Soviet symphonic school

E708830

The Soviet symphonic school was a 20th-century Russian musical tradition characterized by powerful orchestral writing, strong ideological and folk influences, and a focus on dramatic, large-scale symphonic forms.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (57)

Predicate Object
instanceOf 20th-century classical music movement
musical tradition
symphonic school
aimedAt broad mass audience
associatedWith Soviet cultural policy
Union of Soviet Composers NERFINISHED
characteristic dramatic large-scale symphonic forms
emphasis on symphony as central genre
expressive orchestration
ideological content
monumental symphonic cycles
powerful orchestral writing
programmatic elements
strong thematic development
use of folk melodies
contrastsWith avant-garde Western European symphonic trends
countryOfOrigin Soviet Union
developedIn Leningrad NERFINISHED
Moscow NERFINISHED
other major Soviet cultural centers
endTime late 20th century
follows Russian Romantic symphonic tradition
genreFocus concerto
orchestral suite
symphonic poem
symphony
hasNotableRepresentative Alexander Lokshin NERFINISHED
Alfred Schnittke NERFINISHED
Andrei Eshpai NERFINISHED
Aram Khachaturian NERFINISHED
Boris Tchaikovsky NERFINISHED
Dmitri Shostakovich NERFINISHED
Edison Denisov NERFINISHED
Gavriil Popov NERFINISHED
Mieczysław Weinberg NERFINISHED
Nikolai Myaskovsky NERFINISHED
Reinhold Glière NERFINISHED
Rodion Shchedrin NERFINISHED
Sergei Prokofiev NERFINISHED
Sofia Gubaidulina NERFINISHED
Tikhon Khrennikov NERFINISHED
hasPart Armenian symphonic tradition
Baltic symphonic traditions
Georgian symphonic tradition
Russian symphonic tradition
Ukrainian symphonic tradition
includes modernist elements
neo-classical elements
influencedBy Russian classical music
Russian folk music
Soviet ideology
Western symphonic tradition
late Romantic harmony
socialist realism
startTime 1920s
timePeriod 20th century
typicalLanguage tonal

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Gennady Rozhdestvensky influencedBy Soviet symphonic school