Aleksey Sofronov: Difference between revisions

Tchaikovsky Research
 
Line 36: Line 36:
* '''[[Letter 1730]]''' – 20 April/2 May 1881, from [[Saint Petersburg]]
* '''[[Letter 1730]]''' – 20 April/2 May 1881, from [[Saint Petersburg]]
* '''[[Letter 1731]]''' – 25 April/7 May 1881, from [[Moscow]]
* '''[[Letter 1731]]''' – 25 April/7 May 1881, from [[Moscow]]
* [[Letter 1738]] – 2/14 May 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* '''[[Letter 1738]]''' – 2/14 May 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 1746]] – 10/22 May 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* '''[[Letter 1746]]''' – 10/22 May 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 1756]] – 18/30 May 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* '''[[Letter 1756]]''' – 18/30 May 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 1773]] – 4/16 June 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 1773]] – 4/16 June 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 1794a]] – 24 June/6 July 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 1794a]] – 24 June/6 July 1881, from [[Kamenka]]
Line 58: Line 58:
* '''[[Letter 1969]]''' – 16/28 February 1882, from [[Naples]]
* '''[[Letter 1969]]''' – 16/28 February 1882, from [[Naples]]
* '''[[Letter 1979]]''' – 24 February/8 March 1882, from [[Naples]]
* '''[[Letter 1979]]''' – 24 February/8 March 1882, from [[Naples]]
* [[Letter 2012]] – 2/14 May 1882, from [[Kamenka]]
* '''[[Letter 2012]]''' – 2/14 May 1882, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 2022]] – 16/28 May 1882, from [[Kamenka]]
* '''[[Letter 2022]]''' – 16/28 May 1882, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 2037]] – 3/15 June 1882, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 2037]] – 3/15 June 1882, from [[Kamenka]]
* [[Letter 2042]] – 12/24 June 1882, from [[Grankino]]
* [[Letter 2042]] – 12/24 June 1882, from [[Grankino]]

Latest revision as of 15:16, 11 June 2024

Aleksey Sofronov (1859-1925)

Long-time servant of the composer (b. 1859 at Tiliktino, near Klin; d. 1925 at Klin), born Aleksey Ivanovich Sofronov (Алексей Иванович Софронов), known affectionately by Tchaikovsky as Alyosha (Алëша) or Lyonya (Лёня).

In 1871, Aleksey first stood in for his older brother Mikhail (1848–1932) as Tchaikovsky's servant in Moscow. After Mikhail left Tchaikovsky's service in 1877, Aleksey stayed on to serve the composer for the rest of his days. Tchaikovsky became very attached to Aleksey, who was always staunchly loyal to his master, and helped to found the memorial museum at Klin after the composer's death.

Tchaikovsky was also godfather to Aleksey's son Georgy (b. 1892), by his second wife Yekaterina (b. 1873).

Correspondence with Tchaikovsky

117 letters from Tchaikovsky to Aleksey Sofronov have survived, dating from 1875 to 1893, of which those highlighted in bold have been translated into English on this website:

128 letters from Aleksey Sofronov to Tchaikovsky, dating from 1877 to 1893, are preserved in the Tchaikovsky State Memorial Musical Museum-Reserve at Klin (a4, Nos. 4062–4189).

External Links