Death:
November 6, 1893 - St. Petersburg
Tchaikovsky Facts:
- Above all the other composers, Tchaikovsky adored Mozart. He once referred to Mozart as "the musical Christ." Of other composers, Wagner bored him and he detested Brahms.
- Tchaikovsky was a shy person, a quality that intensified to almost manic like proportions. He once wrote in his diary that he could hold "incredibly animated conversations" with people but would rather "flee from them to the ends of the world."
- Tchaikovsky struggled with his sexuality and worked hard to keep his homosexuality a secret.
Tchaikovsky's Childhood:
Tchaikovsky
was born to a fairly wealthy middle class family. His father, Ilya
Petrovich
(a two time divorcee) married Alexandra and the two had two sons, Pyotr
and Modest. Tchaikovsky was a precocious child having learned to read
French and German by the age of six. A year later, he was writing
French verses. The family hired a governess to keep watch over the
children, and she often referred to Tchaikovsky as the "porcelain
child." Tchaikovsky, was ultra sensitive to music and was placed into
piano lessons at a young age. He would complain at night that the music
in his head would not let him sleep.
Tchaikovsky's Teenage Years:
When
Pyotr was 10 years old, his family enrolled him into the School of
Jurisprudence for a career in civil service, not fully comprehending his
remarkable musical talent. Because the minimum acceptance age was 12,
Pyotr was sent to boarding school. After turning 12, he entered into
the senior classes at the school. Apart from singing in choir, he did
not seriously study music. It wasn't until after he graduated in 1859,
that he began to study music. In 1862, Pyotr began taking classes with
Nikolai Zaremba at the St. Petersburg Conservatory. In 1863, Pyotr quit
his day job as clerk at the Ministry of Justice.
Tchaikovksy's Early Adult Life:
After
quitting his day job, Tchaikovsky devoted his life to music. Under the
mentorship of Anton Rubenstein (director of the conservatory),
Tchaikovsky went through the conservatory's curriculum. Aside from
musical studies, he also studied conducting. Tchaikovsky had an immense
fear of it, and would often hold his chin with his left hand while
conducting after once imagining his head falling off his shoulders.
Though he was not the best conductor, he was one of the best music
students. In 1866, Tchaikovsky took a job as a harmony teacher for the Moscow Conservatory with Rubenstein's recommendation.
Tchaikovsky's Mid Adult Life, pt. 1:
In
1868, he had a brief flirtation with soprano Desiree Artot, but she
later married a Spanish baritone. Though his personal life may have
been unsuccessful, Tchaikovsky was steadily completing composition after
composition. In 1875, Tchaikovsky's world premiere of his third
symphony was given in Boston on October 25, and was conducted by Hans
von Bulow. Despite there being pockets of opposition towards his music,
his works and reputation began to spread across Europe. In 1877, he
married a beautiful young woman named Anotonina Miliukova, but divorced
her 9 weeks later because she "possessed little intelligence."
Tchaikovsky's Mid Adult Life, pt. 2:
During
the same year of his disastorous marriage, Tchaikovsky also entered
into another relationship - only instead of meeting face to face, they
communicated through letters. This worked out very well for him given
his extreme shyness, and also in part, he did not have to consummate the
relationship. The woman was Nadeshda von Meck. Though it is unclear
why she did not want to meet him, she sent him money as she greatly
admired his work. Despite what it seemed on the outside, inside
Tchaikovsky was emotionally troubled, weeping and doubting himself very
often, and took to alcohol as a form of relief.
Tchaikovsky's Late Adult Life:
After
enjoying numerous successes and frequent travels, Pyotr's money and
letters from Meck came to a halt. In 1890, she claimed to be broke,
though that wasn't the case. It wasn't the loss of the money that had
greatly upset him, it was the sudden termination of his emotional
companion of 13 years. This was a low blow for the already emotionally
sensitive composer. In 1891, he fled to the US after receiving an
invitation to the opening week of New York's Music Hall (which was
renamed Carnegie Hall a few years later). He visited Niagara Falls and
conducted in Philadelphia and Baltimore before returning to Russia.
The Death of Tchaikovsky:
Though
there are many rumors about Tchaikovsky's cause of death, the most
widely accepted explanation is that he died of cholera after drinking a
glass of water that wasn't boiled. He died less than one week after
premiering what is considered to be his greatest work, Symphony Pathetique.
http://classicalmusic.about.com/od/classicalcomposers/p/tchaikovsky.htm
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