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Composer Sofia Gubaidulina has Died, Age 93

The renowned Soviet Russian composer wrote some of the most pivotal pieces of the 20th century and is performed widely to this day

 

Born in 1931 in the Tatar region of Russia under the Soviet Socialist Republic, composer Sofia Gubaidulina began learning music at the age of five and wrote her first composition eight years later.

She commenced piano and composition studies in Kazan, Russia, before continuing at the Moscow Conservatory in her early 20s studying with Vissarion Shebalin. Her skill was recognized by Dimitri Shostakovich, whose support in the late 1950s was a significant moment in her life.

According to Deutsche Grammophon, when the head of Moscow Conservatory’s examination panel stated that Gubaidulina’s writing of a symphony was “on the wrong path,” Shostakovich stepped in to advise differently. “My wish for you is that you should continue on your own incorrect path,” he told her.

“I am grateful the whole of my life for those wonderful words,” she told the Guardian. “They fortified me and were exactly what a young composer needed to hear from an older one. It gave me the courage to follow my own path.”

She later settled into Moscow’s musical scene but was not fully embraced by the Soviet Union’s conservative music organization. She developed a personal and unique quality in her concert works which expressed her Christian faith. This was often confronted by the artistic mandates of the Soviet Union.

Making a living during this time composing film scores, she was also exploring non-Western percussion instruments. “I give a lot of importance to percussion instruments,” she told the NY times. “They contain the essence of existence.”

She faced many issues with the Soviet authorities due to her meeting with dissidents and attending unauthorized western music festivals.

In 1979, she was blacklisted at the Sixth Congress of the Composers of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and denounced with six other composers for producing “noisy mud instead of real musical innovation,” wrote the Guardian. The condemned group became known as Khrennikov’s Seven.

While most of them went into exile, Gubaidulina stayed. “Being blacklisted and so unperformed gave me artistic freedom, even if I couldn't earn much money,” she said. “I could write what I wanted without compromise.”

In the 1980s, she turned heads in the West with “Offertorium,” her first violin concerto written for Latvian violinist Gidon Kremer. With its influence from Webern and Bach, the work rooted Gubaidulina’s global regard as a spiritualist writer.

“Offertorium” was premiered by Kremer in 1981 in Vienna. Gubaidulina could not attend as she was denied an exit permit by the Soviet government at the time.

In 1996, she composed her viola concerto, dedicated to violist Yuri Bashmat, and in 2007, wrote her second violin concerto “In Tempus Praesens,” for violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter.

At age 87 and inspired by the philosopher Martin Buber’s 1923 book I and Thou, Gubaidulina wrote her third violin concerto in 2018, titled “Dialogue: I and You,” dedicating it to violinist Vadim Repin. This piece performed by Baiba Skride in 2021 can be watched below.

In addition to writing a tome of concertos, solo, and vocal works, she penned four string quartets, with the fourth dedicated to the Kronos Quartet in 1993.

 

To mark her 90th birthday in 2021, conductor Andris Nelsons and Leipzig's Gewandhaus Orchestra released an album featuring three of her symphonic pieces with metaphysical undertones.

Throughout her career, Gubaidulina earned over 40 awards and prizes — the Rome International Composer's Competition, Japan's Praemium Imperiale, and Spain's BBVA Frontiers of Knowledge award. She received honorary doctorates from Beijing Conservatory, Kyiv Music Academy, University of Chicago, and Yale University. Her prizes included

Since the Soviet Union dissolved, Gubaidulina resided in a small village outside Hamburg, Germany, where she found it peaceful to compose music.

Her pieces are published and represented by the UK’s Boosey & Hawkes, the British Commonwealth, and the Republic of Ireland.

Her death was confirmed by Boosey & Hawkes, who called Gubaidulina "the grande dame of new music."

"Her profound curiosity about the world, people, and spirituality left a lasting impression on all who met her and had the honor of collaborating with her," they continued.

Tributes have been pouring in online, with the Berliner Philharmoniker writing "We mourn the death of our dear friend and musical partner Sofia Gubaidulina."

Violinist Daniel Hope said, "Sofia Gubaidulina was a force of nature—a visionary who sculpted sound with an alchemist’s touch. Her music was both a whisper and a reckoning, a realm where the spiritual and the physical converged."

The Concertgebouworkest wrote, "We mourn the passing of Sofia Gubaidulina (1931–2025), one of the artistic giants of our time. We will cherish our longstanding friendship with her since our first collaboration in 1991 and deeply feel the loss of her musical presence. The loss of this leading composer leaves a profound void. Still, her music will continue to inspire for generations to come."

Our condolences to Ms. Gubaidulina's family, friends, and colleagues.

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