Andrei Ilyashenko 1884-1954
ILYASHENKO, Andrey Stepanovich (b. 1884, Moscow; d. 1954, Brussels)—upon graduating from the Imperial Alexander Lyceum in St. Petersburg in 1905, he received his musical education at the St. Petersburg Conservatory, where he studied under A. Petrov, A. Lamb and M. Steinberg. He began his compositional activity before the Revolution of 1917; the publishing house of P. Jurgenson released a selection of his hymns from the Divine Liturgy in 1912.
During the revolution, Ilyshenko left his homeland (he is known to have been in Taganrog in 1919 and in Chisinau [Kishinev] in 1922). From 1923, he lived in Brussels, devoting himself entirely musical activity. He taught at the Brussels Conservatory, and also for two years at a conservatory in Toronto Canada. His works include orchestral pieces, works for organ, piano, compositions in the cantata-oratorio genre, arrangements of Russian folk songs, as well as church music.
Several of the sacred works written by Ilyashenko outside his homeland were published by Archpriest Nikolai Vieglais in the series “Orthodox Christian Sheet Music Library” (Berkeley, CA), as well as recorded in the CD series “Chants of the Russian Emigres” (San Francisco: Russian Shepherd, 2004-2007).
—Archpriest Peter Perekrestov
During the revolution, Ilyshenko left his homeland (he is known to have been in Taganrog in 1919 and in Chisinau [Kishinev] in 1922). From 1923, he lived in Brussels, devoting himself entirely musical activity. He taught at the Brussels Conservatory, and also for two years at a conservatory in Toronto Canada. His works include orchestral pieces, works for organ, piano, compositions in the cantata-oratorio genre, arrangements of Russian folk songs, as well as church music.
Several of the sacred works written by Ilyashenko outside his homeland were published by Archpriest Nikolai Vieglais in the series “Orthodox Christian Sheet Music Library” (Berkeley, CA), as well as recorded in the CD series “Chants of the Russian Emigres” (San Francisco: Russian Shepherd, 2004-2007).
—Archpriest Peter Perekrestov
Sticheron At The Praises, Tone 7
Chants of the Russian Emigres; v.6
The Minsk Theological College Choir
O Gentle Light
Chants of the Russian Emigres; v.2
Choir Of The Joy Of All Who Sorrow Church In Minsk
Exaposteilarion for the Annunciation, "The Mystery of God"
Panagia; Orthodox Hymns to the Mother of God
Archangel Voices
Get the Sheet Music for this track: OMP-Il002E |