Julian Scriabin Explained

Julian Alexandrovich Scriabin (né Schlözer; Russian: Юлиа́н Алекса́ндрович Скря́бин;12 February 1908 – 22 June 1919) was a Swiss-born Russian composer and pianist who was the youngest son of Alexander Scriabin and Tatiana de Schloezer.

Biography

Scriabin was born in Lausanne, Switzerland as Julian Alexandrovich Schlözer. Through his mother, his granduncle was Paul de Schlözer. His father Alexander Scriabin, famous for his innovative piano compositions, had seven children: Rima, Yelena,[1] Maria[2] and Leo from his first marriage to Vera Ivanovna Isakovich; and Ariadna, Julian, and Marina from his relationship with Tatyana Fyodorovna Schloezer (Shlyotser). His eldest daughter Rima (1898–1905) and his son Leo (1902–1910) both died at the age of seven.[3] By the time of the death of Leo, the composer had already been living for several years with Schloezer and had become estranged from his first family, so much so that the parents did not even meet at the burial of their son Lev (half brother of Julian).

He was himself a promising composer and pianist, but he died at the age of eleven under mysterious circumstances.[4] In the last year of his life he wrote four preludes in his father's style, the authorship of which is questioned by some researchers.[5] Those preludes were published for the first time 95 years after his death by Edition Octoechos.[6] Musicologists have described Julian Scriabin both as a successor of his father[7] and as an early representative of the early Russian and Soviet avant-garde of the 1920s.[8]

Scriabin mysteriously died in Irpin in Kyiv Oblast, four years after the death of his father. His body was found in the Dnieper river.

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Notes and References

  1. Later Yelena Aleksandrovna Sofronitskaya (1900–1990), also a pianist.
  2. Maria Aleskandrovna Skryabina (1901–1989), an actress at the Second Moscow Art Theatre, an anthroposophist and the wife of director Vladimir Tatarinov.
  3. Letopis' zhizni i tvorchestva A. N. Skriabina, p. 179
  4. Markus, p. 243
  5. Rodgers
  6. http://editionoctoechos.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=91 Four Preludes by Julian Scriabin, new edition, E. Octoechos
  7. Lemer, p. 30
  8. Web site: Irina Ivanova, "Russkaia muzyka nachala XX veka" . 27 October 2012 . 3 May 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190503000928/http://www.musica-ukrainica.odessa.ua/_a-ivanova-russavant.html . dead .