Vera Butakova: Difference between revisions
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Vera was the sister of Tchaikovsky's brother-in-law [[Lev Davydov]], and she became attached to Tchaikovsky during a family holiday at [[Hapsal]] [now [[Haapsalu]]] in Estonia in 1867. The composer dedicated the cycle of piano pieces he was writing at the time — ''[[Souvenir de Hapsal]]'', Op. 2 — to Vera. | Vera was the sister of Tchaikovsky's brother-in-law [[Lev Davydov]], and she became attached to Tchaikovsky during a family holiday at [[Hapsal]] [now [[Haapsalu]]] in Estonia in 1867. The composer dedicated the cycle of piano pieces he was writing at the time — ''[[Souvenir de Hapsal]]'', Op. 2 — to Vera. | ||
Although it appears that Vera had romantic feelings for Tchaikovsky during the late 1860s, these were not reciprocated, and in 1871 she married a much older man — Vice-Admiral Ivan Ivanovich Butakov (1822–1882), commander of the Russian Mediterranean fleet, and had | Although it appears that Vera had romantic feelings for Tchaikovsky during the late 1860s, these were not reciprocated, and in 1871 she married a much older man — Vice-Admiral Ivan Ivanovich Butakov (1822–1882), commander of the Russian Mediterranean fleet, and they had four sons — Grigory (1873–1960); Ivan (1874–1879); Stepan (1879–1927); and Aleksandr (1882–1914). | ||
==Dedications== | ==Dedications== | ||
Tchaikovsky dedicated two of his compositions to Vera Butakova: | Tchaikovsky dedicated two of his compositions to Vera Butakova: | ||
* ''[[Souvenir de Hapsal]]'', for piano, Op. 2 (1867) | * ''[[Souvenir de Hapsal]]'', for piano, Op. 2 (1867) — "à V. V. Davidoff". | ||
* ''Sleep — ''No. 4 of the [[Six Romances, Op. 57]] (1884) | * ''Sleep — ''No. 4 of the [[Six Romances, Op. 57]] (1884) | ||
Latest revision as of 22:44, 1 September 2023
Sister-in-law of the composer (b. 1843; d. 1923), born Vera Vasilyevna Davydova (Вера Васильевна Давыдова); known after her marriage as Vera Vasilyevna Butakova (Вера Васильевна Бутакова).
Vera was the sister of Tchaikovsky's brother-in-law Lev Davydov, and she became attached to Tchaikovsky during a family holiday at Hapsal [now Haapsalu] in Estonia in 1867. The composer dedicated the cycle of piano pieces he was writing at the time — Souvenir de Hapsal, Op. 2 — to Vera.
Although it appears that Vera had romantic feelings for Tchaikovsky during the late 1860s, these were not reciprocated, and in 1871 she married a much older man — Vice-Admiral Ivan Ivanovich Butakov (1822–1882), commander of the Russian Mediterranean fleet, and they had four sons — Grigory (1873–1960); Ivan (1874–1879); Stepan (1879–1927); and Aleksandr (1882–1914).
Dedications
Tchaikovsky dedicated two of his compositions to Vera Butakova:
- Souvenir de Hapsal, for piano, Op. 2 (1867) — "à V. V. Davidoff".
- Sleep — No. 4 of the Six Romances, Op. 57 (1884)
Correspondence with Tchaikovsky
Although no letters from the composer to Vera Butakova have known to have survived, 5 letters from Vera to Tchaikovsky, dating from around 1886 to 1893, are preserved in the Tchaikovsky State Memorial Musical Museum-Reserve at Klin (a4, Nos. 361–365).