Brussels: Difference between revisions
Tchaikovsky Research
m (1 revision imported) |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<!-- mapframe text="Map showing Brussels" width=350 height=350 zoom=5 latitude=50.85 longitude=4.35 lang="en"> { "type": "Feature", "properties": { "marker-color": "#ff0000", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "" }, "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [4.35, 50.85] }}</mapframe>--> | <!-- mapframe text="Map showing Brussels" width=350 height=350 zoom=5 latitude=50.85 longitude=4.35 lang="en"> { "type": "Feature", "properties": { "marker-color": "#ff0000", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "" }, "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [4.35, 50.85] }}</mapframe>--> | ||
'''''Brussels''''' (Brussel, Bruxelles) | '''''Brussels''''' (Brussel, Bruxelles) is the capital city of Belgium. | ||
<br clear="all"/> | |||
__TOC__ | __TOC__ | ||
==Tchaikovsky in Brussels== | ==Tchaikovsky in Brussels== | ||
Tchaikovsky is only known to have visited Brussels twice: | Tchaikovsky is only known to have visited Brussels twice: |
Latest revision as of 21:52, 1 January 2023
Brussels (Brussel, Bruxelles) is the capital city of Belgium.
Tchaikovsky in Brussels
Tchaikovsky is only known to have visited Brussels twice:
From | Until | Notes |
---|---|---|
20 July/1 August 1861 | 20 July/1 August 1861 | A brief stop while travelling from Antwerp to Ostend on his first journey outside Russia. |
28 December 1892/9 January 1893 | 3/15 January 1893 | In order to rehearse and conduct a concert of his own works (2/14 January 1893), which included the Suite No. 3, the Piano Concerto No. 1 (soloist Franz Rummel), the suite from The Nutcracker, the Serenade for String Orchestra, and the overture The Year 1812. "The orchestra performed well, if not very well," he wrote afterwards, "but had little discipline. Everyone there received me very cordially and kindly, but this did not make it any easier for me, so that in Brussels I suffered twofold: from agitation, and from melancholy" [1]. This concert was all the more memorable for the composer because during the interval François-Auguste Gevaert delivered a speech thanking him on behalf of the Brussels Association of Musicians to which Tchaikovsky had donated his conducting fee. Back in 1865, while still a student, Tchaikovsky had translated Gevaert's famous Traité d'instrumentation into Russian, which was published by Jurgenson the following year [2]. |
Bibliography
- П. И. Чайковский в Брюсселе (1973)
- П. И. Чайковский в Брюсселе (1979)
- П. И. Чайковский в Брюсселе (1980)
External Links
Notes and References
- ↑ Letter 4844 to Modest Tchaikovsky, 4/16 January 1893.
- ↑ See Handbook for Instrumentation (TH 329).