Complete Works (Spendiarov, Aleksandr)

This work has been identified as being in the public domain in Canada, as well as countries where the copyright term is life+50 or life+70 years (including all EU countries). However, this work is probably still protected by copyright in the United States, unless an exception applies. See public domain for details.
This work may not be in the public domain in all countries. Please check the copyright laws of your country.

Javascript is required to submit files.

General Information

Work Title Complete Collection of Works
Alternative. Title Երկերի լրիվ ժողովածու ; Ստեղծագործությունների լրիվ ժողովածու ; Полное собрание сочинений
Composer Spendiarov, Aleksandr
I-Catalogue NumberI-Cat. No. None [force assignment]
Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's 11 volumes (12 books, see below for contents)
First Publication. 1943-87
Composer Time PeriodComp. Period Romantic
Piece Style Romantic
Instrumentation see below, contents

Navigation etc.

  • Editor: Gevorg Budaghyan (1899-1978) -- general editor
  • Editorial board: A. Shahverdyan, A.K. Kocharyan, Chr. Kushnaryan, Ts. Poghosyan, K. Sarajev, G. Tigranov, Z. Vardanyan
  • Vol.3 contains works for piano, violin and piano, cello and piano, string quartet and string trio.

English-language Index follows, based upon: Alexander Shahverdian. A. A. Spendiaryan. ed. Robert Atayan, trans. Dewi Williams. Yerevan: Hayastan, 1971. 52-61.

Vol. I, 1943

ROMANCES AND SONGS

  • ‘No Question For Many A Day’ (V. Solovyov). 1892.
  • ‘You Are The Bright Sun The Sun Of My Soul’ (anon.) Serenade 1892.
  • ‘Song Of The Drowned Woman’ (A. Podolinsky) 1895.
  • ‘I Don’t Know Why’ (L. May) 1895.
  • ‘The Same Night' (A. Borovikovsky) 1895.
  • ‘Oh, Rose Of My Youth’ (anon, date unknown).
  • ‘And Profound Is Their Love’ (M Lermontov, Heine) Op.1 No 1. 1895.
  • ‘I Have Dreamed Of Your Love’ (S. Nadson) Op.1 No. 2, 1898.
  • ‘Ah, Rose’ (Oriental Melody, A. Tsaturyan) Op.1 No. 3, 1894.
  • ‘Dozing Sweetly And Tenderly’ (S. Nadson) Op.1 No. 4, 1899?
  • ‘Look, Here Is A Ruined Castle’ (S. Broons) Op.5 No. 1 1900.
  • ‘Oriental Lullaby’ (R. Patkanyan) Op.5 No.2 1900.
  • ‘Ah, My Kiss Awaits You’ (A. Maykov) Op.5 No. 3 1901.
  • ‘The Evening Falls Slowly’ (S. Natson) Op.5 No. 4, 1901.
  • ‘A Tatar Song’ (alter Pushkin, folk melody), 1902.
  • ‘The Fisherman And The Fairy’. A Ballad. (M. Gorky) Op.7, 1902.
  • ‘Waiting’. (A. Golenishchev-Kutuzov), 1904.
  • ‘Ozymandias’ (Shelley) Op.11 No. 1, 1904.
  • ‘Oriental Legend’ (S. Marshak) Op.11 No. 2, 1905.
  • ‘To The Moon’ (Shelley) Op.13 No. 1, 1906.
  • ‘Rejoice, O My Heart’ (A. Fet, from Hafiz) Op.13 No. 2, 1906..
  • ‘I See Your Smile’ (A. Fet) Op.13 No. 3, 1908.
  • ‘The Song Of Hafiz’ (A. Fet, from Hafiz) Op.13 No. 4, 1906.
  • ‘Preacher Beda’, Legend (Y. Polonsky) Op.19, 1907.
  • ‘Seramide’, Aria (Teffi) 1909.
  • ‘Al-Zamast’ (Teffi) Op.22 No.1, 1910.
  • ‘Do Not Weep, O Nightingale’ (’Armenian Song', A. Tsaturyan> Op.22 No. 2, 1910.
  • ‘From Hafiz’ (N. Rachinsky) Op.22 No. 3, 1910.
  • ‘Aishe’ (Words and melody by Crimean Tatars) Op.22 No. 4, 1910.
  • ‘Over There, Over There, to the Field of Honor’ (Words by Spendiaryan, based on the epilogue of Kh. Abovyan's novel ’Wounds of Armenia’) Op.24, 1914.
  • ‘Lullaby’ (by Crimean Tatars. Russian words by Spendiaryan) Op.25 No. 1, 1915.
  • ‘Dance Song’ (by Crimean Tatars. Russian words by Spendiaryan) Op.25 No. 2, 1915.
  • ‘Take, O Armenia’ Concert Aria. (H. Hovhannisyan) Op.27, 1915.
  • ‘Take, O My Sweetheart’ (Armenian folk song. Russian words by Spendiaryan) 1916.
  • ‘My Native Land’ (Words and melody by Crimean Tatars. Russian words by Spendiaryan) 1924.
  • ‘Elmas’ (Crimean folk song. Russian words by Spendiaryan) 1924.
  • ‘Your Lips Are Like Mountain Cherries’ (Crimean folk song. Russian words by Spendiaryan) 1924.
  • ‘Gharib Blbul’ (from the songs of Sayat-Nova) 1925.
  • ‘Iago's Song’ (written for Shakespeare’s Othello) 1926.

