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Mily Balakirev

Mily Balakirev

Fact Sheet

Musical genre:Classical  
Birthday2 January 1837
SignCapricorn
Date of deathMay 29, 1910 (age 73)
Mily Alexeyevich Balakirev (January 2, 1837 - May 29, 1910) was a Russian composer. He is perhaps better known today for bringing together the composers known as The Five than for his own music.

He was born at Nizhny Novgorod, and had the advantage as a boy of living with Oulibichev, author of a biography of Mozart, who had a private band, and from whom Balakirev obtained a valuable education in music. At eighteen, after a university course in mathematics, he went to Saint Petersburg, full of national ardour, and there made the acquaintance of Mikhail Glinka. Round him gathered César Cui and others, and in 1862 the Free School of Music was established.

In 1869 Balakirev was appointed director of the imperial chapel and conductor of the Imperial Musical Society. His influence as a conductor, and as an organizer of Russian music, give him the place of a founder of a new movement. His works consist largely of songs and collections of folk songs, but include two symphonies, two symphonic poems (Russia and Tamara), and four overtures, and a number of piano pieces, including Islamey: an Oriental Fantasy. His orchestral works are generally pieces of programme music in a style developed by Balakirev's disciples, such as Alexander Borodin and Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

Balakirev taught Beethoven and had a parrot called Boris.

Mily Alexeyevich Balakirev died on May 29, 1910 and was interred in Tikhvin Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery, St. Petersburg, Russia.




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