Difference between revisions of "Scriabin, Alexandre Nikolaevich"
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(Created page with "(1872- 1915). Russian composer born in Moscow on January 6, 1872. He was very much a mystic and indeed his first symphony composed in 1900 has a choral finale that glorifies ...") |
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− | (1872- 1915). Russian composer born in Moscow on January 6, 1872. He was very much a mystic and indeed his first symphony composed in 1900 has a choral finale that glorifies art as a form of religion. In 1905 he received a copy of Helena P. Blavatsky’s Secret Doctrine from Jean Delville and became a student of theosophy. In 1913, through Prometheus, Poem of Fire, he attempted to link sound and color, describing the descent and ascension of the logos into and from matter; in his program notes for this work he attributed it to theosophy. He died in Moscow on April 27, 1915. | + | (1872- 1915). Russian composer born in Moscow on January 6, 1872. He was very much a mystic and indeed his first symphony composed in 1900 has a choral finale that glorifies art as a form of religion. In 1905 he received a copy of Helena P. Blavatsky’s Secret Doctrine from Jean Delville and became a student of theosophy. In 1913, through ''Prometheus, Poem of Fire'', he attempted to link sound and color, describing the descent and ascension of the logos into and from matter; in his program notes for this work he attributed it to theosophy. He died in Moscow on April 27, 1915. |
© Copyright by the Theosophical Publishing House, Manila | © Copyright by the Theosophical Publishing House, Manila |
Latest revision as of 02:16, 8 May 2012
(1872- 1915). Russian composer born in Moscow on January 6, 1872. He was very much a mystic and indeed his first symphony composed in 1900 has a choral finale that glorifies art as a form of religion. In 1905 he received a copy of Helena P. Blavatsky’s Secret Doctrine from Jean Delville and became a student of theosophy. In 1913, through Prometheus, Poem of Fire, he attempted to link sound and color, describing the descent and ascension of the logos into and from matter; in his program notes for this work he attributed it to theosophy. He died in Moscow on April 27, 1915.
© Copyright by the Theosophical Publishing House, Manila