Moscow Conservatory
The Moscow Conservatory, also officially Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory (Russian: Московская государственная консерватория им. П. И. Чайковского, romanized: Moskovskaya gosudarstbennaya konservatoriya im. P. I. Chaykovskogo) is a musical educational institution located in Moscow, Russia. It grants undergraduate and graduate degrees in musical performance and musical research. The conservatory offers various degrees including Bachelor of Music Performance, Master of Music and PhD in research.
History
It was co-founded in 1866 as the Moscow Imperial Conservatory by Nikolai Rubinstein and Prince Nikolai Troubetzkoy.[1] It is the second oldest conservatory in Russia after the Saint Petersburg Conservatory. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was appointed professor of theory and harmony at its opening. Since 1940, the centenary of his birth, the conservatory has borne his name.
Choral faculty
Prior to the October Revolution, the choral faculty of the conservatory was second to the Moscow Synodal School and Moscow Synodal Choir, but in 1919, both were closed and merged into the choral faculty. Some of the students now listed as being of the conservatory were in fact students of the Synodal School.
Great Hall
A renovation of the hall was completed in 2011.
Some notable graduates
- Valery Afanassiev (b. 1947) – pianist
- Nelly Akopian-Tamarina – pianist
- Ashot Ariyan (b. 1973) – composer and pianist
- Eduard Artemyev (1937-2022) – composer
- Vladimir Ashkenazy (b. 1937) – pianist, conductor
- Vladimir Bakaleinikov (1885-1953) – violist, composer, conductor
- Stanisław Barcewicz (1858-1929) – violinist
- Rudolf Barshai (1924-2010) – violist, conductor
- Dmitri Bashkirov (1931-2021) – pianist
- Yuri Bashmet (b. 1953) – violist, conductor
- Boris Berezovsky (b. 1969) – pianist
- Boris Berman (b. 1948) – pianist
- Lazar Berman (1930-2005) – pianist
- Pavel Berman (b. 1970) – violinist, conductor
- Vadim Borisovsky (1900-1972) – violist
- Anatoliy Brandukov (1859-1930) – cellist
- Alexander Chuhaldin (1892-1951)– violinist, conductor, composer
- Tish Daija (1926-2003) – Albanian composer
- Đặng Thái Sơn (b. 1958) – pianist
- Bella Davidovich (b. 1928) – pianist
- Nikolai Demidenko (b. 1955) – pianist
- Edison Denisov (1929-1996) – composer
- Vladimir Denissenkov (b. 1956) – accordionist
- Fyodor Druzhinin (1932-2007) – violist
- Youri Egorov (1954-1988) – pianist
- Samuil Feinberg (1890-1962) – pianist, composer
- Frank Fernandez (b. 1944) – pianist, composer
- Yakov Flier (1912-1977) – pianist
- Andrei Gavrilov (b. 1955) – pianist
- Misha Geller (1937-2007) – composer, violist
- Emil Gilels (1916-1985) – pianist
- Marina Goglidze-Mdivani (b. 1936) – pianist
- Alexei Gorokhov (1927-1999) – violinist, musicologist
- Vera Gornostayeva (1929-2015) – pianist
- Sofia Gubaidulina (b. 1931) – composer
- Maria Grinberg (1908-1978) – pianist
- Natalia Gutman (b. 1942) – cellist
- Rustem Hayroudinoff – pianist
- Andrej Hoteev (1946-2021) – pianist
- Waleed Howrani (b. 1948) – composer, pianist
- Rinat Ibragimov (1960-2020) – double bassist, conductor
- Valentina Igoshina (b. 1978) – pianist
- Konstantin Igumnov (1873-1948) – pianist
- Ilya Itin (b. 1967) – pianist
- Dmitry Kabalevsky (1904-1987) – composer, pianist
- Olga Kern (b. 1975) – pianist
- Aram Khachaturian (1903-1978) – composer
- Savvas Savva (b. 1957) - composer, pianist
- Yuri Kholopov (1932-2003) – musicologist
- Vladimir Khomyakov (b. 1984) – pianist
- Tikhon Khrennikov (1913-2007) – composer
- Igor Khudolei (1940-2001) – pianist
- Olga Kiun – pianist
- Pavel Klinichev – conductor
- Leonid Kogan (1924-1982) – violinist
- Pavel Kogan (b. 1952) – violinist, conductor
- Evgeni Koroliov (b. 1949) – pianist
- Serguei Kostiuchenko (b. 1965) – Belarusian conductor
- Ivan Kotov (1950-1985) – bassist
- Vladimir Krainev (1944-2011) – pianist
- Gidon Kremer (b. 1947) – violinist
- Eduard Kunz (b. 1980) – pianist
- Ina Lange (1846-1930) – pianist; later music historian and writer
