... under a pile of old papers in a Conservatory...
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2015/s ... -100-years
Stravinsky is one of my musical heroes. I can't wait to hear it!

Moderators: Frodo, FMiguelez, MIDI Life Crisis
And there probably won't be as long as someone can make some $$$ selling it somehow. Damn publishers! LOLcuttime wrote:Very good news! I can't believe that there isn't a scan of the manuscript anywhere. I'm going to keep looking.
And you were right. I think it's great that you speak a little Russian. I love the sound of it, and It's one of my favourite languages.mhschmieder wrote:My Russian isn't as strong as it once was, but I think that translates to "Funeral Song".
Is there anything this man can't do? LOLmhschmieder wrote:My Russian isn't as strong as it once was...
Safe bet. I expected to be learning it before life got in my way and had taken classes in Russian to help in that effort....I bet you guys know this piece, but if you don't, do yourself a favour and listen to it. Gorgeous choral writing. Mike Halloran, I bet you know the opera, since it has some great bass parts!
Funny, I was going to bring up the Mozart/Handel comparison but I felt it would be too obscure. Can't get anything past you!mhschmieder wrote:?..
Hmm, I hadn't paid enough attention to the Shostakovitch involvement in the version of Boris Godunov performed by SFO a few years ago, which I was shocked to have disliked. Even though my all-time favorite opera ("Lady Macbeth of Mtensk") is an original by Shostakovitch, that doesn't guarantee that I like it when a favorite composer mucks with another's work (another example might be Mozart's "update" of Handel's "Messiah").
At any rate, I've always been intrigued by the relationship of the Soviet composers and how many of them served as sort of a "tag team" at times.