Philippe Depétris Vídeos
flautista
- flauta
- Francia
Última actualización
2024-05-21
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Bach Morozov Neumann Turovsky Mark Steinberg Steinberg Igor Oistrakh Oistrakh Régis Pasquier Pasquier Michael Frischenschlager Jeanne Lamon Augustin Dumay Weill Isaac Stern Alice Tully Fischer Sandoval Michel Legrand Maye Kent Nagano Alan Gilbert Karina Canellakis Leila Josefowicz Ilya Kaler Augustin Hadelich Mark Peskanov Daniel Rowland Maxwell Dorothy Delay Carnegie Hall Steinway Hall Alice Tully Hall Lincoln Center 2008 2012 2020
J.S. Bach - Sarabande, Partita No. 1 BWV 1002 Nikita Morozov, violin Recorded live @ The Empty Circle Space for Art, Music and Theater January 24, 2020 Recorded with two Neumann KM184 microphones, and two Lumix DMC FZ1000 cameras. (http•••) (http•••) ... Described by La Presse as a “violinist with genuine strength,” Nikita Morozov is a Grand Prize winner in competitions including the Festival du Royaume, Montreal Classical Music Festival, Sorel Music Festival, and the Canadian Music Competition. A quartet performance of his was praised by Allan Kozinn of The New York Times as ‘the best performance of the evening... This was a virtuosic performance, but it achieved the often elusive, typically Brahmsian goal of putting virtuosity at the service of bigger ideas, rather than celebrating it for its own sake.” Morozov studied the violin with the Turovsky family in Montreal for 16 years and completed his Bachelor of Music degree at the Université de Montréal in 2008, under the guidance of Eleonora Turovsky. He earned his Master of Music degree at The Juilliard School in 2012, having received the Naumburg and DePetris Scholarships, and studying with Lewis Kaplan and Joseph Lin. He later pursued a Doctor of Musical Arts degree at The Graduate Center (CUNY), where he studied with Rolf Schulte and Mark Steinberg. He has also worked with violinists Igor Oistrakh, Régis Pasquier, Rodney Friend, Mauricio Fuks, Michael Frischenschlager, Jeanne Lamon, and Augustin Dumay. Throughout his multi-faceted career, Morozov performed in halls including Weill, Zankel and Isaac Stern Auditorium (Carnegie Hall), Steinway Hall in NYC, Théâtre Maisonneuve at the Place-des-Arts in Montreal, Le Poisson Rouge in NYC, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art in NYC (MoMA), Alice Tully Hall and Avery Fischer Hall (Lincoln Center in NYC). He shared the stage with jazz/pop legends Arturo Sandoval, Michel Legrand, Marilyn Maye, Elaine Page, Ana Gabriel, Becky G, and Rita Moreno, as well as conductors Kent Nagano, Alan Gilbert, Karina Canellakis, and Emmanuel Villaume, violinists Leila Josefowicz, Ilya Kaler, Augustin Hadelich, Mark Peskanov, and Daniel Rowland, among others. Throughout his 18-year teaching career, Nikita Morozov helped countless musicians of all levels, always encouraging an open-minded, curious and warm-hearted approach. His fascination with the infinite potential of humankind inspired him to study thoroughly Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences Theory, Maxwell Maltz’s Psycho-Cybernetics, Neuro-Linguistic Programming, as well as the Feldenkrais Method. Morozov believes the music learning process to be one of holistic personal improvement, developing not only our musical talent, but also our interpersonal, creative, analytical and bodily-kinesthetic abilities. He teaches and lives by the words of the late Dorothy Delay: “The secret to concentration is enjoyment.” For bookings or lessons: •••@•••
Bach Morozov Neumann Turovsky Mark Steinberg Steinberg Igor Oistrakh Oistrakh Régis Pasquier Pasquier Michael Frischenschlager Jeanne Lamon Augustin Dumay Weill Isaac Stern Alice Tully Fischer Sandoval Michel Legrand Maye Kent Nagano Alan Gilbert Karina Canellakis Leila Josefowicz Ilya Kaler Augustin Hadelich Mark Peskanov Daniel Rowland Maxwell Dorothy Delay Carnegie Hall Steinway Hall Alice Tully Hall Lincoln Center 2008 2012 2020
