Natalya Plesskaya: Difference between revisions

Tchaikovsky Research
m (Text replacement - "Nata-Valse" to "Natha-Valse" / Omitted "now" for clarity of meaning)
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* '''[[Letter 4958]]''' – 19 June/1 July 1893, from [[Grankino]]
* '''[[Letter 4958]]''' – 19 June/1 July 1893, from [[Grankino]]


250 letters from Natalya Plesskaya to the composer, dating from 1878 to 1893, are preserved in the [[Klin]] House-Museum Archive.
250 letters from Natalya Plesskaya to the composer, dating from 1878 to 1893, are preserved in the {{RUS-KLč}} at [[Klin]].


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==

Revision as of 09:52, 8 August 2023

Natalya Plesskaya (b. 1837)

Cousin to the composer's brother-in-law Lev Davydov (b. 1837), born Natalya Andreyevna Plesskaya (Наталия Андреевна Плесская), sometimes also spelled Pleskaya (Плеская).

Natalya was a close friend of the composer's sister Aleksandra, and a cousin to his brother-in-law Lev Davydov (1837–1896). Tchaikovsky was very fond of Natalya Plesskaya, and admired her sunny disposition and ready wit. In 1878 he wrote a piano piece — Nathalie-Valse — specially for her, and he revised this three years later as the Natha-Valse — No. 4 of the Six Pieces, Op. 51.

Dedications

In 1878, Tchaikovsky wrote a Nathalie-Valse for Natalya Plesskaya. He retained the dedication of this piano piece when it was reworked as Natha-Valse, No. 4 of the Six Pieces, Op. 51 (1881).

Correspondence with Tchaikovsky

16 letters from Tchaikovsky to Natalya Plesskaya have survived, dating from 1879 to 1893. Those highlighted in bold have been translated into English on this website:

250 letters from Natalya Plesskaya to the composer, dating from 1878 to 1893, are preserved in the Tchaikovsky State Memorial Musical Museum-Reserve at Klin.

Bibliography