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Soviet Composers and the Development of Soviet Music (1970) is a thought-provoking review of Soviet music and musicians. The lives and works of some two dozen major Soviet composers are discussed, and insight is provided into Soviet thinking about music, and thinking about the arts.



Soviet Composers and the Development of Soviet Music (1970) is a thought-provoking review of Soviet music and musicians. This scholarly and readable distillation of factual information and well-reasoned conclusions is the result of many years of exhaustive study of reference works, monographs and journals, as well as musical scores both published and unpublished, all supplemented by interviews and personal participation in Soviet musical life. The author presents a cogent, critical analysis of the relationship between extra-musical pressures and the theory and practice of artistic autonomy. The lives and works of some two dozen major Soviet composers are discussed, and insight is provided into Soviet thinking about music, and thinking about the arts.

Part
1. Soviet Russian Cultural Ideology and Music
1. Before October
2.
Axes of Development
3. Music and Politicians: Lunacharsky and Others
4. Music
and Revolution: 191732
5. Music and Reaction: 1932 Part
2. The Older
Generation of Soviet Composers
6. Ippolitov-Ivanov
7. Reinhold Gliere
8.
Sergei Vasilenko
9. Boris Asafev
10. Nikolai Miaskovsky
11. Dmitrii
Arakishvili
12. Uzeir Gadzhibekov
13. Sergei Prokofieff Part
3. The Middle
Generation of Soviet Composers
14. Iurii Shaporin
15. Dmitrii Shostakovich
16. Vissarion Shebalin
17. Aram Khachaturian
18. Dmitrii Kabalevsky
19.
Tikhon Khrennikov
20. Georgii Sviridov
21. Andrei Balanchivadze Part
4. The
Younger Generation of Soviet Composers
22. Rodion Shchedrin
23. German
Galynin
24. Otar Taktakishvili
25. Kara Karaev
26. Fikret Amirov
27. Other
Young Composers
Stanley Dale Krebs was the first American to be enrolled at Moscows Tchaikovsky Conservatory, and whose works were played in America and abroad. He was conductor of the Santa Maria (California) Symphony Orchestra, and was Associate Professor of Music at the University of California, Santa Barbara.