Biography
Aleksandra Nikolayevna Pakhmutova (Russian: Александра Николаевна Пахмутова ; born 9 November 1929) is a Soviet and Russian composer. She has remained one of the best-known figures in Soviet and later Russian popular music since she first achieved fame in her homeland in the 1960s. She was awarded the People's Artist of the USSR in 1984. She was born on November 9, 1929, in Beketovka (now a neighborhood in Volgograd), Russian SFSR, Soviet Union, and began playing the piano and composing music at an early age. In 1936, she entered the Stalingrad City Music School. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union, she briefly went to Karaganda for refuge and study. She was admitted to the prestigious Moscow Conservatory and graduated in 1953. In 1956, she completed a post-graduate course led by composer Vissarion Shebalin.Her career is notable for her success in a range of different genres. She has composed pieces for the symphony orchestra (The Russian Suite, the concerto for the trumpet and the orchestra, the Youth Overture, the concerto for the orchestra); the ballet Illumination; music for children (cantatas, a series of choir pieces, and numerous songs); and songs and music for over a dozen different movies from Out of This World in 1958 to Because of Mama in 2001.
She is best known for some of her 400 songs, including such enduringly popular songs as The Melody, Russian Waltz, Tenderness, Hope, The Old Maple Tree, The Song of the Perturbed Youth, a series of the Gagarin Constellation, The Bird of Happiness (from the 1981 film O Sport, You – the world!, this song is subsequently very known in both Russia and China when performed by Russian singer Vitas since 2003) and Good-Bye Moscow which was used as the farewell tune of the 22nd Olympic Games in Moscow. Tenderness was used with great effect in Tatyana Lioznova's 1967 film Three Poplars in Plyushchikha. Her husband, the eminent Soviet-era poet Nikolai Dobronravov, contributed lyrics to her music on occasion, including songs used in three films.
One of her most famous ballads is Belovezhskaya Pushcha, composed in 1975, which celebrates Białowieża Forest, a last remnant of the European wildwood split now between Poland and Belarus. Another much-aired song was Malaya Zemlya, about a minor outpost where the then Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev served as a political commissar during World War II.
Alexandra Pakhmutova found favor with the state establishment as well as the public. Reputedly Brezhnev's favorite composer, she received several Government Awards and State Prizes and served as the Secretary of the USSR and Russian Unions of Composers. She was named a Hero of Socialist Labour in 1990. Her name was given to Asteroid # 1889, registered by the planetary centre in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.
Filmography
all 17
Movies 16
TV Shows 1
Son for Father... (1995)
Ode to Sports (1979)
Закрытие сезона (1975)
Кто пасётся на лугу? (1973)
Tigers on Ice (1971)
The Girls (1962)
Yabloko razdora (1962)
По ту сторону (1958)
Ulyanov Family (1957)
Information
Known ForSound
GenderFemale
Birthday1929-11-09 (95 years old)
RelationshipsNikolai Dobronravov (1956-08-01 - 2023-09-16)
SpouseNikolai Dobronravov
CitizenshipsRussia, Soviet Union
Also Known AsАлександра Пахмутова
AwardsOrder of Francisc Skorina, Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called, Order of the Red Banner of Labour, People's Artist of the USSR, Hero of Socialist Labour, Order of Lenin, People's Artist of the RSFSR, Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" II class, Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" III class, Honored art worker of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, Through Art – to Peace and Understanding, Lenin Komsomol Prize, Honorary citizen of Volgograd, Order of the Holy Princess Olga, State Prize of the Russian Federation, Honorary citizen of the Volgograd region, honorary citizen of Moscow, Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" I class, USSR State Prize, Order of Friendship of Peoples
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