Yrjö Ikonen Vidéos
acteur ou actrice, artiste lyrique
- basse
- Finlande
Dernière mise à jour
2024-05-15
Actualiser
Paul Juon Holder Jan Hřímalý Anton Arensky Sergei Taneyev Woldemar Bargiel Heymann Nikos Skalkottas Pancho Vladigerov Philipp Jarnach Heinrich Kaminski Ikonen Trapp Heino Kaski Yrjö Kilpinen Wilhelm Guttmann Stefan Wolpe Nicolas Nabokov Hegner Stadtorchester Winterthur 1872 1874 1889 1894 1896 1911 1912 1928 1934 1940
It is my express wish that any and all financial compensation that may be my due from this video presentation be instead directed towards all holders of copyright. Should a change in copyright holder or status necessitate its removal, I hereby ask only for immediate notification prior to the filing of a potentially deleterious claim with YouTube, and I will not hesitate to delete it as swiftly as possible. Paul Juon +••.••(...)) Violin Concerto No. 2 in A Major, Op. 49 I. Allegro moderato 0:00 II. Elegie "Weisse Nächte": Andantino 11:47 III. Allegro non troppo 20:58 Sybille Tschopp, violin Stadtorchester Winterthur Nicholas Carthey, conductor Paul Juon (1872 – 1940) was a Russian-born Swiss composer. He was born in Moscow, where his father was an insurance official. His parents were Swiss, and he went to a German Primary school in Moscow. He entered the Moscow Conservatory in 1889, where he studied violin with Jan Hřímalý and composition with Anton Arensky and Sergei Taneyev. He completed his studies at the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin, under Woldemar Bargiel. His first (privately) printed works, two Romanzen (lieder) appeared in 1894, the year he began studies with Bargiel. During his time in Berlin he was a composition professor, employed by Joseph Joachim; his students included Hans Chemin-Petit, Werner Richard Heymann, Nikos Skalkottas, Henry Jolles, Pancho Vladigerov, Philipp Jarnach, Heinrich Kaminski, Lauri Ikonen, Max Trapp, Heino Kaski, Yrjö Kilpinen, Gerhart von Westerman, Hans Moltkau, Giannis Konstantinidis, Wilhelm Guttmann, Stefan Wolpe, Nicolas Nabokov and Gunnar Johansen. He retired to Switzerland in 1934, and died in Vevey. He was twice married: He married his first wife in Katharina Schalchalova, married in 1896, and had three children: Ina, Aja, Ralf. Katharina died in 1911. In 1912, he married to Marie Hegner-Günthert (called Armande) and together they also had three children: Stella, Irsa and Rémi. He dedicated his Mysterien, Op 59 to Armande in 1928. His younger brother was the painter Konstantin Yuon.
Pas plus ?
Tous les jours, soclassiq cherche de nouveaux articles, vidéos, concerts, etc. sur la musique classique et l'opéra, leurs artistes, leurs lieux de concert, leurs orchestres....
Yrjö Ikonen ? Nous n'avons pas encore rassemblé beaucoup de contenu sur ce sujet, mais nous continuons à chercher.
ou
- chronologie: Artistes lyriques (Europe).
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): I...