Sergej Newski
Sergej Newski (Сергей Павлович Невский), born 10 October 1972, is a Russian composer.
Life[]
Born in Moscow, Nevsky studied music theory at the Moscow Conservatory. He then continued his studies at the Hochschule für Musik Carl Maria von Weber Dresden with Jörg Herchet and at the Berlin University of the Arts with Friedrich Goldmann. There, he additionally studied music theory and music education with Hartmut Fladt from 2000 to 2005.[1]
Nevsky's music will be performed at the Donaueschinger Musiktages, the Wien Modern, festivals, among others, MaerzMusik, , and Warsaw Autumn.[2]
He has received commissions from the Konzerthaus Berlin, the Staatsoper Unter den Linden, the Staatstheater Stuttgart, the Opergruppa (for the Bolshoi Theatre), the Klangforum Wien, Deutschlandradio and the Südwestrundfunk.[3] His opera Franziskus premiered at the Bolshoi Theatre Moscow in September 2012.[4] In February 2020, his music theatre Secondhand-Zeit premiered at the Staatsoper Stuttgart.[5]
Awards and scholarships[]
- Berliner Kunstpreis (2014).[6]
- Golden Mask (2014).[7]
- Stipendium Villa Aurora in Los Angeles (2014).[2]
- 1st prize in the composition competition of the state capital Stuttgart (2006).[8]
- Deutsche Akademie Casa Baldi (2005).[9]
- Cité internationale des arts Paris (2001/02).[3][10]
Compositions[]
Stage work[]
- Secondhand-Zeit (2018/19) based on texts from the eponymous novel by Svetlana Alexievich
- Francis (2008-2012) chamber opera in four scenes based on the play "Saint Francis" by Claudius Luenstedt.
- Autland (2008/09) for six soloists and mixed chamber choir
Orchestral work[]
- 18 Episodes for Orchestra (2018/19)
- Heath (2018) for viola and string orchestra
- Cloud Ground (2015) for violin and Orchestra
Work for ensemble[]
- Letter to H. Marx (2018) for baritone and 14 instruments
- Galileo: Messenger (2017) for violin and 14 instruments
- Rules of Love (2012/13) for soprano, low alto and five instrumentalists
- Opening Gesture (2011) for solo violin, five percussionists and chamber orchestra
- Working Surface (2011) for solo percussion, solo piano, solo tuba and three instrumentalists
- Alles (2008) for speaker and eight instrumentalists
- Fluss (2003/05) for voice and ensemble
Vocal work[]
- Island (2011). Three pieces for mixed choir, accordion and percussion to by Friedrich Hebbel.
- Dolze mio drudo (2010). Scenic cantata for five voices, three brass groups and noise instruments. Alternative scoring: madrigal for five voices and four trombones ad libitum. Text: Friedrich II
- What flee hare and hedgehog.... . (2004) for six voices. Text Einar Schleef
- Generator (2001/02) for four vocal soloists.
- Vray dieu d'amours (2007). for bass and alto voice. Text Matthaeus Pipelare
Chamber music[]
- Wut (2013) for flute, cello, percussion and piano
- Tcas' (2011/12) for violin and five strings
- channel surfing (2010) for alto saxophone, accordion and double bass
- String quartet no. 3 (2009)
- blind alphabet (2007) for various instrumentations
References[]
- ^ "ruhrtriennale.de". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "villa-aurora.org". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "musikrat. de". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "faz.net". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ Georg Rudiger (5 February 2020). "Es ist kompliziert – Boris Godunow and Secondhand-Zeit by Sergej Newski in Stuttgart". Neue Musikzeitung. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "tagesspiegel.de". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "goldenmask.ru". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "1. Preis Kompositionswettbewerb Stuttgart 2006". 24 November 2006. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "Stipendiaten Casa Baldi". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "Chronik Sergej Newski". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
External links[]
- Literature by and about Sergej Newski in the German National Library catalogue
- Sergej Newski discography at Discogs
- Biografie und Werkverzeichnis beim Ricordi Verlag
- Gastbeitrag von Sergej Newski in der FAZ: „Russlands neue Seele. Aufstand gegen die Modernisierung“
- Interview auf Deutschlandradio Kultur
- Interview in der nmz
- Interview by the Goethe-Institut
- Russian male classical composers
- 21st-century classical composers
- Russian opera composers
- 1972 births
- Living people
- Musicians from Moscow
- 21st-century Russian male musicians