Orthodox Sacred Music Reference Library

Lvov, Aleksei

Alekseilvov

LVOV, Aleksei Fyodorovich (b. 25 May [5 June] 1798, Revel, today Tallin, Estonia; d. 16 [28] December 1870, estate of Roman’, near Kovno, today Kaunas, Lithuania) — began his career as a military engineer, while continuing to play the violin, which he had studied from childhood. In 1833 gained fame as the composer of the national anthem “God, Save the Tsar”; in 1834 was appointed as personal adjutant to Emperor Nicholas I. From 1837 through 1861, served as Director of the Imperial Court Chapel. As Director of the Chapel, Lvov had a marked effect on the direction of church singing in Russia. Enforcing the Imperial Decree of 1816, according to which only works approved by the Director of the Chapel could be performed at divine services, Lvov exercised strict control over the repertoire of church choirs in Russia. Under his administration, precentors’ courses were established at the Imperial Chapel, as well as a system of examinations and ranks for church precentors; each diocese in the Russian Empire was required to send candidates for training. Lvov also supervised the compilation and arrangement in four-part harmony of the Obikhod notnovo peniya [Common book of musical singing], which later came to be required throughout the entire country. In his theoretical work O svobodnom ili nesimmetrichnom ritme [Concerning free or unsymmetrical rhythm] (1858), Lvov was the first among Russian musicians to identify theoretically the possibility in choral music of rhythm determined by verbal accents rather than by a regular meter. Lvov’s compositional output bears a strong influence of the Italianate style and in particular, of early German Romanticism. In the field of church music, in addition to the Obikhod and a number of simple harmonizations of various common chants, he composed 48 works (publ. by A. Gutheil): of these 17 are composed in free rhythm, but only five are chant arrangements; 15 works have the character of “miniature” sacred concertos, while four are large-scale, multi-movement sacred concertos. In Lvov’s works the harmony, replete with chromaticism, has a marked predominance over melody.

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Lv009

Kheruvimskaia pesn' No. 1

Cherubic Hymn

S.Op. 9

Izhe kheruvimy

First printed edition

4

Lv009

Lv010

Kheruvimskaia pesn' No. 2

Cherubic Hymn

S.Op. 10

Izhe kheruvimy

First printed edition

7

Lv010

Lv051

Kheruvimskaia pesn'

Cherubic Hymn - cf. Lv 009 above

S.Op. 45a

Izhe kheruvimy

SSAA Soli and SSAA Chorus

A. Gutheil #A.377945a G. 1887

First printed edition

4

Lv051

Lv054

Kheruvimskaia pesn'

Cherubic Hymn

S.Op. 48

Izhe kheruvimy

SATB

A. Gutheil #A.377948 G. 1887

First printed edition

2

Lv054

Lv002

Khvalite imia Gospodne

Praise the name of the Lord

S.Op. 2

Polyeleion

Ps. 134[135]:1,21; 135[136]:1,26

First printed edition

3

Lv002

Lv052

Milost' mira

A mercy of peace - cf. Lv 011 above

S.Op. 46

[Yaroslav Melody]

TTBB

A. Gutheil #A.377946 G. 1887

First printed edition

5

Lv052

Lv011

Milost' mira

A mercy of peace

S.Op. 11

Yaroslav Melody

First printed edition

5

Lv011

Lv006

Nyne otpushchaeshi

Lord, now lettest Thou

S.Op. 6

Song of St. Symeon

Luke 2:29-32

First printed edition

3

Lv006

Lv053

Nyne sily nebesnyia

Now the powers of heaven

S.Op. 47

Cherubic Hymn from Liturgy of the Pre-Sanctified Gifts

SATB

A. Gutheil #A.377947 G. 1887

First printed edition

5

Lv053

Lv015

Otche nash No. 1

Our Father

S.Op. 15

The Lord's Prayer

First printed edition

3

Lv015