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Nov 25, 1925 — May 5, 2002· 76 yrs

BIOGRAPHY · COMPOSERS

David Brown

Also known as: Brown, David, 1929-2014., David Clifford Brown

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David Brown (b. Romsey, Hampshire, UK 25 November 1925 - d. 5 May 2002) was an art curator and veterinary researcher.

Mikhail Ivanovich Glinka was the father of the 19th-century Russian nationalist school of composers, and exerted a profound and freely acknowledged influence upon Balakirev and his circle and upon Tchaikovsky.

— from The New Grove Russian Masters, I, 1986

Most acclaimed

#1

The New Grove Russian Masters II

1986

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#2

The New Grove Russian Masters, I

1986

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#3

Tchaikovsky

3.0 (2)

This monumental 656-page biography is probably the fullest, most revealing account to date of Tchaikovsky's private life. Poznansky identifies the death of the composer's mother as a shattering experience for young Pyotr Ilyich, a source of deep existential melancholy. His hypersensitivity, forged by a child's feeling of paradise lost, would manifest in neurosis, insomnia and depressive fits marked by "a sense of insurmountable terror." A Yale University librarian, Poznansky explores the composer's obsessive fear of death, his idealized relationship with eccentric, free-thinking patron Nadezhda von Meck, the fiasco of his brief, unconsummated marriage, and his involvement in a homosexual subculture that simultaneously fascinated and repelled him. Drawing on Russian sources, the author refutes the theory that Tchaikovsky's death in 1893 at age 53 was a suicide forced upon him by a conspiracy of former classmates. "The story of a soul finding itself," this remarkable book casts only an indirect light on the relationship between Tchaikovsky's life and art, as the author omits extended discussion of the music. Photos.

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