St Peter - Rimskykorsakovsymphonies 1 2 [CD]

$16.95
+ $8.49 Shipping

St Peter - Rimskykorsakovsymphonies 1 2 [CD]

  • Brand: Unbranded

St Peter - Rimskykorsakovsymphonies 1 2 [CD]

  • Brand: Unbranded
Price: $16.95
Sold by:
$16.95
+ $8.49 Shipping

Taxes calculated at checkout

14-Day Returns Policy

Currently unavailable

We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.

Payment methods:

Description

St Peter - Rimskykorsakovsymphonies 1 2 [CD]

Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov (1844- 1908) Symphony No.1 in E Minor, Op. 1 Symphony No.2, Op. 9, (Symphonic Suite), Antar Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov originally intended a naval career, following the example of his elder brother. He showed some musical ability even as a very small child, but at the age of 14 he entered the Naval Cadet College in St. Petersburg in pursuit of a more immediately attractive ambition. The city, in any case, offered musical opportunities. He continued piano lessons, but, more important than this, he was able to enjoy the opera and attend his first concerts. It was in 1861, the year before he completed his course at the Naval College, that Rimsky-Korsakov met Balakirev, a musician who was to become an important influence on him, as he was on the young army officers Mussorgsky and Cui, who already formed part of his circle, later joined by Borodin. The meeting had a far-reaching effect on Rimsky-Korsakov's career, although in 1862 he set sail as a midshipman on a cruise that was to keep him away from Russia for the next two and a half years. On his return in 1865 Rimsky-Korsakov fell again under the influence of Balakirev. On shore there was more time for music and the encouragement he needed for a serious application to music that resulted in compositions in which he showed his early ability as an orchestrator and his deftness in the use of Russian themes, a gift that Balakirev did much to encourage as part of his campaign to create a truly Russian form of music. Nevertheless, as Rimsky-Korsakov himself soon realised, Balakirev lacked the necessary technique of a composer, justifying Anton Rubinstein's taunts of amateurism. In spite of his own perceived deficiencies in this respect, in 1871 he took a position as professor of instrumentation and composition at St. Petersburg Conservatory and the following year he resigned his commission in the navy, to become a civilian Inspector of Naval Bands, a position created for him through personal and family influence. Rimsky-Korsakov's subsequent career was a distinguished one. Understanding the need for a sure command of compositional techniques, harmony, counterpoint and orchestration, he set to work to make good these defects in his own musical formation with remarkable success. This led him, as the only real professional of the nationalist group dominated by Balakirev, to take on the task of completing and often orchestrating works left unfinished by other composers of the new Russian school. As early as 1869 Dargomizhsky had left him the task of completing the opera The Stone Guest. Twenty years later he was to perform similar tasks for the music of Mussorgsky and for Borodin, both of whom had left much undone at the time of their deaths. Relations with Balakirev were not always easy and Rimsky-Korsakov, who had become increasingly intolerant of the former's obligatory and dogmatic interference in the work of others, was to become associated with Belyayev and
  • Fruugo ID: 426555657-895647818
  • EAN: 0730099581127

Delivery & Returns

Dispatched within -1 days

  • STANDARD: $8.49 - Delivery between Mon 29 December 2025–Tue 06 January 2026

Shipping from United Kingdom.

We do our best to ensure that the products that you order are delivered to you in full and according to your specifications. However, should you receive an incomplete order, or items different from the ones you ordered, or there is some other reason why you are not satisfied with the order, you may return the order, or any products included in the order, and receive a full refund for the items. View full return policy