Sergueï Taneïev Vidéos
compositeur russe (1856-1915)
Commémorations 2025 (Décès: Sergueï Taneïev)
- piano
- opéra, symphonie
- Empire russe
- compositeur ou compositrice de musique classique, musicologue, professeur ou professeure de musique, théoricien ou théoricienne de la musique, professeur ou professeure d'université, pianiste, écrivain ou écrivaine, compositeur ou compositrice
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2024-06-01
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Sergei Taneiev Natalia Iretskaya Pauline Viardot Fyodor Chaliapin Scriabin Mariinsky Theatre Covent Garden Scala 1875 1905 1915 1976
Oda Slobdskaya sings "Nocturne?" by Sergei Taneiev. Slobodskaya was born in Vilnius, then part of Russia, and studied with the formidable Natalia Iretskaya, herself a pupil of Pauline Viardot Garcia. She sang major roles in the Mariinsky theatre St Petersburg but after the Revolution and subsequent famine, she left Russia with Fyodor Chaliapin when he brought his own opera company to the west. She went on to sing major roles at Covent Garden, La Scala Milan and other major houses. She eventually married and settled in London where she enjoyed great success as both a concert and opera singer. She continued to give entertaining recitals of Russian songs well into her seventies and was a witty and characterful narrator of Peter and the Wolf. If you can post a synopsis or translation it would be most welcome. Sergei Taneiev was born in1856 and graduated from the Moscow Conservtory in 1875, the first student in the history of the Conservatory to win the gold medal both for composition and for performing (piano). He was also the first person ever to be awarded the Conservatory's Great Gold Medal. In 1905, the revolution and its consequent effect on the Moscow Conservatory led Taneyev to resign from the staff there. He resumed his career as a concert pianist, both as soloist and chamber musician. He died in 1915 from pneumonia contracted whilst attending the funeral of Scriabin. Disclaimer- Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. If for any reason, you deem that a video appearing in this channel violates copyright, please inform us immediately before you submit a claim to YouTube and we will take care to remove it
Sergei Taneiev Natalia Iretskaya Pauline Viardot Fyodor Chaliapin Scriabin Mariinsky Theatre Covent Garden Scala 1875 1905 1915 1976
Oda Slobdskaya sings "My heart is beating" by Sergei Taneiev. Disclaimer- Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. If for any reason, you deem that a video appearing in this channel violates copyright, please inform us immediately before you submit a claim to YouTube and we will take care to remove it Slobodskaya was born in Vilnius, then part of Russia, and studied with the formidable Natalia Iretskaya, herself a pupil of Pauline Viardot Garcia. She sang major roles in the Mariinsky theatre St Petersburg but after the Revolution and subsequent famine, she left Russia with Fyodor Chaliapin when he brought his own opera company to the west. She went on to sing major roles at Covent Garden, La Scala Milan and other major houses. She eventually married and settled in London where she enjoyed great success as both a concert and opera singer. She continued to give entertaining recitals of Russian songs well into her seventies and was a witty and characterful narrator of Peter and the Wolf. The photograph of the statuette is reproduced by kind permission of stuartliff If you can post a synopsis or translation it would be most welcome. Sergei Taneiev was born in1856 and graduated from the Moscow Conservtory in 1875, the first student in the history of the Conservatory to win the gold medal both for composition and for performing (piano). He was also the first person ever to be awarded the Conservatory's Great Gold Medal. In 1905, the revolution and its consequent effect on the Moscow Conservatory led Taneyev to resign from the staff there. He resumed his career as a concert pianist, both as soloist and chamber musician. He died in 1915 from pneumonia contracted whilst attending the funeral of Scriabin.
Tchaikovsky Taneyev Kotaro Fukuma 2019
Tchaikovsky : Waltz of the Flowers from "The Nutcracker" (Valse des Fleurs, extrait de Casse-Noisette) piano transcription by Taneyev (additional arrangement by Fukuma) recorded at Kitakami Sakura hall, Iwate on December 21, 2019 piano : Fazioli F278 "Michelangelo" チャイコフスキー:『くるみ割り人形』より『花のワルツ』タニェーエフ編曲(追加アレンジ:福間) 2019年12月21日北上市文化交流センター・さくらホールにて録音 2019 Kotaro Fukuma ___________________ ︎ Instagram (http•••) ︎ Twitter (http•••) ︎ Facebook (English & 日本語) (http•••) ︎ メール配信登録はこちら↓ (http•••) ︎ Subscription of newsletter (EN, FR or DE) (http•••) ___________________
Pyotr Il Yich Tchaikovsky Bona Taneyev 1812 1862 1865 1893
Concerto No.3, Op.75, Op.56 The Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 3 is rarely heard, though it is a finely crafted work worth greater attention. It has suffered alongside the magnificent and superior Second and the ever-popular First. Moreover, it is not a bona fide concerto at all, the composer having completed only the first movement before his sudden death in 1893. Contrary to the suggestion of a few, it is highly unlikely he intended to produce a one-movement concerto. Tchaikovsky wrote two other piano pieces the same year bearing the titles "Andante" and "Finale," respectively. Following his death, Taneyev orchestrated these and attached them to the Concerto, though Tchaikovsky had left no indication they were to be a part of it. But the pair did share something in common with the completed first movement: a theme source—the incomplete Symphony No. 7. Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky was a Russian composer of the Romantic era. His wide-ranging output includes symphonies, operas, ballets, instrumental, chamber music and songs. He wrote some of the most popular concert and theatrical music in the classical repertoire, including the ballets Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty and The Nutcracker, the 1812 Overture, his First Piano Concerto, his last three numbered symphonies, and the opera Eugene Onegin. Born into a middle-class family, Tchaikovsky was educated for a career as a civil servant, despite his obvious musical precocity. He pursued a musical career against the wishes of his family, entering the Saint Petersburg Conservatory in 1862 and graduating in 1865. This formal, Western-oriented training set him apart from the contemporary nationalistic movement embodied by the influential group of young Russian composers known as The Five, with whom Tchaikovsky's professional relationship was mixed.
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