Dmytro Lvovich Klebanov (Ukrainian: Дмитрo Львович Клебанiв; Russian: Дми́трий Льво́вич Клеба́нов; 25 July[O.S. 12 July]1907 – 6 June 1987) was a Soviet-era Ukrainian composer. He studied at the Kharkov Music and Drama Institute (graduated 1926) with S. Bogatyryov. He taught at the Kharkov Conservatory (professor, 1960). Among his students were Valentin Bibik, Vitaliy Hubarenko, and Viktor Suslin.
Soviet Ukrainian composer, musician, and teacher (1907–1987)
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Klebanov studied music academically as a pianist, violist, conductor, and composer, and became a professor of composition at the Kharkov Conservatory. In the late 1930s and early 1940s a couple of ballets, a violin concerto, and a symphony received major performances in Moscow and Kiev. Unfortunately, the first symphony "In Memoriam to the Martyrs of Babi Yar" (1945) fell afoul of Stalinist critics who found it anti-patriotic. Being accused of distortion of the historic truth about the Soviet people and of national narrow-mindedness it was exiled for a life in archives. Stalin made his infamous attack on Soviet artists.[further explanation needed] The Soviet Composers' Union adopted the unwritten rule that one composer would be selected to take the heat for all of them—Klebanov was it.[citation needed] Although Klebanov was spared exile to Siberia, or worse, he was relegated to an obscure existence and spent most of this period composing politically correct works of "socialist realism" with titles like Ode for the Party and "First of May" Symphony. Following thirty years in de facto exile, Klebanov was rehabilitated in the 1980s.
In 1983, Mela Tenenbaum (violinist/violist) was in Kharkov to play a viola concerto written for her by a pupil of Klebanov, whom she met after the concert. Klebanov suggested Tenenbaum perform his own Violin Concerto, and after the success of that venture the following season, he wrote a viola concerto expressly for her. This work had a positive reception in several Russian cities and Klebanov found his long stifled creative energies reviving. Another new work followed, Japanese Silhouettes for soprano, viola d'amore and instrumental ensemble, based on haiku texts translated into Russian. This work was recorded for Radio Kiev with soprano Natalia Kraftzova, and a "rehabilitation" of Klebanov seemed imminent. But the composer died in 1987, just short of his 80th birthday, and soon artistic chaos engulfed the disintegrating Soviet Union. His music disappeared and was thought to have been lost in a fire and flood which destroyed the Musical Foundation building where his scores were kept.
Selected works
Opera
By One Life (Единой жизнью) (1947)
Vasily Gubanov (Василий Губанов) (1966)
The Communist (Коммунист) (1967); revision of Vasily Gubanov
Red Cossacks (Красные казаки) (1971)
The Baby Stork (Аистенок), Children's Opera (1934)
Symphony No.1 In Memoriam to the Martyrs of Babi Yar (1945)
Ukrainian Suite (Украинская сюита) (1949)
Symphony No.2 (1952)
Symphony No.3 (1956)
Symphony No.4 (1958)
Symphony No.5 (1959)
Suite No.1 for chamber orchestra (1971)
Four Preludes and Fugues (Четыре прелюдии и фуги) (1975)
Heroic poem, dedicated to the 30th anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War (Героическая поэма, посвященная 30-летию победы в Великой Отечественной войне) (1975)
Suite No.2 for chamber orchestra (1976)
Symphony No.6 (1981)
Symphony No.7 (1982)
Symphony No.8 "Poeme about bread" for soprano, bass and orchestra (1983)
Symphony No.9 (1989)
Concertante
Concerto No.1 for violin and orchestra (1939)
Poem-Fantasia on a Theme of Nishchinsky (Поэма-фантазия на тему Нищинского) for cello and orchestra (1950)
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