Background
Schwartz was born in Romny in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1923.
Schwartz was born in Romny in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1923.
Saint St. Petersburg Conservatory.
His family moved to Leningrad in 1930, where he learned to play the piano. He gave his first concert in 1935 with the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra. Schwartz"s father was professor of archeology at the Leningrad State University: he was arrested in 1936 and executed two years later as part of the Great Purge.
Schwartz"s family was exiled to Kyrgyzstan in 1937, and Schwartz gave private music lessons in Frunze (now Bishkek) as well as occasionally accompanying the silent films at the cinema with live music
During the Second World War, Schwartz directed one of the sections of the Red Army Choir. Shostakovich helped Schwartz gain entry to the Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory in Leningrad, from whence he graduated with a diploma in composition in 1951.
He joined the Union of Soviet Composers in 1955. Only years later did he discover that Shostakovich had paid for his education.
When Shostakovich was dismissed from the Conservatory, Schwartz was asked to denounce Shostakovich, but he refused.
Schwartz"s first major commission was the music for the film Our Correspondent in 1959. He went on to compose the music for more than 100 Soviet films, including White Sun of the Desert (Белое солнце пустыни, 1969) and The Captivating Star of Happiness (Звезда пленительного счастья, 1975). Perhaps his best known work outside of the Soviet Union was for Akira Kurosawa"s 1975 film Dersu Uzala.
Schwartz also composed music for ballets and theatrical performances and, to a lesser extent, for television
His one symphony, Gelbe Sterne – Purimspiel im Ghetto, was first performed in Saint St. Petersburg in 2000: it was inspired by the story of the Kovno Ghetto in Lithuania. Schwartz died in Siversky, near Saint St. Petersburg, Russian Federation, on 27 December 2009, aged 86.
Union of Soviet Composers.