Alexander Knayfel
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Alexander Aronovich Knayfel (Russian: Алекса́ндр Аро́нович Кна́йфель, Knayfel', Knaifel; born November 28, 1943 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan) is a Russian composer known for his operas The Ghost of Canterville and Alice in Wonderland as well as for his music for cinema.
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[edit] Education
Knayfel studied cello with Mstislav Rostropovich at Moscow Conservatory from 1961 to 1963, then composition with Boris Arapov in Leningrad from 1964 until 1967.
[edit] Music
From the very beginning of his composing career he associated himself with the group of so to say "avant-garde" Soviet composers that include Andrey Volkonsky, Edison Denisov, Alfred Schnittke, Sofia Gubaidulina, Valentin Silvestrov, Leonid Hrabovsky, Arvo Pärt, Tigran Mansuryan, and others. The works of the 1990s and 2000s were strongly influenced by religious themes and showed dramatic changes of his musical language.
He wrote more than 80 compositions in various genres and also more than 40 scores for features films and documentaries.
His music often surprises by its extravagant ideas, strange combination of the instruments or incredibly long duration. For example, his very slow and quiet Agnus Dei (1985) written for four instrumentalists (each of them plays several instruments including keyboards, percussion, electronics, saxophones and double bass) lasts exactly 120 minutes; another two hours long piece Nika (72 fragments after Heraclitus and Dante 1973-1974), is written for 17 double basses; and the piece titled Solaris (1980) is scored for 35 Javanese gongs.
In 1979 Knayfel was blacklisted as one of the "Khrennikov's Seven" at the Sixth Congress of the Union of Soviet Composers for unapproved participation in some festivals of Soviet music in the West.
Norman Lebrecht explains Knayfel and his music as follows: "Russian iconoclast, writing slow, quiet and unsettling music that passes from one instrument to another when it is good and ready... Many of his scores are unperformed, perhaps unperformable." (The Companion to 20th Century Music, 1992).
[edit] Selected Works
- The Ghost of Canterville, opera in 3 acts with Prologue after Oscar Wilde for soloists and chamber orchestra (1965-1966)
- Medea, ballet in two parts after the Greek saga (1968)
- Monody for female voice (1968)
- The Silly Horse, 15 poems after V. Levin and F. Solasko for female singer and piano (1981) CD Megadisc MDC 7844: Tatjana Melentieva (soprano), Oleg Malov (piano)
- Agnus Dei for four instruments a cappella (1985) CD Megadisc 7808/07: nsemble Musiques Nouvelles
- God, ode after Dershavin for chorus and children's chorus (1985)
- Litany I for orchestra (1988)
- Litany II for orchestra (1988)
- Through the Rainbow of Unvoluntary Tears for soprano and cello (1988)
- The Offer for a chorus of string instruments (1991)
- Svete Tikhiy (O Gladsome Light), song of the Most Holy Theotokos for Tatjana Melentieva (1991) CD ECM New Series 1763: Tatiana Melentieva (soprano), Andrei Siegle (sampler)
- Yet again on the Hypothesis (A Dialogue with J.S. Bach Prelude and Fugue B minor from Well Tempered Piano) for soloistic instrumental ensemble (1991-1992)
- In any Forgetting of Exhaustion, postludium to the memory of M.G. Orlovski for chamber orchestra (1992)
- Postludium for soprano and piano) CD Megadisc MDC 7855: Tatjana Melentieva (soprano), Oleg Malov (piano)
- The Jacob's Ladder, glossolalia of Thirteen for chorus (1992)
- The Eighth Chapter, canticum canticorum for choruses and cello (1993)
- In Air Clear and Unseen, stanzas with Tyutchev for piano and string quartet (1994) CD ECM New Series 1763: Keller Quartet, Oleg Malov (piano)
- Lux Aeterna for two cellos and psalm singers (1998)
- Scarry March for soprano and piano CD Megadisc MDC 7855: Tatjana Melentieva (soprano), Oleg Malov (piano)
- Prayer to the Holy Spirit for soprano and piano CD Megadisc MDC 7855: Tatjana Melentieva (soprano), Oleg Malov (piano)
- Alice in Wonderland, opera (2001)
In 2006, a sample from the album Svete Tikhiy (O Gladsome Light) has been used on the track 'Psychological' which features on the new Pet Shop Boys album 'Fundamental'
[edit] Quotations
"The sounds are, for me, signs of the existence of beauty. Beauty is the most important thing for me - it is energy, unrepeatable." (Alexander Knayfel')
[edit] Bibliography
Svetlana Savenko: The magic of Alexander Knaifel’s message; also: List of Alexander Knaifel’s principal works. In «Ex oriente...III» Eight Composers from the former USSR Philip Gershkovich, Boris Tishchenko, Leonid Grabovsky, Alexander Knaifel, Vladislav Shoot, Alexander Vustin, Alexander Raskatov, Sergei Pavlenko. Edited by Valeria Tsenova. English edition only. (studia slavica musicologica, Bd. 31) Verlag Ernst Kuhn – Berlin ISBN 3-928864-92-0