Mieczysław Weinberg

He was born into a musical family. His father was a composer and violinist; he conducted a music ensemble at Warsaw?s Jewish ?Scala? Theatre. He was also a head of the Jewish department of the ?Syrena Records? phonographic company. It was at the ?Scala? Theatre that Weinberg played his first concert as a pianists at age ten (or eleven). In 1931 he began studies the State Warsaw Conservatory in Warsaw. He studied piano under Józef Turczyński and in 1937, he composed for his teacher String Quartet No. 1.

After the outbreak of WWII, he emigrated to the Soviet Union. His family lost their life in the Nazi Trawniki concentration camp in 1943. Weinberg initially settled in Minsk (now Belarus), where in 1939-41 he studied composition with Vasily Zolotarev. In 1941 he fled the German invasion to Tashkent (Uzbekistan), where he worked in the opera and ballet theatre and married Natalia Vovsi-Mikhoels, the daughter the Salomon Mikhoels ? the city?s Jewish theatre actor and plays? director, at that time director of the opera and ballet theatre.

Two years later (1943), he sent a manuscript of his Symphony No. 1 to Dmitri Shostakovich in Moscow. This was the start of a long-time friendship between the two composers. Thanks to Shostakovich?s efforts, Weinberg could come to Moscow and he lived there till the end of his life, dedicating himself mostly to composition and giving concerts as a pianist. 1948 saw the assassination of his father-in-law (related to Stalin?s anti-Semitic witch-hunt); five years later Weinberg himself was arrested for the same reasons and spent almost three months in prison. He was released thanks to Shostakovich?s intervention after Stalin?s death. The deep friendship between the composers found its reflection in their music. Shostakovich dedicated to Weinberg his String Quartet No. 10, and the latter responded with the dedication of his Symphony No. 12. In 1975 Shostakovich attended the premiere of Weinberg?s opera The Madonna and the Soldier. He could return to Warsaw in 1966, when he was delegated to visit the ?Warsaw Autumn? International Festival of Contemporary Music.

In 1971 he was awarded the title of Meritorious Artist of the Soviet Union, in 1980 ? National Artist of the Soviet Union. In 1990 he received State Award of the Soviet Union.

Weinberg?s extensive output comprises 26 symphonies, 7 concertos, 17 string quartets, about 30 song cycles, 22 sonatas for piano and other instruments, 7 operas, 2 ballets, music for 65 films, theatrical plays and radio dramas.

For the most part, Weinberg?s music represents the neo-Classical style. Most frequently he made use of the sonata form, which appears in all of his symphonies and concertos, all his string quartets and instrumental sonatas. His style is transparent and clear, and he maintains a fine balance between form and content. In many of his compositions one can trace the influences of Prokofiev, Hindemith, Bartók, Mahler and ? most of all ? Shostakovich. Weinberg frequently introduced programmatic, autobiographical elements in his compositions ? mainly related to memories of his childhood and World War II. His religious music for choir is focused and meditative. Two of his symphonies, No. 21 and No. 26 ?Kaddish?, commemorate the extermination of the inhabitants of the Warsaw Ghetto, where many of his relatives perished. Three other symphonies (Nos. 17, 18 and 19) form a trilogy entitled On the Threshold of War. The ?programmatic? character of Weinberg?s music typically manifests itself in the use of motifs drawing on Polish folklore, on Jewish or Moldovan music.


Source: Polish Music Information Centre, Polish Composers' Union

Chamber works

  • 5 utworów na flet i fortepian, 1947 Buy

    Details:

    No. 1 Landscape, No. 2 First Dance, No. 3 Second Dance, No. 4 Melody, No. 5 Third Dance