- Elisabeth Leonskaja – pianist
- Josef Lhévinne – pianist
- Rosina Lhévinne – pianist
- Dong-Hyek Lim – pianist
- Alexei Lubimov – pianist
- Nikolai Lugansky – pianist
- Radu Lupu – pianist
- Anna Saulowna Lyuboshits – cellist
- Dmitry Malikov – pianist, composer, singer
- Anna Malikova – pianist
- Yevgeny Malinin – pianist
- Alexander Malofeev - pianist
- Álvaro Manzano (1955-2022) - Ecuadorian conductor
- Emanuil Manolov – pianist, flutist, conductor, composer
- Fuat Mansurov – conductor
- Denis Matsuev – pianist
- Nikolai Medtner – composer, pianist
- Victor Merzhanov – pianist
- Alexander Mogilevsky – violinist
- Roman Moiseyev – conductor
- Alexander Mosolov – pianist, composer
- Avni Mula – Albanian singer, composer
- Shoista Mullodzhanova – Shashmaqam singer
- Viktoria Mullova – violinist
- Sergey Musaelyan – pianist
- Lisa Nakazono-Węgłowska – pianist
- Alexandre Naoumenko – singer
- Anahit Nersesyan – pianist
- Heinrich Neuhaus – pianist
- Stanislav Neuhaus – pianist
- Tatiana Nikolayeva – pianist
- Dmitri Novgorodsky – pianist[2]
- Lev Oborin – pianist
- David Oistrakh – violinist
- Alexander Osminin − pianist
- Aleksandra Pakhmutova – composer
- Dmitry Paperno – pianist
- Georgs Pelēcis – Latvian composer and musicologist
- Nikolai Petrov (1943-2011) – pianist
- Gregor Piatigorsky – cellist
- Mikhail Pletnev – pianist, composer, conductor
- Ivo Pogorelić – pianist
- Viktoria Postnikova – pianist
- Mikhail Press – violinist
- Sergei Rachmaninoff – pianist, composer
- Sviatoslav Richter – pianist
- Mstislav Rostropovich – cellist and conductor
- Gennady Rozhdestvensky – conductor
- Nikolai Sachenko (b. 1977) – violinist
- Dilorom Saidaminova (b. 1943) - Uzbek composer
- Aram Satian – composer
- Alexander Scriabin – composer and pianist
- Rodion Shchedrin – composer and pianist
- Alfred Schnittke – composer
- Dmitry Shishkin (b. 1992) - pianist
- Leonid Sigal – violinist
- Valery Sigalevitch – pianist
- Tamriko Siprashvili – pianist
- Pyotr Slovtsov – tenor
- Galina Konstantinovna Smirnova - composer
- Viviana Sofronitsky – pianist
- Aleksandr Sokolov – Russian Minister of Culture
- Senya Son (b. 1951) – pianist, composer
- Alexei Soutchkov – pianist
- Vladimir Spivakov – violinist, conductor
- Steven Spooner – pianist
- Mykola Suk – pianist
- Yevgeny Svetlanov – conductor, pianist, composer
- Ivan Tasovac – pianist
- Marina Tchebourkina – organist, musicologist
- Viktor Tretiakov – violinist
- Anna Tsybuleva – pianist
- Ibrahim Tukiqi – Albanian singer
- Pava Turtygina - composer, pianist
- Mauricio Vallina – pianist
- Saša Večtomov – cellist
- Alexander Veprik – composer
- Anastasia Vedyakova - violinist and composer
- Eliso Virsaladze – pianist
- Oleg Volkov - pianist
- Mikhail Voskresensky – pianist
- Jacob Weinberg – pianist and composer
- Çesk Zadeja – Albanian composer
- Marina Yakhlakova – pianist
- Irina Zaritskaya – pianist
- Igor Zubkovsky – cellist
Notable current professors
- Yuri Bashmet – viola
- Andrei Diev – piano
- Andrei Eshpai – composition
- Natalia Gutman – cello
- Alexei Lubimov – piano and historical keyboards
- Valery Popov – bassoon
- Kirill Rodin – cello
- Natalia Shakhovskaya – cello
- Yuri Slesarev – piano
- Eliso Virsaladze – piano
- Irina Zhurina – voice
References
- "Московская государственная консерватория им. П.И. Чайковского". Культура.РФ (in Russian). Retrieved 10 December 2020.
- Levin, Neil M. Biography: Jacob Weinberg 1879–1956. Milken Archive. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
- The Moscow Conservatory. Information Booklet. Second Edition. Moscow, 2001. ISBN 5-89598-111-9.
- Moscow Conservatoire. Moscow, 1994. ISBN 5-86419-006-3.
- Moscow Conservatory: Traditions of Music Education, Art, and Science 1866–2006. Moscow: "Moskovskaya Konservatoriya" Publishing House, 2006.
- Loomis, George (18 April 2001), "Moscow's Great Hall Turns 100", International Herald Tribune
External links
- Moscow Conservatory website (in Russian)
- Moscow Conservatory website (in English)