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
Mily Balakirev
Born: January 2, 1837; Nizhny Novgorod, Russia   Died: May 29, 1910; St. Petersburg, Russia  
Mily Balakirev learned his craft from local musicians. Conductor Karl Eisrich introduced Balakirev to the music of Chopin, Glinka, and Alexander Ulybyshev, a music loving landowner who maintained a vast library of musical scores. In 1855, Balakirev composed his Piano Fantasia on Themes from Glinka's a Life for the Tsar, and Ulybyshev took Balakirev to St. Petersburg to meet Glinka himself. Glinka appreciated Balakirev's talent, and offered advice ...
Read more
See all recordings available (108)   OR   Select a specific Work or Most Popular Work below.
Mily Balakirev titles in:
New Releases   Recommended   DVD   SuperAudio CD   ArkivCD   MP3 Downloads  
Featured Mily Balakirev CDs & DVDs:
Tchaikovsky: The Seasons; Balakirev: Islamey / Bronfman
Release Date: 10/20/1998   Label: Sony   Catalog: 60689   Number of Discs: 1
ArkivCD
$12.99
Add To Your Cart
Low Stock
On sale!
See more featured titles
Works
Among The Flowers (1)
Au jardin (4)
Barcarole (2)
Berceuse for Piano in D flat minor (4)
Brigand's Song (1)
Capriccio for Piano in D major (2)
Chant du pecheur (2)
Come To Me (1)
Come to Me (Pridi ko mne), song for voice & piano (20 Songs, No. 10) (1)
Concerto for Piano no 1 in F sharp minor, Op. 1 (4)
Concerto for Piano no 2 in E flat major (4)
Delirium (1)
Desert (1)
Dream (1)
Dumka for Piano (3)
Embrace and Kiss (1)
Esquisses (Sonatina) for Piano in G major (2)
Fantasia on themes from Glinka's "A Life for the Tsar" (3)
Forgotten Songs (3): no 1, Thou art so captivating (1)
Forgotten Songs (3): no 3, Spanish song (3)
From Behind Your Mysterious, Cold Mask (1)
Georgian Song (1)
Georgian Song (Gruzinskaya pesnya), for voice & piano (or orchestra) (20 Songs, No. 19) (1)
Gondellied in A minor (2)
Grand Fantasia on Russian Folksongs, Op. 4 (2)
Hebrew melody (2)
Humoresque for Piano in D major (2)
I Have Come To Greet You (1)
I Loved Him (1)
Impromptu for Piano (3)
Impromptu, for piano (after Chopin's Preludes in E flat minor and B major) (1)
In Bohemia (2)
King Lear: Overture (2)
King Lear: Prelude to Act 2 (1)
King Lear: Prelude to Act 3 (1)
King Lear: Prelude to Act 4 (1)
King Lear: Prelude to Act 5 (1)
King Lear: Procession (1)
Knight (1)
La fileuse for Piano in B flat minor (2)
Let all mortal flesh keep silence (1)
Look, my friend (1)
Lullaby (1)
Mazurka for Piano no 1 in A flat major (4)
Mazurka for Piano no 2 in C sharp minor (4)
Mazurka for Piano no 3 in B minor (3)
Mazurka for Piano no 4 in G flat major (3)
Mazurka for Piano no 5 in D major (3)
Mazurka for Piano no 6 in A flat major (4)
Mazurka for Piano no 7 in E flat minor (3)
My Soul Is Yearning (1)
Nocturne (1)
Nocturne for Piano no 1 in B flat minor (2)
Nocturne for Piano no 2 in B minor (3)
Nocturne for Piano no 3 in D minor (3)
Nocturne for piano No. 2 in B minor (1)
Novelette for Piano in A major (2)
O Night, Now Show Me In (1)
Octet for flute, oboe, horn, violin, viola, cello, double bass & piano, Op. 3 (unfinished) (1)
Old Man's Song (1)
Oriental Fantasy for Piano, Op. 18 "Islamey" (50)
Over The Lake (1)
Overture on a Spanish March theme (1)
Overture on Russian Themes no 2 "Russia" (6)
Overture on themes of three Russian Songs (2)
Phantasiestuck for Piano in D flat major (2)
Polka for Piano in F sharp minor (5)
Prelude Song (1)
Rêverie for Piano in F major (3)
Romance from Chopin's "Piano Concerto no 1" (1)
Russian Folksongs (30) for Voice and Piano/Piano Duet (1)
Scherzo for Piano no 1 in B minor (4)
Scherzo for Piano no 2 in B flat minor (5)
Scherzo for Piano no 3 in F sharp major (3)
Selim's Song (1)
Should I, A Brave Lad (1)
Sleep! (1)
Sonata for Piano in B flat minor (1905) (4)
Sonata for Piano no 1 in B flat minor, Op. 5 (5)
Song (1)
Song Of The Goldfish (1)
Songs (10), 1896: no 1, Over the lake (1)
Songs (10), 1896: no 2, The wilderness (1)
Songs (10), 1896: no 5, I loved him (1)
Songs (20): no 11, Song of Selim (1)
Songs (20): no 13, Hebrew melody (1)
Songs (20): no 18, When I hear thy voice (1)
Songs (20): no 19, Georgian song (1)
Songs (20): no 2, Embrace, kiss (2)
Songs (20): no 5, The bright moon (2)
Songs (20): no 9, My heart is torn (1)
Spanish melody for Piano (3)
Spanish Serenade for Piano (2)
Spanish Song (1)
Suite after Chopin in D minor (1)
Suite for Piano 4 hands (1)
Symphony no 1 in C major (11)
Symphony no 2 in D minor (4)
Tamara (8)
Tarantella for Piano in B major (2)
The Cliff (1)
The Lark (8)
The Lark (Zhavoronok), transcription for piano after Glinka (2)
The Link (1)
The Pine (1)
The Prophets Inspired by Heaven (Svîshe prorotsï), anthem for chorus (1)
The Rosy Sunset's Burning Down (1)
The Sea Foams Not (1)
The Sunset (1)
The wilderness (1)
They all Tell Me (2)
Thou Art Full Of Fascinating Tenderness (1)
Toccata for Piano in C sharp minor (5)
Tyrolienne (2)
Up In The Sky (1)
Waltz for Piano no 1 in G major "Valse di bravura" (3)
Waltz for Piano no 2 in F minor "Valse mélancholique" (2)
Waltz for Piano no 3 in D major "Valse-impromptu" (2)
Waltz for Piano no 4 in B flat major "Valse de concert" (3)
Waltz for Piano no 5 in D flat major (2)
Waltz for Piano no 6 in F sharp minor (2)
Waltz for Piano no 7 in G sharp minor (2)
When Yellow Fields Wave (1)
When, Careless (1)
Whene'er I Hear Thy Voice (2)
Whisper, Shy Breathing (1)
Why? (1)
More Featured Mily Balakirev CDs & DVDs:
Balakirev: Symphonies No 1 & 2, Etc / Sinaisky, Et Al
Release Date: 11/22/2005   Label: Chandos   Catalog: 24129   Number of Discs: 2
CD  $14.99
Add To Your Cart
In Stock
On sale!
