Sergei Lyapunov
Sergei Lyapunov
Sergei Lyapunov
Most of his music was published by Zimmerman in Leipzig. Many of the dedicatees were women as
more women took up the piano. Vera Scriabina was the dedicatee of the Barcarolle and Sophie Chipilow
was honoured with the Autumn Song Op 26 and the Humoreske Op 54 acknowledges Birdice Blye.
Xenie Liapounova is named the dedicatee of the simple pieces Op 41. Joseph Lhevienne is inscribed
on the Grand Polonaise Op 55 and Nicholas II is the dedicate of the Solemn Overture on Russian
Themes for orchestra.
In 1893, the Imperial Geographical Society commissioned Lyapunov, along with Balakirev and
Anatoly Lyadov, to gather folksongs from the regions of Vologda, Vyatka (now Kirov) and Kostroma.
They collected nearly 300 songs, which the society published in 1897. Lyapunov arranged 30 of
these songs for voice and piano and used authentic folk songs in several of his compositions during
the 1890s.
He succeeded Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov as assistant director of music at the Imperial Chapel and also
became a director of the Free Music School, then became its principal as well as a professor at the St.
Petersburg Conservatory in 1911. After the Revolution, he emigrated to Paris in 1923 and directed a
school of music for Russian émigrés, but died of a heart attack the following year on 8 November. For
many years , the official Soviet line was that Lyapunov had died during a concert tour of Paris with no
acknowledgement of his being a voluntary exile.
Lyapunov enjoyed a successful career as a stunning concert pianist. He made several tours of Western
Europe, including Germany and Austria in 1910–1911. From 1904, he also made appearances as a
conductor, mounting the podium by invitation in Berlin and Leipzig in 1907.
He is largely remembered for his Douze études d’exécution transcendente. This set completed the
cycle of the 24 major and minor keys that Franz Liszt had started with his own Transcendental Études
but had left unfinished. Not only was Lyapunov’s set of études as a whole dedicated to the memory of
Franz Liszt, but the final étude was specifically titled Élégie en memoire de Franz Liszt.
In the spring of 1910 Lyapunov recorded some of his own works for the reproducing piano Welte-
Mignon (Op. 11, Nos. 1, 5, and 12; Op. 35).
Selected works
Gifts of the Terek, Cantata for viola solo, chorus and orchestra (1883)
6 Very Easy Pieces (1918–1919)
Toccata and Fugue (1920)
Canon (1923)
Allegretto scherzando (1923)
2 Preludes
Piano transcription of Pachelbel’s Canon in D
Piano transcription of Glinka’s “Kamarinskaya”
(1430)
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