Alexander Goedicke Explained

Alexander Goedicke
Birth Name:Alexander Fyodorovich Goedicke
Birth Date:4 March 1877
Birth Place:Moscow, Russia
Death Date:9 July 1957
Death Place:Moscow, Soviet Union
Nationality:Russian
Occupation:Composer, pianist

Alexander Fyodorovich Goedicke (Russian: Александр Фёдорович Гёдике|Aleksandr Fyodorovich Gyodike; 9 July 1957) was a Russian and Soviet composer and pianist.

Goedicke was a professor at Moscow Conservatory. With no formal training in composition, he studied piano at the Moscow Conservatory with Galli, Pavel Pabst and Vasily Safonov. Goedicke won the Anton Rubinstein Competition in 1900. Despite his lack of traditional guidance, his compositional efforts were rewarded when he won the Rubinstein Prize for Composition at the young age of 23. Goedicke died at the age of 80 on 9 July 1957.

Alexander Goedicke was Nikolai Medtner's first cousin.[1] Alexander's father Fyodor Goedicke, a minor composer and pianist, was Medtner's mother's brother and his first teacher.[2]

Selected works

Opera
Orchestral
Concert band
Concertante
Chamber music
  1. Nocturne
  1. Etude
Organ
Piano
  1. Prélude in C minor
  1. Petite valse in F minor
  1. Duetto
  1. Scherzo in B minor
  1. Méditation
  1. Prélude
  1. Tarantella, Étude de concert

No. 20 Sonatina in C major

Cantata
Vocal

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/al.asp?al=CDA66877 Hyperion Records
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=Yglj7pFb9UoC&dq=goedicke+medtner&pg=PA118 Robert Rimm, The Composer-Pianists: Hamelin and the Eight