Stanyslav Lyudkevych

Stanyslav Pylypovych Lyudkevych (Ukrainian: Станіслав Пилипович Людкевич; 24 January 1879 – 10 September 1979) was a Soviet and Ukrainian composer, theorist, teacher, and musical activist. People's Artist of the USSR (1969) and Hero of Socialist Labour (1979). He earned a Doctor of Philosophy in musicology in Vienna, 1908. His name may alternatively be spelled as Stanislaw Ludkiewicz (Polish) or Stanislav Filipovich Ludkevich (Russian).

Stanyslav Lyudkevych
Background information
Birth nameStanyslav Pylypovych Lyudkevych
Born(1879-01-24)24 January 1879
Jarosław, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austria-Hungary
Died10 September 1979(1979-09-10) (aged 100)
Lviv, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Occupation(s)Composer, theorist, and teacher

Biography

Lyudkevych was born in 1879 in Jarosław, Austria-Hungary (now Poland). He is a former student of the Lviv Academic Gymnasium.[1] From 1898 to 1907 Lyudkevych studied philosophy in the Lviv University. Although he initially learned music theory privately from his mother who was a pianist, Lyudkevych studied with Mieczysław Sołtys in Lviv and with O. Tsemlinsky and H. Hredener in Vienna. From 1901, Lyudkevych worked as a teacher in Lviv and Przemyśl.

From 1905 to 1907, Lyudkevych was an editor of the magazine Artistic Bulletin. He was one of the organizers of the higher musical institute in Lviv named after Mykola Lysenko, in 1910—1915 he was its director, and from 1919, teacher of theoretical disciplines and inspector of legal entities. He worked with the choirs Boyan, Bandurist, Surma. In 1936, Lyudkevych became head of the musicological commission of the Shevchenko Scientific Society. In 1939-72, he was a professor in the institute named after Mykola Lysenko.

He died on September 10, 1979, in Lviv, aged 100.

Works

He was the author of numerous musicological works, was a publicist, and originator and editor of musical publications.

Style

The participation of Lyudkevych in the revolutionary-democratic movement of Western Ukraine lead to the ideological orientation of his activities and works.

Honors

See also

References

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