J.S. Bach - Double I, Partita No. 1 BWV 1002 Nikita Morozov, violin Recorded live @ The Empty Circle Space for Art, Music and Theater January 24, 2020 Recorded with two Neumann KM184 microphones, and two Lumix DMC FZ1000 cameras. (http•••) (http•••) ... Described by La Presse as a “violinist with genuine strength,” Nikita Morozov is a Grand Prize winner in competitions including the Festival du Royaume, Montreal Classical Music Festival, Sorel Music Festival, and the Canadian Music Competition. A quartet performance of his was praised by Allan Kozinn of The New York Times as ‘the best performance of the evening... This was a virtuosic performance, but it achieved the often elusive, typically Brahmsian goal of putting virtuosity at the service of bigger ideas, rather than celebrating it for its own sake.” Morozov studied the violin with the Turovsky family in Montreal for 16 years and completed his Bachelor of Music degree at the Université de Montréal in 2008, under the guidance of Eleonora Turovsky. He earned his Master of Music degree at The Juilliard School in 2012, having received the Naumburg and DePetris Scholarships, and studying with Lewis Kaplan and Joseph Lin. He later pursued a Doctor of Musical Arts degree at The Graduate Center (CUNY), where he studied with Rolf Schulte and Mark Steinberg. He has also worked with violinists Igor Oistrakh, Régis Pasquier, Rodney Friend, Mauricio Fuks, Michael Frischenschlager, Jeanne Lamon, and Augustin Dumay. Throughout his multi-faceted career, Morozov performed in halls including Weill, Zankel and Isaac Stern Auditorium (Carnegie Hall), Steinway Hall in NYC, Théâtre Maisonneuve at the Place-des-Arts in Montreal, Le Poisson Rouge in NYC, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art in NYC (MoMA), Alice Tully Hall and Avery Fischer Hall (Lincoln Center in NYC). He shared the stage with jazz/pop legends Arturo Sandoval, Michel Legrand, Marilyn Maye, Elaine Page, Ana Gabriel, Becky G, and Rita Moreno, as well as conductors Kent Nagano, Alan Gilbert, Karina Canellakis, and Emmanuel Villaume, violinists Leila Josefowicz, Ilya Kaler, Augustin Hadelich, Mark Peskanov, and Daniel Rowland, among others. Throughout his 18-year teaching career, Nikita Morozov helped countless musicians of all levels, always encouraging an open-minded, curious and warm-hearted approach. His fascination with the infinite potential of humankind inspired him to study thoroughly Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences Theory, Maxwell Maltz’s Psycho-Cybernetics, Neuro-Linguistic Programming, as well as the Feldenkrais Method. Morozov believes the music learning process to be one of holistic personal improvement, developing not only our musical talent, but also our interpersonal, creative, analytical and bodily-kinesthetic abilities. He teaches and lives by the words of the late Dorothy Delay: “The secret to concentration is enjoyment.” For bookings or lessons: •••@•••
Bach Morozov Neumann Turovsky Schulte Steinberg Igor Oistrakh Oistrakh Régis Pasquier Pasquier Michael Frischenschlager Jeanne Lamon Augustin Dumay Weill Isaac Stern Alice Tully Fischer Sandoval Michel Legrand Maye Kent Nagano Alan Gilbert Karina Canellakis Leila Josefowicz Ilya Kaler Augustin Hadelich Mark Peskanov Maxwell Dorothy Delay Carnegie Hall Steinway Hall Alice Tully Hall Lincoln Center
J.S. Bach - Fuga, Sonata No.1 in G minor BWV 1001 Nikita Morozov, violin Recorded live @ The Empty Circle Space for Art, Music and Theater January 24, 2020 Recorded with two Neumann KM184 microphones, and two Lumix DMC FZ1000 cameras. (http•••) (http•••) ... Described by La Presse as a “violinist with genuine strength,” Nikita Morozov is a Grand Prize winner in competitions including the Festival du Royaume, Montreal Classical Music Festival, Sorel Music Festival, and the Canadian Music Competition. A quartet performance of his was praised by Allan Kozinn of The New York Times as ‘the best performance of the evening... This was a virtuosic performance, but it achieved the often elusive, typically Brahmsian goal of putting virtuosity at the service of bigger ideas, rather than celebrating it for its own sake.” Morozov studied the violin with the Turovsky family in Montreal for 16 years and completed his Bachelor of Music degree at the Université de Montréal in 2008, under the guidance of Eleonora Turovsky. He earned his Master of Music degree at The Juilliard School in 2012, having received the Naumburg and DePetris Scholarships, and studying with Lewis Kaplan and Joseph Lin. He later pursued a Doctor of Musical Arts degree at The Graduate Center (CUNY), where he studied with Rolf Schulte and Mark Steinberg. He has also worked with violinists Igor Oistrakh, Régis Pasquier, Rodney Friend, Mauricio Fuks, Michael Frischenschlager, Jeanne Lamon, and Augustin Dumay. Throughout his multi-faceted career, Morozov performed in halls including Weill, Zankel and Isaac Stern Auditorium (Carnegie Hall), Steinway Hall in NYC, Théâtre Maisonneuve at the Place-des-Arts in Montreal, Le Poisson Rouge in NYC, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art in NYC (MoMA), Alice Tully Hall and Avery Fischer Hall (Lincoln Center in NYC). He shared the stage with