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- Q2596902 subject Q7898395.
- Q2596902 subject Q8007373.
- Q2596902 subject Q8148851.
- Q2596902 abstract "Nagasaki is an oratorio composed by Soviet composer Alfred Schnittke in 1958, at the age of 25. It was Schnittke's graduation composition in the Moscow Conservatory, and the topic was suggested by his teacher Evgeny Golubev. The work was considered formalistic, and Schnittke was accused of forgetting the principles of Realism in music. Thus, he suppressed the expressionistic central movement depicting the nuclear explosion and modified the finale. It was recorded by the Moscow Radio Symphony in 1959 and broadcast to Japan through Voice of Russia, but it wasn't printed and it didn't receive any subsequent performances. Nagasaki was finally given its public premiere in its original form in Cape Town on 23 November 2006, eight years after Schnittke's death, by Hanneli Rupert and the Cape Philharmonic conducted by Owain Arwel Hughes.It consists of five movements, on Soviet and Japanese lyrics: Nagasaki, City of Grief (Anatoly Sofronov) Morning (Toson Shimazaki) The bombing (A. Sofronov) Standing in the Ruins (Yoneda Eisaku) Rise Sun, Rise Sun of Peace (A. Sofronov)↑ ↑".
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q1093783.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q1192963.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q15180.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q158078.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q17.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q180902.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q200426.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q212196.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q215539.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q488099.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q5034994.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q5465.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q5469984.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q706139.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q7114239.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q7898395.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q8007373.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q8148851.
- Q2596902 wikiPageWikiLink Q85477.
- Q2596902 comment "Nagasaki is an oratorio composed by Soviet composer Alfred Schnittke in 1958, at the age of 25. It was Schnittke's graduation composition in the Moscow Conservatory, and the topic was suggested by his teacher Evgeny Golubev. The work was considered formalistic, and Schnittke was accused of forgetting the principles of Realism in music. Thus, he suppressed the expressionistic central movement depicting the nuclear explosion and modified the finale.".
- Q2596902 label "Nagasaki (Schnittke)".