Nektarios Chargeishvili

Nektarios (or Nektarius) Nektariosovich Chargeishvili (in Georgian: ნექტარიოს ჩარგეიშვილი) (5 September 1937 – 14 November 1971) was a Russian/Soviet and Georgian composer, as well as an educator and a philosopher.[1] Despite having composed a body of sophisticated orchestral works and film scores, he is virtually unknown today. This is in no small part due to his political outspokenness against the Soviet regime which led to his being ostracised, his music prohibited from performance or distribution, and to being dismissed from his teaching position at the Moscow Conservatory. His struggles to maintain any kind of career after his dismissal—he was even denied a job as a bus-driver—led to a serious deterioration in his mental health, and eventually to his suicide at the age of 34.

Nektarios Chargeishvili
ნექტარიოს ჩარგეიშვილი
Born5 September 1937
Died14 November 1971
Moscow, Russian SFSR, USSR
Cause of deathSuicide
Resting placeNew Athos, Georgia
Other namesNikolai Yakovlev
EducationMoscow Conservatory; State University of Moscow
Occupation(s)Composer; Teacher
EmployerMoscow Conservatory
Notable workSymphony (1971)

Life and career edit

Born in Leningrad, Nektarios Chargeishvili grew up in Abkhazia, then spent most of his life in Moscow. He graduated from the Moscow Conservatory in 1963, followed by postgraduate studies with Tikhon Khrennikov and Aram Khachaturian. He taught score reading and instrumentation at the Conservatory from 1966 to 1968. In 1969, he studied philosophy at Moscow State University.[2]

Pursuing the traditions of the Russian symphony, he composed two one-act ballets from popular stories, The absence of Dobrynya (Три года Добрынюшка стольничал) in 1963 and Dobrynia subdued the Chubis (чудь покорил) in 1965, and a symphonic poem inspired by a song by Kircha Danilov in 1965. Chargeishvili also composed in the style of Renaissance music (Suite for string orchestra in memory of C. Monteverdi, 1967). His Symphony (1971) was hailed as a masterpiece by Schnittke and Gubaidulina, but remained unperformed until 1990. He also composed music for several films, some under the pseudonym Nikolai Yakovlev, and worked as a music editor for the Bolshoi Ballet, including making an arrangement of Prokofiev's Lieutenant Kijé suite for them.[citation needed]

He also wrote a philosophical treatise Esoteric Doctrine of Christianity.

After being critical of the Soviet regime, he was dismissed from the Moscow Conservatory[citation needed]. After that, he struggled to find work (he was even denied a job as a bus driver), and his mental health deteriorated. In 1971, he committed suicide by hanging. He is buried in New Athos, Georgia.

Works edit

Orchestral works edit

  • Scherzo for Orchestra (1957)
  • Suite for Orchestra (1957)
  • The Return of the Prodigal Son (1967)
  • Concerto No. 1 for chamber orchestra with cymbal (1959)
  • Concerto for orchestra (1960)
  • Concerto No. 2 for chamber orchestra (1962)
  • The absence of Dobrynya (1963)
  • Symphonic poem by Kirsch Danilov (1965)
  • Dobrynia subdued the Chubis (чудь покорил) (1965)
  • Concerto for violin and orchestra (1966)
  • Suite for string orchestra in memory of C. Monteverdi (1967)
  • Symphony (1971)

Film music edit

NB: some films are credited under the pseudonym N. Yakovlev

References edit

  1. ^ Allan Benedict Ho; Dmitry Feofanov (1 January 1989). Biographical Dictionary of Russian/Soviet Composers. Greenwood Press. pp. 636–. ISBN 978-0-313-24485-8.
  2. ^ Keldys, Jurij Vsevolodovic (1974). Muzykal'naja ėnciklopedija. Izdat. Sovetskaja Ėnciklopedija.

External links edit