Sofia Gubaidulina
• Sofia Gubaidulina is, together with Schnittke and Denisov, one of three major Moscow composers of the post-Shostakovich era
• Of half-Tartar, half-Slav extraction
• Music strikingly combines spiritual and dramatic, with daring and transparently original colours
• One of earliest Soviet composers to show a deep interest in religious themes
• Music can at one extreme be improvisatory such as Garden of Joys and Sorrows for flute, viola and harp, and at the other extreme be strictly organised on ancient mystical principles such as the orchestral works Stimmen… verstummen and Figures of Time
• Particular interest in setting visionary and prophetic texts by T.S.Eliot, Marina Tsvetaeva and Gennadi Aigi
• Aural imagination developed through sonic experiments in her film music
• Has been commissioned by world’s finest performers including Gidon Kremer, Yuri Bashmet, Mstislav Rostropovich, the Kronos and Arditti Quartets, Gennady Rozhdestvensky and Sir Simon Rattle
Works by Sofia Gubaidulina include:
Offertorium (1980, rev. 1986) for violin and orchestra
St. John Passion (2000) for soli, choirs and orchestra
The Light of the End (2003) for orchestra
On Love and Hatred (2016/18) for soli, choirs and orchestra
Works by Gubaidulina are represented by Boosey & Hawkes/Sikorski for the world.
Looking Ahead: Honorary membership in the Hamburg Academy of Arts; World premiere Musical Toys for ensemble (arranged by Johannes X. Schachtner) in Straubing (8 June); Finnsih First perfomance Der Zorn Gottes, Finnish National Opera Orchestra; Cond.: Hannu Lintu in Helsinki (15. Aug.)
"I am a religious Russian Orthodox person and I understand ‘religion’ in the literal meaning of the word, as ‘re-ligio’, that is to say the restoration of connections, the restoration of the ‘legato’ of life. There is no more serious task for music than this." — Sofia Gubaidulina