Here’s a little secret: All uploads from this week I made in a single day, because I was on vacation; now I’m back (and I felt like playing a bit piano), so here is a little extra piece for today, a short but sweet Nocturne.
Aleksandr Lazarevich Lokshin (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ла́заревич Локши́н) (1920–1987) was a Soviet composer of classical music. He was born on 19 September 1920 in the town of Biysk, in the Altai Region, Western Siberia, and died in Moscow on 11 June 1987.
An admirer of Mahler and Alban Berg, he created his own musical language; he wrote eleven symphonies plus symphonic works including Les Fleurs du Mal (1939, on Baudelaire’s poems), Three Scenes from Goethe’s Faust (1973, 1980), the cantata Mater Dolorosa (1977, on verses from Akhmatova’s Requiem). Only his Symphony No 4 is purely instrumental; all his other symphonies include vocal parts. Symphony No 3 by Lokshin was written on Kipling’s verses, and a ballet Fedra was staged to music from
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10 months ago 00:03:35 1
RUSALOCHKA SONG (1968)
11 months ago 00:03:04 1
Lola Marsh - Only For A Moment
1 year ago 00:03:00 5
Basiaga - Валим (Sold Out)
2 years ago 00:02:02 2
Alexander Lokshin: Nocturne
4 years ago 00:00:00 1
Online concert / Orchestra Safonov/ conductor
4 years ago 00:24:17 4
Alexander Lokshin - String quartet
5 years ago 00:26:20 2
Alexander Lokshin - String Quintet in Memory of Shostakovich
7 years ago 00:28:49 1
(1920 - 1987), Symph 8 (“Western Slavs’ Songs“)
7 years ago 00:09:35 2
The Sunway - Our World (English Version)
9 years ago 00:24:47 2
Alexander Lokshin Variations for piano - Maria Grinberg, piano
9 years ago 00:09:35 193
The Sunway - Our World (Russian Version)
10 years ago 00:03:29 4
Чаян Фамали Вера Внутри Меня
10 years ago 00:02:12 3
Lokshin - In the spring - Kuschnerova
10 years ago 00:07:26 1
Lokshin - Prelude and Theme with Variations in A - Kuschnerova