Composer
Alexander Tcherepnin (1899-1977); RUS
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Alexander Tcherepnin was a Russian-born composer, pianist and conductor known for his cosmopolitan style that included influences from France and the Far East. Tcherepnin's father, Nikolay Tcherepnin, was an important composer and conductor, and it was his influence and teaching that formed Alexander's early training. In 1921 Tcherepnin's family fled the aftermath of the Bolshevik revolution, and the young composer began his career in their adopted home of Paris. From the beginning he favored new and experimental techniques, and during the 1920s he fomulated his own 9-tone scale (now called the Tcherepnin scale), consisting of three overlapping major and minor tetrachords; this allowed for the simultaneous sounding of major and minor sonorities, which the composer found particularly satisfying. He also developed a new form of counterpoint—called "interpoint"—which allows for the combination of several self-contained contrapuntal structures. These musical devices were not so much abstract concepts as attempts on the part of the emerging composer to codify his very instinctive and individual approaches to sound and rhythm. These tendencies had already been expressed in early works, such as the bitonal Pièces sans titres, Op. 7, from 1913.
From 1934 through 1937, he toured the Far East, using Tokyo, Shanghai, and Peking alternately as bases of operation; he would have considerable influence as a teacher of both Japanese and Chinese composers of the period. He also met his wife, the pianist Lee Hsien Ming while in China. The newly married couple returned to Paris in 1938, but the turmoil of WWII put a stop to musical activities. Immediately following the war, however, he resumed his creative output, eventually relocating to Chicago in 1950, and finally settling in New York in 1964.
Although Tcherepnin's style was Russian at heart, it lacked much of the Romantic melancholy and overt nationalism seen in other Russian-born composers. Instead, his earlier works are characterized by a French leanness and clarity and an emphasis on the clean articulation of form. Some, such as in the Second Piano Concerto (1923), bear a similarity to the works of Prokofiev in their motoric rhythms. Tcherepnin himself considered his style to be "Eurasian." Notable works include the Piano Concerto 4 (1947), the Cinq études de concert and his opera The Farmer and the Nymph (1952)—all of which have a distinctly oriental sound—and the Fifth Piano Concerto (1963) and Serenade for Strings (1964), both of which suggest aggressive exploration of new concepts at the end of his life. Tcherepnin produced a wide variety of works in every genre, eventually even incorporating electronic elements in his radio score The Story of Ivan the Fool.
© Steven Coburn, All Music Guide
From 1934 through 1937, he toured the Far East, using Tokyo, Shanghai, and Peking alternately as bases of operation; he would have considerable influence as a teacher of both Japanese and Chinese composers of the period. He also met his wife, the pianist Lee Hsien Ming while in China. The newly married couple returned to Paris in 1938, but the turmoil of WWII put a stop to musical activities. Immediately following the war, however, he resumed his creative output, eventually relocating to Chicago in 1950, and finally settling in New York in 1964.
Although Tcherepnin's style was Russian at heart, it lacked much of the Romantic melancholy and overt nationalism seen in other Russian-born composers. Instead, his earlier works are characterized by a French leanness and clarity and an emphasis on the clean articulation of form. Some, such as in the Second Piano Concerto (1923), bear a similarity to the works of Prokofiev in their motoric rhythms. Tcherepnin himself considered his style to be "Eurasian." Notable works include the Piano Concerto 4 (1947), the Cinq études de concert and his opera The Farmer and the Nymph (1952)—all of which have a distinctly oriental sound—and the Fifth Piano Concerto (1963) and Serenade for Strings (1964), both of which suggest aggressive exploration of new concepts at the end of his life. Tcherepnin produced a wide variety of works in every genre, eventually even incorporating electronic elements in his radio score The Story of Ivan the Fool.
© Steven Coburn, All Music Guide
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Orchestral Works
83 tracks
- Symphonies
33 tracks
- Symphony No.4, Op.91
9 tracks
- Symphony No.3, Op.83 ("Chinese")
8 tracks
- Symphony No.1, Op.42
8 tracks
- Symphony No.2, Op.77
8 tracks
- Symphony No.4, Op.91
- Romantic Overture, Op 67
1 track
- Suite for orchestra, Op 87
4 tracks
- Russian Dances, Op 50
5 tracks
- Symphonic Prayer, for orchestra, Op.93
2 tracks
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Concertos
26 tracks
- Piano Concerto No.2, Op.26
2 tracks
- Concerto for piano & orchestra, No 4 "Fantaisie"
6 tracks
- Concerto for piano & orchestra No.1, Op 12
2 tracks
- Concerto for piano & orchestra No.3, Op.48
4 tracks
- Concerto for piano & orchestra No.6, Op.99
6 tracks
- Piano Concerto No.5, Op.96
6 tracks
- Piano Concerto No.2, Op.26
- Magna mater, for orchestra, Op.41
2 tracks
- Festmusik, Op.45a
8 tracks
- Symphonic March, Op.80
2 tracks
- Symphonies
-
Piano Works
36 tracks
- Bagatelles (11) for piano, Op.5
20 tracks
- Suite for harpsichord, Op.100
5 tracks
- Concert Etudes (5), for piano, Op.52
5 tracks
- Fantasy for 2 Pianos
3 tracks
- 3 Pieces, for 2 pianos
3 tracks
- Bagatelles (11) for piano, Op.5
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Chamber Works
21 tracks
- Sonatine Sportive, for bassoon & piano, Op.63
3 tracks
- Wind Quintet, Op.107
3 tracks
- Trio for flute, violin & cello
4 tracks
- Study, for flute & piano
1 track
- Prelude for 2 flutes
1 track
- Duo for two flutes, Op.108
5 tracks
- Sonatina for 3 timpani & piano
4 tracks
- Sonatine Sportive, for bassoon & piano, Op.63
Below are works by A.Tcherepnin that every music lover should explore:



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