Mykola Pavlovych Dyletsky
Mykola Pavlovych Dyletsky | |
|---|---|
Дилецький Микола Павлович | |
| Born | c. 1630 probably Kyiv (Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth) |
| Died | |
| Occupations | choir director, composer, music theorist |
| Notable work | A Musical Grammar |
| Signature | |
Mykola Pavlovych Dyletsky, also Nikolai Pavlovich Diletsky (Ukrainian: Дилецький Микола Павлович, Russian: Николай Павлович Дилецкий), c. 1630–c. after 1680) was a choir director, music theorist, and composer born in the Kiev Voivodeship of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and active in the Tsardom of Russia. There is evidence he died in Moscow. Little information about his life is known. He was widely influential in late 17th-century Russia with his treatise on part song, A Musical Grammar, of which the earliest surviving version dates from 1677. Dyletsky's followers included the Russian composer Vasily Titov.