Orthodox Sacred Music Reference Library

Kompaneisky, Nikolai

Kompaneisky

KOMPANEISKY, Nikolai Ivanovich (b. 1848, Priyutino, nr. Taganrog; d. 17 [30] March 1910, St. Petersburg) — studied at the Nikolayevsk Cavalry School; took lessons in cello and music theory, studied vocal technique with the outstanding opera singer Osip Petrov. Was friends with the leading composers of the nascent Russian nationalist school, Alexander Dargomyzhsky, Modest Musorgsky, Alexander Serov and others, under whose influence he wrote two operas on national themes: Taras Bulba and May Night (which he subsequently burned); his other secular works — a symphony, romances — have not survived either. With the rise in the 1890s of the «New Direction» in Russian Orthodox sacred music, K. began to compose arrangements of church chants and write extensively as a musical critic and publicist (in such magazines as Russkaia muzykal'naia gazeta, Muzyka i penie, et al.) on topics related to church singing. Together with Archpriest Mikhail Lisitsyn, Semyon Panchenko, and Nikolai Cherepnin, K. comprised the St. Petersburg contingent of the New Direction.

Kompaneisky was an advocate of an unadulterated “Old Russian” style in church composition. The guiding principle of his chant arrangements was not so much the “harmonization” of church melodies, in which the top voice is underpinned with subordinate parts that lack independent interest, but rather the contrapuntal combination of characteristic melodic elements — “chantlets” (povevki) that comprise a given church chant. His works possess a churchly quality, are expressive, and display a close correlation between music and text; and while at times they may lack technical polish, this was a fact that the composer himself unapologetically admitted. Among the techniques one frequently encounters in his arrangements are elements (such as voice leading and unison cadences) consciously borrowed from Russian folk song. In his works K. attempted to introduce what he referred to as a purely Russian, vocal-choral “symphony,” based on counter-voice heterophony, applied to church music. He successfully fought for the uncensored publication of sacred choral works against the claims of the supervisory council of the Moscow Synodal Choir School; after initial difficulties in obtaining permission to publish his works, most of them (over 50) were published by P. Jurgenson. His major sacred works include the Theotokia Dogmatika in znamenny chant (1900–1903) and the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, based on Bulgarian chants (1906).

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Km025

Milost' mira

A mercy of peace

S.Op. 24

Demestvenny [Freely composed]

S(div)A(div)T(div)B(div)

PJu #31000 n.d.

First printed edition

7

Km025

Km013

Milost' mira

A mercy of peace

S.Op. 12

Kievan Chant

S(div)A(div)T(div)B(div)

PJu #29156 1903

First printed edition

5

Km013

Km014

Milost' mira

A mercy of peace

S.Op. 13

Znamenny Chant

SA(div)T(div)B

PJu #29158 1903

First printed edition

6

Km014

Km070

Molitva Sv. Efrema Sirina

The prayer of St. Ephraim the Syrian

N.O.N.

Gospodi i Vladyko zhivota moego

SATB(div)

Muzyka i penie, #M.396 P. n.d.

First printed edition

2

Km070

Km058

O Tebe raduetsia

All creation rejoices in you

S.Op. 31

Russian Greek Chant, T.8

Hymn to the Mother of God from the Liturgy of St. Basil

S(div)A(div)T(div)B(div)

PJu #33121 n.d.

First printed edition

4

Km058

Km027

Otche nash

Our Father

S.Op. 25

Demestvenny [Freely composed]

The Lord's Prayer

SATB

PJu #31316 1903

First printed edition

4

Km027

Km024

Simvol very

The Creed

S.Op. 23

Demestvenny [Freely composed]

Veruiu

S(div)A(div)T(div)B(div) and SATB Soli

PJu #30999 1903

First printed edition

12

Km024

Km054

Stikhiry Paskhi

The Stichera of Pascha

S.Op. 28

Znamenny Chant

Da voskresnet Bog

S(div)A(div)T(div)B(div)

PJu #33111 n.d.

First printed edition

11

Km054

Km068

Tebe odeiushchagosia

Thou who clothest Thyself with light

S.Op. 41

Bulgarian Chant

Sticheron at Aposticha for Holy Friday Vespers

S(div)A(div)T(div)B(div)

PJu #33123 n.d.

First printed edition

10

Km068

Km016

Tropar' Paskhi

The Troparion of Pascha

S.Op. 15

Russian Greek Chant

Khristos voskrese

S(div)A(div)T(div)B(div)

PJu #30991 1903

First printed edition

3

Km016