Composers

Nikolay Sokolov

Piano
Voice
Cello
Violin
Viola
Men's chorus
Orchestra
Female chorus
Boys' choir
String ensemble
Song
Romance
Secular choruses
Choruses
Melody
Quartet
Serenade
Duet
Divertimento
Incidental music
by popularity

#

2 Choruses for Male Voices, Op.62 Choruses, Op.122 Choruses, Op.82 Romances in Old Style, Op.273 Mélodies, Op.103 Mélodies, Op.393 Romances after Fet, Op.285 Choruses for Male Voices, Op.155 Mélodies after Richepin, Op.305 Mélodies, Op.325 Mélodies, Op.96 Duets, Op.336 Romances, Op.417 Mélodies, Op.319 Romances, Op.43

D

Divertissement, Op.42Do not Attract Me

F

Final Chorus from Tolstoy’s Don Juan, Op.5

M

Mélodie, Op.16Music for Shakespeare's 'The Winter's Tale', Op.44

N

Nocturne

R

Romance for Cello, Op.19

S

Serenade for Strings No.2, Op.23Sérénade, Op.3String Quartet No.1, Op.7String Quartet No.2, Op.14String Quartet No.3, Op.20String Trio, Op.45

V

Variations for Piano, Op.25
Wikipedia
Nikolay Alexandrovich Sokolov (Russian: Никола́й Алекса́ндрович Соколо́в; 26 March [O.S. 14 March] 1859 – 27 March 1922) was a Russian composer of classical music and a member of the circle that grew around the publisher Mitrofan Belyayev.
Sokolov was born in Saint Petersburg in 1859. A student of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, he taught Alexander Tcherepnin, Dmitri Shostakovich and Yuri Shaporin at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory.
He was the posthumous dedicatee of Shostakovich's Theme and Variations in B-flat major for orchestra, Op. 3.
Sokolov's recorded works include his contributions to several collaborative projects of the "Belyayev circle", including the set of character pieces for string quartet known as Les Vendredis as well as a set of variations for piano and orchestra on a Russian theme.
Other works include a Quintet, Op. 3, also arranged for string orchestra as a serenade; final chorus from Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy's Don Juan, Op. 5; choruses for women's voices, Op. 12 (published 1892); piano variations, Op. 25; Variations on a popular Russian theme for string quartet (published 1899). There are also three string quartets, in F major, A major and D minor, and a string trio in D minor, his Op. 45 (published in 1916). All of these were published by Belyayev's firm.
It is possible that, when Sergei Diaghilev was looking for a composer for The Firebird, Sokolov was considered before Igor Stravinsky was settled on.
He died in Petrograd in 1922, aged 63.
Davis-Beattie, Richard 'Beauty of Belaieff' p. 288-290 ISBN 978-1-905912-14-8