jazz/pop legends Arturo Sandoval, Michel Legrand, Marilyn Maye, Elaine Page, Ana Gabriel, Becky G, and Rita Moreno, as well as conductors Kent Nagano, Alan Gilbert, Karina Canellakis, and Emmanuel Villaume, violinists Leila Josefowicz, Ilya Kaler, Augustin Hadelich, Mark Peskanov, and Daniel Rowland, among others. Throughout his 18-year teaching career, Nikita Morozov helped countless musicians of all levels, always encouraging an open-minded, curious and warm-hearted approach. His fascination with the infinite potential of humankind inspired him to study thoroughly Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences Theory, Maxwell Maltz’s Psycho-Cybernetics, Neuro-Linguistic Programming, as well as the Feldenkrais Method. Morozov believes the music learning process to be one of holistic personal improvement, developing not only our musical talent, but also our interpersonal, creative, analytical and bodily-kinesthetic abilities. He teaches and lives by the words of the late Dorothy Delay: “The secret to concentration is enjoyment.” For bookings or lessons: •••@•••
Bach Morozov Neumann Turovsky Mark Steinberg Steinberg Igor Oistrakh Oistrakh Régis Pasquier Pasquier Michael Frischenschlager Jeanne Lamon Augustin Dumay Weill Isaac Stern Alice Tully Fischer Sandoval Michel Legrand Maye Kent Nagano Alan Gilbert Karina Canellakis Leila Josefowicz Ilya Kaler Augustin Hadelich Mark Peskanov Daniel Rowland Maxwell Dorothy Delay Carnegie Hall Steinway Hall Alice Tully Hall Lincoln Center 2008 2012 2020
J.S. Bach - Gigue, Partita No. 2 BWV 1004 Nikita Morozov, violin Recorded live @ The Empty Circle Space for Art, Music and Theater January 24, 2020 Recorded with two Neumann KM184 microphones, and two Lumix DMC FZ1000 cameras. (http•••) (http•••) ... Described by La Presse as a “violinist with genuine strength,” Nikita Morozov is a Grand Prize winner in competitions including the Festival du Royaume, Montreal Classical Music Festival, Sorel Music Festival, and the Canadian Music Competition. A quartet performance of his was praised by Allan Kozinn of The New York Times as ‘the best performance of the evening... This was a virtuosic performance, but it achieved the often elusive, typically Brahmsian goal of putting virtuosity at the service of bigger ideas, rather than celebrating it for its own sake.” Morozov studied the violin with the Turovsky family in Montreal for 16 years and completed his Bachelor of Music degree at the Université de Montréal in 2008, under the guidance of Eleonora Turovsky. He earned his Master of Music degree at The Juilliard School in 2012, having received the Naumburg and DePetris Scholarships, and studying with Lewis Kaplan and Joseph Lin. He later pursued a Doctor of Musical Arts degree at The Graduate Center (CUNY), where he studied with Rolf Schulte and Mark Steinberg. He has also worked with violinists Igor Oistrakh, Régis Pasquier, Rodney Friend, Mauricio Fuks, Michael Frischenschlager, Jeanne Lamon, and Augustin Dumay. Throughout his multi-faceted career, Morozov performed in halls including Weill, Zankel and Isaac Stern Auditorium (Carnegie Hall), Steinway Hall in NYC, Théâtre Maisonneuve at the Place-des-Arts in Montreal, Le Poisson Rouge in NYC, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art in NYC (MoMA), Alice Tully Hall and Avery Fischer Hall (Lincoln Center in NYC). He shared the stage with jazz/pop legends Arturo Sandoval, Michel Legrand, Marilyn Maye, Elaine Page, Ana Gabriel, Becky G, and Rita Moreno, as well as conductors Kent Nagano, Alan Gilbert, Karina Canellakis, and Emmanuel Villaume, violinists Leila Josefowicz, Ilya Kaler, Augustin Hadelich, Mark Peskanov, and Daniel Rowland, among others. Throughout his 18-year teaching career, Nikita Morozov helped countless musicians of all levels, always encouraging an open-minded, curious and warm-hearted approach. His fascination with the infinite potential of humankind inspired him to study thoroughly Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences Theory, Maxwell Maltz’s Psycho-Cybernetics, Neuro-Linguistic Programming, as well as the Feldenkrais Method. Morozov believes the music learning process to be one of holistic personal improvement, developing not only our musical talent, but also our interpersonal, creative, analytical and bodily-kinesthetic abilities. He teaches and lives by the words of the late Dorothy Delay: “The secret to concentration is enjoyment.” For bookings or lessons: •••@•••
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- cronología: Intérpretes (Europa).
- Índices (por orden alfabético): D...