Pavel Serebryakov Video
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2024-04-30
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Frédéric Chopin Pavel Serebryakov 1901 1938 1939 1944 1945 1949 1961 1977
Paweł Serebrjakow, Fortepian - Sonata b-moll Nr 2, Marsz żałobny (The Funeral March from Piano Sonata No. 2 in B minor, Op. 35 by Frédéric Chopin), part 1,2, Muza (Polish) 1949 NOTE: This upload is dedicated to the 73rd anniversary of the outbreak of the heroic August 1944 Uprising in Warsaw +••.••(...)4). The Warsaw Uprising was militarily targeted against the Germans, politically against the approaching USSR Red Army as well as the pro-Soviet Vth column operating on the area of the Germany-occupied Poland during the 2nd WW. The Polish Underground Army (Armia Krajowa) was planning to liberate the capital before the Red Army entered, hoping that it would strengthen the international position of the Polish government in exile and stop Stalin's process of vassalisation and sovietization of Poland. Therefore, as soon as the Uprisaing outbroke, the Red Army halted the Warsaw offensive, and the Soviet dictator consistently refused to give more serious help to the struggling Polish capital city. Support provided by U.S. and Great Britain to insurgents was limited in character and did not significantly affect the situation in Warsaw. As a result, the weakly armed insurgent troops for 63 days fought a lone struggle against the overwhelming German forces, and capitulated on October 3, 1944. During two months of fighting the losses of Polish troops amounted to about 16,000, missing and taken captive 20,000, injured 15,000. As a result of raids, artillery fire, heavy living conditions and massacres organized by German troops allied with the Ukrainian, Latvijan and Dutch SS-troops up to 200 000 civilian residents of the capital city were mass-murdered, sometimes in ubelievably cruel way: burnt alive in the apartment houses, buried alive in the tumbling buildings, torn apart by the explosives thrown into the city canals, which were used to evacuate the women, children and disabled from the burning districts of the city. Over 600 000 civilians were expelled from the city to the concentration camps outside of town, after the collapse of the uprising. As a result of the insurrectionary struggles and the systematic demolition of the city, the Germans destroyed 95 % of Warsaw's material structuree, including hundreds of priceless monuments and objects of great cultural and spiritual value. The enormous pile of rumble - into which was turned the once lively metropolitan city, called before 1939 the Paris of the East - was continously and furiously demolished on and on by the Germans, no matter the whole city was already left behind by its inhabitants and less than 5 % of houses were still available for dwelling... It was "furror teutonicus"in its purest form... The Warsaw Uprising is considered one of the most important events in the history of Poland. Due to the scale of its tragic consequences, it finds no comparison in the modern European history either. The barbarism of the Germans, Soviets as well as collaborating Ukrainian and other nations’ forces, who during the Warsaw Uprising unloaded their unimaginable cruelty and hatred on the Polish capital and its inhabitants, has forever stained their history with disgrace. Interestingly: the German and Soviet war reparations - paid only partly, and only by Germany after 1945 to several nations - have never been paid to Poland. Paweł SIERIEBRIAKOW (Pavel Serebryakov, b.1901 in Trasitsin, Russia – d.1977 in St. Petersburg, then: Leningrad in USSR) – Russian piano virtuoso, professor and rector in the Leningrad Conservatory between 1938-51, and 1961-77). In 1949 he was invited to the jury of the world-famous Polish Chopin Piano Contest in Warsaw (- it was first such competition held again in Poland after the end of the 2nd WW). During his stay in Poland, Serebryakov cut several sides for the Polish phonograph company Muza.