  • Aria for string quartet, op. 9, 1942 Buy

  • Capriccio for string quartet, op. 11, 1943 Buy

  • Improvisation und Romanze for string quartet, 1950 Buy

  • Piano Quintet, op. 18, 1944 Buy

  • Piano Trio, op. 24, 1945 Buy

  • Rhapsody on Moldavian Themes for violin and piano, op. 47 No. 3, 1949/52 Buy

  • Sonata No. 1 for violin and piano, op. 12, 1943 Buy

  • Sonata No. 1 for violoncello and piano, op. 21, 1945 Buy

  • Sonata No. 2 for violin and piano, op. 15, 1944 Buy

  • Sonata No. 2 for violoncello and piano, op. 63, 1958-1959 Buy

  • Sonata No. 3 for violin and piano, op. 37, 1947 Buy

  • Sonata No. 4 for violin and piano, op. 39, 1947 Buy

  • Sonata No. 5 for violin and piano, op. 53, 1953 Buy

  • Sonata No. 6 for violin and piano, op. 136bis, 1982 Buy

  • Sonata for clarinet and piano, op. 28, 1945 Buy

  • Sonata for two violins, op. 69, 1959 Buy

  • Sonatina for violin and piano, op. 46, 1949 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 1, op. 2/141, 1937 rev. 1986 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 10, op. 85, 1964 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 11, op. 89, 1965-1966 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 12, op. 103, 1969-1970 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 13, op. 118, 1977 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 14, op. 122, 1978 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 15, op. 124, 1979 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 16, op. 130, 1981 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 17, op. 146, 1987 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 2, op. 3/145, 1940 rev. 1986 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 3, op. 14, 1944 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 4, op. 20, 1945 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 5, op. 27, 1945 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 6, op. 35, 1946 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 7, op. 59, 1957 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 8, op. 66, 1959 Buy

  • String Quartet No. 9, op. 80, 1963 Buy

  • String Trio op. 48, 1950 Buy

  • Three Pieces for violin and piano, 1934-1935 Buy

    Details:

    No. 1 Nocturne, No. 2 Scherzo, No. 3 Dreaming of a Doll

  • Trio for flute, harp and viola, op. 127, 1979 Buy

  • Twelve Miniatures for flute and piano, op. 29, 1946 Buy

    Details:

    No. 1 Improvisation, No. 2 Arietta, No. 3 Burlesque, No. 4 Capriccio, No. 5 Nocturne, No. 6 Waltz, No. 7 Ode, No. 8 Duet, No. 9 Barcarolle, No. 10 Etude, No. 11 Intermezzo, No. 12 Pastorale

  • Two Songs Without Words for violin and piano, 1947 Buy

Piano works

  • Cancan in honour of Rastorguyev, 1965 Buy

  • Children?s Notebook [Kinderheft] No. 1, op. 16, 1944 Buy

  • Children?s Notebook [Kinderheft] No. 2, op. 19, 1944 Buy

  • Children?s Notebook [Kinderheft] No. 3, op. 23, 1945 Buy

  • Partita, op. 54, 1954 Buy

  • Piano Sonata No. 1, op. 5, 1940 Buy

  • Piano Sonata No. 2, op. 8, 1942 Buy

  • Piano Sonata No. 3, op. 31, 1946 Buy

  • Piano Sonata No. 4, op. 56, 1955 Buy

  • Piano Sonata No. 5, op. 58, 1956 Buy

  • Piano Sonata No. 6, op. 73, 1960 Buy

  • Portraits of Friends (Shostakovich, Prokofiev, Myaskovsky, Shebalin, Khachaturian), 1950, lost

    Details:

    work without opus number

  • Sonata, op. 49 bis, 1978 Buy

  • Sonatina, op. 49, 1951 Buy

  • Twenty-One Easy Pieces for piano, op. 34, 1946 Buy

    Details:

    Nr 1 Merry March, nr 2 The Nightingale, nr 3 The Skipping Rope, nr 4 Baba-Yaga, nr 5 Playmates, nr 6 The Sick Doll, nr 7 A Tin Soldier, nr 8 A Grandmothers Fairy Tale, nr 9 The Shepherd Boy, nr 10 Hide and Seek, nr 11 Old Man Frost, nr 12 Melancholy Waltz, nr 13 The Goldfish, nr 14 Petrushkas Lament, nr 15 Game of Tag, nr 16 The Little Ball, nr 17 Lullaby for a Doll, nr 18 Bear Cubs, nr 19 Little Rabbits, nr 20 The Gray Wolf, nr 21 Good Night

  • Two Fugues, 1983 Buy

  • Two Mazurkas, 1933 Buy

  • Wiegenlied (Berceuse), op. 1, 1935 Buy