Classical Music CDs at ArkivMusic Cart Wish List My Account Gift Certificates Newsletter Help
Composers | Conductors | Performers | Ensembles | Operas | Labels | ArkivCDs | DVDs | More... New ArkivMusic Reissues On Sale
New Releases Recommendations Top Sellers On Sale CDs Under $10 Broadway Reissues Super Audio CDs MP3s Blu-ray Discs Listen Magazine
 Home > Composers >

WGBH Radio WGBH Radio theclassicalstation.org
César Cui
Born: January 18, 1835; Vilnius, Lithuania   Died: March 26, 1918; Petrograd, Russia  
An engineer, military officer, and self-taught composer, César Cui was also a perceptive critic. As a member of the Mighty Handful of composers, he did much to help shape Russian nationalism in the nineteenth century.

Born in Poland, he was the son of a Lithuanian woman and a French officer who had been trapped in Russia following Napoleon's rout in 1812. Cui displayed precocious musical talent and was taught the pianoforte at an early
...
Read more
See all recordings available (50)   OR   Select a specific Work or Most Popular Work below.
César Cui titles in:
Recommended   SuperAudio CD   ArkivCD   MP3 Downloads  
Featured César Cui CDs & DVDs:
Tchaikovsky, Cui, Glazunov, Rimsky-Korsakov / Isserlis, Gardiner
Release Date:    Label: Virgin Classics   Catalog: 91134   Number of Discs: 1
ArkivCD
$12.99
Add To Your Cart
In Stock
On sale!
Works
"You" and "Thou" (1)
(25) Songs, Op. 57: The statue of Tsarskoïe Selo (1)
A feast in the time of plague (1)
Angelo: I live only for you (2)
Bagatelle italianne, for piano in B major, Op. 22/2 (1)
Budrïs and His Sons, Op. 98 (1)
Echoes of War, Op. 66: no 1, Fair Spring (1)
Far niente, Op. 10 no 2 (1)
Here the lilac blossom fades so quickly (1)
Hidden Beauty (1)
Hymn to the Most Holy Mother of God, Op. 93 (1)
I loved you, for voice & piano, Op. 33/3 (1)
I remember the evening (3)
I touched the bloom lightly (1)
Impromptu-Caprice for piano in E major (1)
It's over (1)
Kaleydoskop, Op 50: no 9, Orientale (6)
Le flibustier: Prelude (1)
Les deux ménétriers, Op. 42 (2)
Little Duos (5) for Flute and Violin, Op. 56 (3)
Mélodies (5), Op. 54: no 2, Le colibri (1)
Mélodies (5), Op. 54: no 5, Ici-bas (1)
Melodies (6), Op. 23: Ici Bas (2)
Morceaux (2) for Cello and Orchestra/Piano, Op. 36 (1)
Morceaux (2) for Cello and Orchestra/Piano, Op. 36: no 2 (1)
Nocturne for piano in F sharp minor, Op. 22/3 (1)
Nocturne in F sharp minor (1)
Perpetual motion (2)
Petites Duos (5), for flute, violin & piano, Op. 56 (1)
Poems (25) by Pushkin, Op. 57: Le désir (1)
Poems (25) by Pushkin, Op. 57: no 11, Thou and you (1)
Poems (25) by Pushkin, Op. 57: no 17, La statue de Tsarskoïe Selo (6)
Poems (25) by Pushkin, Op. 57: no 8, Confidant (1)
Poems (7) by Pushkin and Lermontov, Op. 33: no 3, I loved you (1)
Poems (7) by Pushkin and Lermontov, Op. 33: no 4, The burnt letter (2)
Praeludium A flat major (1)
Prelude for Organ in A flat major (1)
Prelude for Organ in G minor (1)
Preludes (24) for Piano, Op. 64: Excerpt(s) (1)
Preludes (25) for Piano, Op. 64 (2)
Preludes (25) for Piano, Op. 64: no 10 (1)
Preludes (25) for Piano, Op. 64: no 16 (1)
Preludes (25) for Piano, Op. 64: no 17 (1)
Preludes (25) for Piano, Op. 64: no 2 (1)
Preludes (25) for Piano, Op. 64: no 8 (1)
Preludes (25) for Piano, Op. 64: no 9 (1)
Quasi Scherzo for piano in B minor, Op. 22/4 (1)
Romances (7), Op. 49: no 1, I touched a flower (1)
Scherzos (3) for Orchestra, Op. 82 (1)
Song of the Most Holy Theotokos, Op. 93 "Magnificat" (1)
Sonnets (4), Op. 48 (1)
Suite concertante for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 25 (1)
Suite for Orchestra no 2 in E major, Op. 38 (1)
Suite for Orchestra no 4, Op. 40 "A Argenteau" (1)
Suite for Piano, Op. 21 (1)
Suite miniature no 1, Op. 20: Berceuse (1)
Tarantella for Orchestra (1)
The Statue of Czarskoye-Selo, for voice & piano, Op. 57/17 (1)
Tï i vï ("You" and "thou"), Op. 57/11 (1)
Tsarskoselskaya statuya (The statue at Tsarskoye Selo), Op. 57/17 (1)
Waltzes (3) for Piano, Op. 31 (1)
Zhelaniye (Desire), Op. 57/25 (1)
Biography by Michael Morrison
An engineer, military officer, and self-taught composer, César Cui was also a perceptive critic. As a member of the Mighty Handful of composers, he did much to help shape Russian nationalism in the nineteenth century.