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto No 1; Prokofiev, Balakirev / Gavrilov, Muti, Rattle
Release Date: 11/22/2005   Label: Emi Classics Encore   Catalog: 86881   Number of Discs: 1
ArkivCD
$12.99
Add To Your Cart
Low Stock
On sale!
Music of Borodin, Balakirev, Rimsky-Korsakov / Brusilow
Release Date:    Label: Emi Studio   Catalog: 63093   Number of Discs: 1
ArkivCD
$12.99
Add To Your Cart
In Stock
On sale!
Balakirev: Symphony no 1; Liadov: Polonaise / Jarvi, City of Birmingham SO
Release Date:    Label: Emi Classics   Catalog: 47505   Number of Discs: 1
ArkivCD
$12.99
Add To Your Cart
Low Stock
On sale!
Biography by Uncle Dave Lewis
Mily Balakirev learned his craft from local musicians. Conductor Karl Eisrich introduced Balakirev to the music of Chopin, Glinka, and Alexander Ulybyshev, a music loving landowner who maintained a vast library of musical scores. In 1855, Balakirev composed his Piano Fantasia on Themes from Glinka's a Life for the Tsar, and Ulybyshev took Balakirev to St. Petersburg to meet Glinka himself. Glinka appreciated Balakirev's talent, and offered advice and encouragement. Balakirev enjoyed a brilliant debut as a pianist in St. Petersburg, and in 1858 performed Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 5 in the presence of the Tsar. In April 1858, Balakirev fell ill with "brain fever"; although he recovered, he would suffer from lifelong headaches, nervousness, and depression. With the deaths of both Glinka and Ulybyshev, Balakirev decided to carry on their ideas of a style reflective of the Russian national spirit. Balakirev wrote incidental music to Shakespeare's play King Lear in 1859-1861, and its resulting popularity enhanced his reputation. In 1861, Balakirev established the Free School of Music with Gabriel Lomakin, with the support of Tsar Nicolas. At the Free School's concerts, Balakirev programmed his own music and that of his students -- Cui, Rimsky-Korsakov, Mussorgsky, and Borodin. This last-named group, along with Balakirev himself, were dubbed the "Mighty Handful" in the Russian press, and recognized as the standard bearers of a new form of Russian musical art.

When Lomakin resigned from the Free School in November 1867, Balakirev assumed its directorship. Along with his prestige came an increased lack of sensitivity and overbearing personality traits; by the late 1860s, Mussorgsky and Rimsky-Korsakov were exchanging letters complaining about Balakirev's "interference." Likewise, St. Petersburg audiences were protesting the lack of light, familiar fare on the Free School concert programs. Balakirev stepped down from the directorship of the Free School in April 1869, but bounced back with his most famous work, the brilliant piano fantasy Islamey, premiered by Nicholas Rubinstein in December. Rubinstein played the work at concerts in Paris and elsewhere, and it achieved great popularity in the West. In addition, Balakirev met and encouraged Tchaikovsky, who composed his Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture under the older composer's watchful eye. The Free School's concert season of 1871-1872 was a disaster; as a result, Balakirev lapsed into a depression lasting five years, and Rimsky-Korsakov overtook the direction of the institution. Friends helped revive Balakirev's spirits, and he returned as an instructor in 1877, but began to match temperaments with Rimsky-Korsakov, who resigned in 1880. Balakirev returned to the post of director, and in 1883 premiered his finest work, the symphonic poem Tamara. Well received in Russia, Tamara was a true revelation for musicians in France, who were amazed by the textures of Russian orchestral color.

In 1883, Balakirev accepted the position of Music Director of Imperial Chapel, naming Rimsky-Korsakov as his assistant. Three years later, Balakirev quarreled with his publisher, Jurgenson, and was dropped from their roster. In 1890, Rimsky-Korsakov held a gala in honor of his own 25th anniversary as a composer; Balakirev refused to attend, occasioning the final break in their relations. Having retired from the Imperial Chapel in 1894, Balakirev made his final public appearance conducting his First Symphony at the Free School in 1898. On the strength of this symphony Balakirev acquired a new publisher, and resumed composition, including the "Glinka" Cantata (1904) and a Second Symphony (1909). Unfortunately, these later works were received with complete indifference. As he had offended practically everyone in his social circle, few friends were left to comfort Balakirev in his last years. He died at the age of 73.
 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.