
Today's Out Spotlight is one of the most popular composers in 
history. He is a beloved treasure of his home country of Russia. His best-known works include the ballets "Swan Lake," "The 
Sleeping Beauty," and "The Nutcracker";  the operas "The Queen of 
Spades" and "Eugene Onegin"; and the widely recognized Fantasy Overture 
“Romeo and Juliet" and "1812 Overture."  Today's Out Spotlight is Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
 
  
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in Votinsk, Russia, a small industrial town on May 7, 1840 . His
 father was a mine inspector. His mother, who was of French and Russian 
heritage, strongly influenced his education and cultural upbringing.
At age 5, Tchaikovsky began piano lessons. His parents nurtured his 
musical talents, but had a different career path in mind for their son. 
In 1850, the family enrolled him at the Imperial School of Jurisprudence
 in St. Petersburg, where he prepared for a job in civil service.

After working in government for a few years, Tchaikovsky pursued his 
passion at the St. Petersburg Conservatory. After graduation, he taught 
music theory at the Moscow Conservatory and worked on new compositions. 
Tchaikovsky created concertos, symphonies, ballets, chamber music, and 
concert and theatrical pieces. His passionate, emotional compositions 
represented a departure from traditional Russian music, and his work 
became popular with Western audiences.
Despite his career success, Tchaikovsky’s personal life was filled 
with crises and bouts of depression.Attract to men he After receiving letters of 
admiration from a former student, Tchaikovsky married her. Historians 
speculate the marriage took place to dispel rumors that Tchaikovsky was 
gay. The marriage was a disaster and Tchaikovsky left his wife after 
nine days.

 Tchaikovsky's marital debacle may have forced him to face the full truth
 about his sexuality. He never blamed Antonina for the failure of their 
marriage
 and he apparently never again considered matrimony or considered 
himself capable of loving women in the same manner as other men. He 
admitted to his brother Anatoly that there was "nothing more futile than
 wanting to be anything other than what I am by nature."
[ Also, though Tchaikovsky would confess it only in periods of deep 
depression, the episode left him with a deep sense of shame and guilt 
and an apprehension that Antonina might fully realize and publicize his 
sexual orientation. 
Tchaikovsky had clear homosexual tendencies; some of the composer's closest relationships were with men.
 He sought out the company of other same-sex attracted men in his circle
 for extended periods, "associating openly and establishing professional
 connections with them."
 Relevant portions of his brother Modest's autobiography, where he tells
 of the composer's sexual orientation, have been published, as have 
letters previously suppressed by Soviet censors in which Tchaikovsky 
openly writes of it.

Tchaikovsky began an unconventional relationship with a wealthy 
widow, Nadezhda von Mek, who agreed to be his benefactor on one 
condition: they were never to meet face to face. The couple exchanged 
more than 1,000 letters, until von Mek abruptly ended their 13-year 
liaison.
The famed composer died suddenly at age 53. The cause of his death, believed by some to be suicide, remains a mystery.
 
"Music’s triumphant power lies in the fact that it reveals to us beauties we find in no other sphere." 
Caution the cannons are loud and my cause dogs to park.