Born in Poland, he was the son of a Lithuanian woman and a French officer who had been trapped in Russia following Napoleon's rout in 1812. Cui displayed precocious musical talent and was taught the pianoforte at an early age. He also received instruction in musical theory, but upon his graduation from school in Wilno, he chose to enter the School of Military Engineering in Saint Petersburg. He became a sub-professor at the Artillery School and Staff College and was recognized as an authority on fortification, even instructing Emperor Nicholas II. He ascended to the rank of lieutenant general and, as a collateral activity, took the post of president of the Imperial Russian Musical Society.

In 1857, Cui encountered Mily Balakirev and not only was his musical enthusiasm fired, he became a disciple of Balakirev and an ardent devotee of his Russian nationalist beliefs. As he did with most everyone else he met, Balakirev bullied Cui and made continual, insistent demands with regard to his compositional efforts. Cui began to compose in earnest and in 1859 produced his first operetta, The Mandarin's Son. It was an early and lackluster effort, but Cui pressed on, winning the prize of the Imperial Russian Music Society in 1860 for a work which combined chorus and orchestra. He had also composed his first three orchestral works: a pair of scherzos and an early tarantella.

Ten years elapsed before Cui produced another opera; it was an ambitious work, a drama in three acts based upon Heine's romantic tragedy William Ratcliff. It was premiered in Saint Petersburg in 1869, was well-received, and established Cui's reputation as a composer of Russian opera. He followed this in 1875 with another large-scale dramatic work based upon the play Angelo by Victor Hugo. Posterity has come to view this as possibly the finest work of Cui's maturity, but it did not receive the adulation nor the popular acceptance of the earlier work.

In the meantime, Cui began to write reviews and essays on musical subjects and became a frequent and respected critic and contributor to many leading Russian papers. As a critic, Cui was perceptive and witty. His articles also appeared in both French and Belgian publications and he used these to call attention outside Russia to the growing nationalism of Russian music.

Though he produced many songs and other larger-scale vocal works, another 13 years passed before Cui produced another opera. This was Le Flibustier, based upon a play by Jean Richepin. Finally presented five years later, in 1894, it was enthusiastically received but did not endure. Between 1899 and 1903, he wrote more operas, continued to produce a few orchestral works, larger numbers of vocal pieces, and solo works for pianoforte during these years. As he finished his career, he generated three more operatic works, the last of which, Puss-in-Boots, was unfinished and unperformed at his death.

Cui produced effective and interesting works, and was at his best smaller forms, such as vocal solos, duets and works for piano.
 About ArkivMusic  Contact Us  Partner Program  Institutional Sales  Terms & Conditions  Privacy Policy  Help  Your Account  Shortcuts  
ArkivMusic - The Source for Classical Music!

Copyright ArkivMusic LLC, 2012.
Data supplied by Rovi Data Solutions, Inc. Copyright 1948-2012. For personal use only. All rights reserved.