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Yuri Sakhnovsky

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Name
  
Yuri Sakhnovsky

Role
  
Composer

Died
  
1930


Yuri Sakhnovsky WN yuri sakhnovsky

Yuri Sergeevich Sakhnovsky (Russian: Юрий Серге́евич Сахновский) (1866–1930) was a Russian composer, conductor and music critic.

Yuri Sakhnovsky WN yuri sakhnovsky

Sakhnovsky came from a well-off family and was known as a "bon vivant (he weighed 260.lbs) handsome, brilliant and wealthy".

Sakhnovsky studied chant with Stepan Vasilevich Smolensky, to whom Sergei Rachmaninoff dedicated his Vespers, though Sakhnovsky later turned to a more "lush" style of choral writing. While a student Sakhnovsky took in his eight-year younger fellow student Rachmaninoff during the difficult winter when it seemed he was suffering from malaria.

In later life Sakhnovsky was active more as a critic than a composer. Particularly notorious were his attacks on Alexander Scriabin's music as "decadent" from 1911-1914.

His song "The Blacksmith" was recorded by Maxim Mikhailov and his song "The Clock" was recorded by Vladimir Rosing.

References

Yuri Sakhnovsky Wikipedia