Vol. II, 1955

ENSEMBLES

Vocal Ensembles, Songs for Choir, Musico-Declamatory Works, Arrangement of Russian and Ukrainian folk Songs.

  • ’Let Us Go Far From Here’ (Yazykov), for soprano, contralto, and piano, 1892.
  • ’The Free Bird’ (A. Pushkin), for S. A. T. B. and piano, Op.6, 1901.

SONGS FOR CHOIR

  • ‘Unmown Field’ (N. Nekrasov), for S. A. T. B. and piano, Op.8, 1902.
  • ‘In Memory Of V. V. Stasov’(V. Likhachov), Cantata for S. A. T.B and piano, Op.16, 1907.
  • ‘Glory To The Great Day Of May’ (A. Spendiaryan), for S. A. T. B. and piano, Op.27, 1917. 

MUSICO-DECLAMATORY WORKS

  • ’We Shall Rest’. Sonya's monologue from Chekhov’s ‘Uncle Vanya’, with piano accompaniment, Op.21, No. 1, 1910.
  • ‘Edelweiss’. From the play by Gorky, with piano accompaniment, Op.21, No. 2, 1911.

RUSSIAN FOLK SONGS 1919—1922

  • ‘There Is A Rock On The Volga’, for tenor, baritone, and piano. Also for three part unaccompanied female choir.
  • ‘Silent Night’.
  • ‘Who Is That Man Still Wifeless?’
  • ‘The Flowers Are Fading’.
  • ‘Oh, My Thick Sharab’.
  • ‘Oh, My Thick Sharab’, with flute accompaniment.
  • ‘Ah, My Dear Mother’.
  • ‘Mother, Sift The Flour’.
  • ‘Oh, My Sanamer, Oh, My Kavorkin’.

UKRAINIAN FOLK SONGS 1919—1922

  • ‘When I Die’ (‘Legacy’, T. Shevchenko), for unaccompanied four part male voice choir.
  • For voice and piano.
  • ‘If Gales Have Ruined You’.
  • ‘How Shall I Lament?’
  • ‘There Was A Drizzle’.
  • ‘Give Ale Not Light, O Moon’.
  • ‘High Time To Return Home’.
  • ‘If Our Lord Wished’.
  • ‘As Soon As My Love Went To The Mill’.
  • ‘I Have Passed By Your Door’.
  • ‘A Good Day To You, My Beloved’.
  • ‘The Old Grandfather Is Sitting Puzzled’.
  • ‘I Am Coming Across The Fields’.
  • ‘Have I Not Been Waiting For You?’

UKRAINIAN SUITE, 1921 For four part mixed Choir and piano.

    • ’Oh, That Black Cloud Grew Near’.
    • ’That Black Cloud Has Shut Out The Light'.
    • ’Oh, The Nightingale Is Flying'.
    • ’The Spring Came, The Beautiful Spring'.

Vol. III, 1951

INSTRUMENTAL WORKS


For Piano

  • Waltz in E flat minor, 1892.
  • Waltz in E flat major, 1893.
  • Scherzo, 1894.
  • Minuet, Op.3, No. 1, 1895.
  • Barcarole, 1895.
  • Ghaytarma (Prologue and Ghaytarma), 1895.
  • Lullaby, Op.3, No. 2, 1897.
  • Minuet, 1897.
  • 'Brave Warriors’. A march based on Kazakh war songs, Op.26, 1915.
  • Song, Dance, and Ghaytarma, 1917.
  • ‘Erevan Sketches’— ’Enzeli’ and ’Hejaz’, Op.30, 1925.

For Violin and Piano

  • Waltz.
  • Song.
  • Romance, 1892.
  • Lullaby, 1894.
  • Canzonetta, 1896.
  • Ghaytarma (Prologue ana Ghaytarma), Op.9 No. 4, 1903.

