6 Romances, Op.6

Composition date:

1869

About


One week in 1869, Tchaikovsky had been under particular strain to produce a number of commissioned works and sought to take time off from composing. Instead, as he explained in a letter to his brother, his "idleness did not last long" and he composed the Six Romances within that week. They feature two unnamed poems from Tolstoy in the First and Fourth Romances, Pleshcheyev's poem, "Silence" in the Second; "Words for Music," a poem by Rostopchina in the Third Romance; Lev Mey's Poem "Why" in the Fifth, and "Harpist's Song" in the Sixth.

Tchaikovsky's Romances are titled as such:

1. Do Not Believe, My Friend (Не верь, мой друг), Moderato assai (C-sharp minor, 63 bars).  
2. Not a Word, O My Friend (Ни слова, о друг мой) Andante ma non troppo (E minor, 41 bars).
3. Bitterly and Sweetly (И больно, и сладко)Allegro vivo (A major, 81 bars).
4. A Tear Trembles (Слеза дрожит) Moderato assai (G-flat major, 80 bars).
5. Why? (Отчего?) Moderato (D major, 41 bars).
6. None but the Lonely Heart (Нет, только тот, кто знал)Andante non tanto (D-flat major, 54 bars).

Each was premiered at a different location, with some disputes as to where they were first formally premired. 


About the composer


Birth date:

May 7, 1840

Death date:

Nov. 6, 1893

This year marks the 175th birthday of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, one of Russia's most beloved composers. The International Tchaikovsky Competition, which was named after the great composer, will commemorate the anniversary…

Read his biography