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*"Russian Melody (tremolo study) by ]", *"Russian Melody (tremolo study) by ]",
*"Ricercar by ]", *"Ricercar by ]",
*"Impromptu" by ] *"Impromptu" by ], and most famous of all,
* "]" (Vavilov himself did not call it so, having it as Anonymous instead, Mark Szachin after a few years since it was first released added Caccini name to it{{Fact|date=May 2009}}<!--"articles and posts on Misplaced Pages, or on websites that mirror its content, may not be used as sources", according to ].-->) often performed to this day, notably by ], ], ] inter alia.


Vavilov died in poverty, of ], a few months before the appearance of "The City of Gold", which became a hit overnight. Vavilov died in poverty, of ], a few months before the appearance of "The City of Gold", which became a hit overnight.

Revision as of 16:26, 31 July 2009

Vladimir Vavilov (5 May 19253 November 1973) was a Russian guitarist, lutenist and composer. He was a student of P. Isakov (guitar) and I. Admoni (composition) at the Rimski-Korsakov Music College in St Petersburg. He played an important part in the Early Music Revival in the Soviet Union.

Vavilov was active as a performer on both lute and guitar, as a music editor for a state music publishing house, and more importantly as a composer. He routinely ascribed his own works to other composers, usually Renaissance or Baroque (occasionally from later eras), usually with total disregard of a style that should have been appropriate, in the spirit of Fetis, Kreisler, Ponse, Casadesus and other mystificators of the previous eras. His works achieved enormous circulation, and some of them achieved true folk music status, with several poems set to his melodies.

The most famous of his hoaxes were

Vavilov died in poverty, of pancreatic cancer, a few months before the appearance of "The City of Gold", which became a hit overnight.

References

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