Alexander Knaifel (; also Alexandr Knaifel; 28 November 1943, Tashkent â 27 June 2024, Berlin) was a Soviet and Russian composer, often described as one of the most prominent Russian composers of his generation. His work spans early experimental compositions associated with Soviet avantgarde and later turns towards a contemplative, spiritually oriented aesthetic influenced by Orthodox Christianity. KnaifelâÂÂs music is characterized by a distinctive use of silence, sparse musical material, and unconventional approaches to text and sound.
Knaifel was born in Tashkent to a family of Leningrad musicians evacuated there during the Second World War. His family soon returned to Leningrad (Saint Petersburg), which remained his lifelong home. Before turning to composition, he studied with Mstislav Rostropovich as a cellist, maintaining a close artistic relationship with him throughout his life.
His experimental work in the 1970s drew criticism from Soviet cultural authorities, and he was associated with the Khrennikov's Seven. From the 1980s, his works were increasingly performed internationally. Knaifel composed in a wide range of genres, including opera, orchestral, choral and chamber music, as well as music for more than forty films. Recordings of his works, particularly those released by ECM Records, contributed to his international recognition.
Knaifel was born on 28 November 1943. He studied cello with Mstislav Rostropovich at Moscow Conservatory from 1961 to 1963, then composition with Boris Arapov in Leningrad from 1964 until 1967.
Knaifel died on 27 June 2024, at the age of 80.
From the very beginning of his composing career he associated himself with the group of so-called "avant-garde" Soviet composers that include Andrey Volkonsky, Edison Denisov, Alfred Schnittke, Sofia Gubaidulina, Valentin Silvestrov, Leonid Hrabovsky, Arvo Pärt, Tigran Mansuryan, and others. The works of the 1990s and 2000s were strongly influenced by religious themes and showed dramatic changes in his musical language.
He wrote more than 80 compositions in various genres and also more than 40 scores for feature films and documentaries.
His music often surprises by its extravagant ideas, strange combination of the instruments or incredibly long duration. For example, his very slow and quiet Agnus Dei (1985) written for four instrumentalists (each of whom plays several instruments including keyboards, percussion, electronics, saxophones and double bass) lasts exactly 120 minutes. Another two-hour-long piece Nika (72 fragments after Heraclitus and Dante 1973âÂÂ1974), is written for 17 double basses; and the piece titled Solaris (1980) is scored for 35 Javanese gongs.
In 1979 Knaifel was blacklisted as one of "Khrennikov's Seven" at the Sixth Congress of the Union of Soviet Composers for unapproved participation in some festivals of Soviet music in the West.
Norman Lebrecht explains Knaifel and his music as follows: "Russian iconoclast, writing slow, quiet and unsettling music that passes from one instrument to another when it is good and ready... Many of his scores are unperformed, perhaps unperformable."
Alexander Knaifel had a performance dedicated to his music in Ireland on 1 May 2009 as part of the Drogheda Arts Festival. The event entitled The Rest is Noise : the music of Alexander Knaifel featured the world premiere of a new work, the string trio " EF and the three calling cards of the poet".
Svetlana Savenko: The magic of Alexander KnaifelâÂÂs message; also: List of Alexander KnaifelâÂÂs principal works. In "Ex oriente...III" Eight Composers from the former USSR Philip Gershkovich, Boris Tishchenko, Leonid Grabovsky, Alexander Knaifel, Vladislav Shoot, Alexander Vustin, Alexander Raskatov, Sergei Pavlenko. Edited by Valeria Tsenova. English edition only (studia slavica musicologica, Bd. 31). Verlag Ernst Kuhn â Berlin ;
Tara Wilson: 'Russian Post-Minimalist Music: A Semiological Investigation into the Narrative Approaches employed by Alexander Knaifel between 1978 and 1994' (PhD Thesis: Goldsmiths, University of London, 2015).