Сергей Васильевич Рахманинов Pavel Serebryakov Mstislav Rostropovich 1873 1909 1926 1927 1943 1977 2007
MIKHAIL VAIMAN / МИХАИЛ ИЗРАИЛЕВИЧ ВАЙМАН, violin (3/12/1926 - 28/11/1977) MSTISLAV ROSTROPOVICH / МСТИСЛАВ ЛЕОПОЛЬДОВИЧ РОСТРОПОВИЧ, cello (27/03/1927 - 27/04/2007) PAVEL SEREBRYAKOV / ПАВЕЛ АЛЕКСЕЕВИЧ СЕРЕБРЯКОВ, piano (28/02/1909 - 17/08/1977) SERGEI RACHMANINOV / СЕРГЕЙ ВАСИЛЬЕВИЧ РАХМАНИНОВ (1/04/1873 - 28/03/1943) PIANO TRIO ELEGIAQUE No.2, Op.9 I. Moderato - Allegro vivace [19' 00''] II. Quasi variazione - Andante [38' 08'] III. Allegro risoluto - Moderato
Music Biennale Zagreb Concertgebouw Gewandhaus Musikverein Pleyel Hall Salzburger Festspiele Festival Lucerne Carnegie Hall Saulius Sondeckis Serebryakov Kondrashin Jansons Mägi Holstein Bach Mozart Lutoslawsky Bergman Crumb Wohlgemuth Vasks Rääts Kangro Kutavicius Gavrilin Pleyel Ivo Pogorelich Herbert Karajan Yehudi Menuhin Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra 1960 1968 1989 1990
Live from Music Biennale Zagreb, Croatia, 1989 The Riga Piano Duo - Nora Novik and Raffi Kharajanyan . Conductor - Saulius Sondeckis. The Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra The piano duo of St. Peterburg conservatoire's graduated (prof. P. Serebryakov's class) Nora Novik and Raffi Kharajanyan is striking example of mastership of co-submitting in art when two splendid musicians with bright but different individualities compound unite and unique ensemble. „To blow up an audience emotionally" - that is the private motto of the duo. Nora and Raffi are playing together since 1968. They gave over 1000 recitals (in Germany, Italy, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Russia, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Chekho-Slovakia, Korea, Zwitzerland, Yugoslavia, Taiwan etc.) and performanced concerts with well-known conductors (K. Kondrashin, S. Sondeckis, A. Ameller, K. Goleminov, A. Jansons, P. Mägi and others). The duo had several invitations to music festivals in Moscow, St. Peterburg, Helsinki, Zagreb, Budapest, Varna, Vilnius, Pyonyang, Schleswig-Holstein etc. 15 records and over 20 editions were made by this Duo- Their repertoire: from J. S. Bach and W. A Mozart up to W. Lutoslawsky, E. Bergman, J. Cage, G. Crumb. Some programs are specially devoted to children audience. Composers as P. Hellawell (England), T. Buchholz, G. Wohlgemuth (Germany), P. Vasks (Latvia), J. Rääts, R. Kangro (Estonia), B. Kutavicius, O. Balakauskas (Lithuania), J. Butcko, V. Gavrilin (Russia), A. Arutjunyan (Armenia), N. Stoikov (Bulgaria) cooperate with the duo often. Beside the concert activity the pianists are teaching at Riga Music Academy. From 1990 the pianists are co-presidents of piano duo Assotiation. R. Kharajanyan is president of Assotiation of People's Cultural Societes of Latvia. Conductor - Saulius Sondeckis .Over the 50 years of his career as a conductor, he has given over 3,000 concerts in almost all European countries, the USA, Japan, Cuba, Canada, Taiwan and South Korea. He has been welcomed by audiences at many famous concert halls, such as Amsterdams Concertgebouw, Berlins Grand Philharmonic Hall, Leipzigs Gewandhaus, Viennas Musikverein and Paris Pleyel Hall, and festivals, including the Salzburger Festspiele, the Schleswig-Holstein Festival, the Echternach Festival, the Lucerne Festival, the Ivo Pogorelich Festival in Bad Wörishofen, the Stockholm Royal Festival, and Svyatoslav Richters December Musical Evenings festival in Moscow. The Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra is based in Vilnus, having been formed in the 1960's by Saulius Sondeckis. The young group was shortly to receive the Herbert von Karajan Gold Medal, which embarked them on an international career. Visits to the Berlin Philharmonie, London's Festival Hall and the Carnegie Hall in New York confirmed their status as an outstanding ensemble. Since then they have made many tours, more recently associated with Yehudi Menuhin, who became their enthusiastic conductor and champion. They have made a number of recordings and are frequently in radio studios. Chernobyl disaster released as much as 400 times the radioactive contamination of the Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Pavel Serebryakov Goltz 1935 1970
From 24 Preludes, op. 2 (1935): № 1 № 4 (1:15) № 12 (4:37) № 14 (6:39) Rec. 1970
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- cronologia: Interpreti (Europa).
- Indici (per ordine alfabetico): S...