Rodion Shchedrin
Rodion Konstantinovich Shchedrin (16 December 1932 – 29 August 2025) was a Russian composer and pianist whose prolific career spanned ballets, operas, symphonies, and concertos, often integrating Russian literary sources with innovative orchestration techniques.[1][2]
Born in Moscow to a musical family, Shchedrin trained at the Moscow Choral School and graduated from the Moscow Conservatory in 1955, studying composition under Yuri Shaporin and piano under Yakov Flier.[1][2] In 1958, he married the renowned Bolshoi Theatre ballerina Maya Plisetskaya, for whom he created seminal works like the Carmen Suite (1967), an orchestration of Bizet's opera adapted as a ballet that premiered to acclaim and highlighted his mastery of theatrical music.[1][3]
Shchedrin's achievements include composing seven works staged at the Bolshoi Theatre, more than any other contemporary, and succeeding Dmitri Shostakovich as head of the Union of Composers of the Russian Federation; he received honors such as the Russian State Prize and membership in the Berlin Academy of Arts.[2] His operas, including Dead Souls (1976) and The Enchanted Wanderer (2002), drew from Gogol and Leskov, while ballets like Anna Karenina (1985) adapted Tolstoy, reflecting a commitment to Russian cultural heritage amid Soviet constraints and later global engagements.[1][2] Shchedrin, who avoided Communist Party membership, defended Shostakovich's music during official scrutiny and continued composing until late in life, dividing time between Munich and Russia before his death in Munich at age 92.[1]