1925 to 1935, and the Kiev Conservatory. From 1938 to 1941 he worked as artistic director for the Ukrainian State Philharmonic (during the German-Soviet war).

A founding member of the Leontovych Music Society, he was also head of the Union of Soviet Composers of Ukraine from 1952 to 1956, and president of the Choral Society of the Ukrainian SSR from 1959 up to his death in 1960. Kozytskiy died in Kiev on 27 April 1960, and is buried in the Baikove Cemetery.

Literary works

  • History of Ukrainian Music (Kiev, 1922)
  • The mass singing. Allowance for amateur choir (Kharkiv, 1927)
  • Bedrich Smetana (Kiev, 1949)
  • Scientific studies and articles on the works of Mykola Leontovych, Kyrylo Stetsenko, Boris Lyatoshinsky, Bedřich Smetana and others. (Kiev, 1952)
  • Taras Shevchenko and musical culture (Kiev, 1959)
  • Singing and Music Academy in Kiev in 300 years of its existence (Kiev, 1971)
  • The stepfather of the heroine of the Great Patriotic War Guli Queen
  • Awards

  • Order of Lenin
  • Order of the Red Banner of Labor
  • References

    Pylyp Kozytskiy Wikipedia