For Cello and Piano

  • Romance in G minor, 1893.
  • Romance in F major, 1893.
  • Barcarole in G major, 1894.
  • Barcarole in G minor. 1896. (Same for Piano, No. 5)

For String Trio

  • Scherzo, 1897.
  • Prelude, 1895.
  • Minuet, 1897. (Same for Piano, No. 8)
  • Fugue, 1898.
  • Rondo, 1900.


Vol. IV, 1953

STRING AND VOCAL WORKS WITH ORCHESTRA

  • Barcarole for Cello and Orchestra. 1894.
  • Variations for Cello and Piano (Vol. Ill, No. 3)
  • Several Romances and Songs of the First Volume with Orchestral Accompaniment
    • ‘O Rose’.
    • ‘Oriental Lullaby’.
    • ‘The Fisherman and the Fairy’.
    • ‘Ozymandias’.
    • ‘Preacher Beda’.
    • ‘Al-Zamast’.
    • ‘There, There To That Field Of Glory’.
    • ‘Lullaby.
    • ‘Dance Song.
    • ‘Take, O Armenia’.
    • ‘Take, O My Sweetheart’.
    • ‘Elmas’.
    • ‘Your. Lips Are Like Mountain Cherries’.
    • ‘Gharib Blbul’.

Vol. V, 1956

STRING AND VOCAL WORKS WITH ORCHESTRA, continued

Some Works of Vol. II, with Symphonic Accompaniment. Recitation with Symphonic Accompaniment.

  • ‘We Shall Rest’.
  • ‘Edelweiss’.

FOR CHORUS AND SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

  • ‘The Bough Of Palestine’ (Lermontov).
  • ‘Unmown Field’, Op.8
  • ‘Ukrainian Suite’.
    • ‘Oh, That Black Cloud Grew Near’.
    • ‘That Black Cloud Has Shut Out The Light’.
    • ‘Oh, The Nightingale Is Flying’.
    • ‘The Spring Came, The Beautiful Spring’.


Vol. VI, 1960

SYMPHONIC WORKS

  • Minuet, Op.3 No. 1, 1825 (Piano Version Vol. Ill, No. 4)
  • Lullaby, Op.3 No. 2, 1897 (Piano Version Vol. Ill, No. 7).
  • Ancient Dance, Op.12, 1896
  • Concert Prelude, Op.4, 1900
  • Crimean Sketches. First Series, Op.9, 1903.
    • Dancing
    • Elegy (Version for Voice and Piano Vol. I, No. 16, ‘Tatar Song’)
    • Feast Song
    • Dance ‘Ghaytarma’ (Version for Violin and Piano Vol. Ill, No. 7)
  • ’Three Palms’. Symphonic Poem, Op.10, 1905.
  • Prelude to the ‘Three Palms’

Vol. VII, 1962

SYMPHONIC WORKS, continued

  • Concert Waltz, Op.18, 1907.
  • Mourning Prelude (written on the occasion of Rimsky-Korsakov’s death, Op.20, 1908)
  • Crimean Sketches. Second Series, Op.23, 1912.
    • Taksim (Prelude) and Keshref (Intermezzo)
    • Love Song
    • Dance ‘Baghlama’
    • Bride’s Lament
    • Brave Bridegroom (Version for Voice and Piano Vol. I, No. 30 ’Aishe’)
    • Song of the Shepherd
    • Song of the Mouse
    • Dance ‘Hoynava’ and Dance ‘Ghaytarma’
  • ‘Brave Warriors’ March (Piano Version Vol. III)
  • Etude on Hebrew Melodies, 1921
  • Erevan Sketches (Piano Version Vol. III)

Vol. VIII, 1964

SYMPHONIC WORKS, continued

  • First Suite from the opera ’Almast’— Persian Shah Nadir and Armenian Prince Tatoul. 1918—1923
    • Persian March
    • Sunset. The Persian’s Prayer
    • Attack
    • Victorious Return of Tatoul
  • Second Suite from ’Almast’—’Feast in Honour of Tatoul’, 1920–1924
    • Feast. Entrance of the Clown
    • Girls’ Dance
    • Men's Dance
    • Almast's Dance
  • ’Betrayal’. Symphonic Poem from Almast


Vol. IX, 1950

  • Composer's Arrangement his Symphonic Works for Two Piano

Vol. X, 1971

OPERA

  • ‘Almast’. Libretto by S. Parnok based on Toumanyan's poem 'The Siege of Tmbka Castle'. 1918-1928, Translated into Armenian by P. Michaelyan. Piano Score.

Vol. 11, 1984

  • ’Almast’. Full Score.