Nikolay Ogaryov: Difference between revisions

Tchaikovsky Research
m (1 revision imported)
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{picture|file=Nikolay Ogaryov.jpg|caption='''Nikolay Ogaryov''' (1813-1877)}}
{{picture|file=Nikolay Ogaryov.jpg|caption='''Nikolay Ogaryov''' (1813-1877)}}
Russian poet, writer and revolutionary (b. 28 November/10 December 1813 in [[Saint Petersburg]]; d. 31 May/12 June 1877 in Greenwich), born '''''Nikolay Platonovich Ogaryov''''' (Николай Платонович Огарёв) <ref name="note1"/>.
Russian poet, writer and revolutionary (b. 28 November/10 December 1813 in [[Saint Petersburg]]; d. 12 June {{NS}} 1877 in Greenwich, [[London]]), born '''''Nikolay Platonovich Ogaryov''''' (Николай Платонович Огарёв) <ref name="note1"/>.


==Tchaikovsky's Settings of Works by Ogaryov==
==Tchaikovsky's Settings of Works by Ogaryov==
Line 6: Line 6:


==External Links==
==External Links==
* [[Wikipedia:Nikolay Ogarev|Wikipedia]]
* [[Wikipedia:Nikolay_Ogarev|Wikipedia]]
* {{viaf|14892493}}


==Notes and References==
==Notes and References==

Latest revision as of 16:16, 19 August 2023

Nikolay Ogaryov (1813-1877)

Russian poet, writer and revolutionary (b. 28 November/10 December 1813 in Saint Petersburg; d. 12 June [N.S.] 1877 in Greenwich, London), born Nikolay Platonovich Ogaryov (Николай Платонович Огарёв) [1].

Tchaikovsky's Settings of Works by Ogaryov

Ogaryov's poem At Bedtime (На сон грядущий), probably written in the early 1840s, was used by Tchaikovsky in his student chorus At Bedtime (1863/64), and in the song of the same name as No. 1 of the Six Romances and Songs, Op. 27 (1875).

External Links

Notes and References

  1. Sometimes transliterated as "Ogarev".