Maxim Berezovsky
Maxim Sozontovich Berezovsky (Russian: Макси́м Созо́нтович Березо́вский ; ⓘUkrainian: Максим Созонтович Березовський; c. 1745 – April 2 [O.S. 24 March] 1777) was a composer of secular and liturgical music, and a conductor and opera singer, who worked at the St. Petersburg Court Chapel in the Russian Empire, but who also spent much of his career in Italy. He made an important contribution in the music of Ukraine. Together with Artemy Vedel and Dmitry Bortniansky, Berezovsky is considered by musicologists as one of the "Golden Three" composers of 18th century Ukrainian classical music, and one of Russia's greatest choral composers.
Maxim Berezovsky | |
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Максим Созонтович Березовський | |
Born | c. 1745 |
Died | April 2 [O.S. 24 March] 1777 Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire |
Era | Classical |
Works | List of choral works by Maxim Sozontovych Berezovsky |
Berezovsky's place of birth and his father’s name are known only from verbal accounts. He is traditionally thought to have been educated at the Hlukhiv Singing School, and may have received part of his education at the Kyiv Theological Academy. In 1758, he was accepted as a singer into the capella at Oranienbaum, before being employed at the Imperial court of Catherine II in Saint Petersburg, where he received lessons from the Italian composer Baldassare Galuppi. In 1769, Berezovsky was sent to study in Bologna. There his composed secular works, including Demofonte, a three-act opera seria that was the earliest Italian-style opera to be written by a Ukrainian or a Russian composer. He returned to Saint Petersburg in October 1773. The circumstances of his death in 1777 are not documented.
Berezovsky is best known for his choral works, and was one of the creators of the Ukrainian sacred choral style. He raised the genre of sacred concertos to the highest musical and artistic level, and influenced both Bortniansky and Vedel. Few of his compositions are extant, but research in recent decades led to the rediscovery of previously lost works, including three symphonies. His opera and violin sonata were the first known examples of these genres by an Imperial Russian composer.