fbpx
Wikipedia

Emil Gilels

Emil Grigoryevich Gilels[a] (Russian: Эми́ль Григо́рьевич Ги́лельс; 19 October 1916 – 14 October 1985) was a Soviet[3] pianist. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest pianists of all time.[4][5]

His sister Elizaveta, three years his junior, was a renowned violinist. His daughter Elena became a successful pianist.

Early life and education edit

Gilels was born to a Jewish family on 19 October 1916 (6 October, Old Style) in Odessa (then part of the Russian Empire, and now Ukraine) to Gesya and Grigory Gilels. His father worked as a clerk in a sugar refinery.

 
Emil Gilels and his sister, the violinist Elizabeth.

Gilels had perfect pitch, and at the age of five-and-a-half, he began lessons with Yakov Tkach [ru], a famous piano pedagogue in Odessa.[6] A quick learner, he was playing all three volumes of Loeschhorn's studies within a few months, and soon afterwards Clementi and Mozart sonatinas. Gilels later credited this strict training with Tkach for establishing the foundation of his technique.[7] In turn, Tkach commented of Gilels, using a diminutive, "Milya Gilels possesses the abilities of one who is born solely for the purpose of becoming a pianist, and that with the required attention to his development, the USSR would in the future enrich itself with the acquisition of a world-renowned pianist."

 
Pianists Emil Gilels (left) and Yakov Flier who took first and third prizes respectively at the Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition in Brussels, Belgium. Pravda newspaper (Soviet Union). May 1938.

In May 1929, aged 12, Gilels gave his first public concert.[7] In 1929, Gilels was accepted to the Odessa Conservatory [ru] into the class of Bertha Reingbald [ru]. Under the tutelage of Reingbald, Gilels broadened his range of cultural interests, with a particular aptitude for history and literature. In 1932, Arthur Rubinstein visited the Odessa Conservatory and met Gilels, and the two of them remained friends through the remainder of Rubinstein's life.[4] Like Tkach, Reingbald carefully guided Gilels in terms of allowing him to give live concerts, and protected her student from excessive concert performances. He competed in the All-Soviet piano competition, despite being below the age limit to participate, but won a scholarship from the jury.

In 1932, Gilels first visited Heinrich Neuhaus. In 1933, Gilels participated in the First All-Union Competition of Performers in Moscow, and won first prize by unanimous decision. This win made Gilels famous throughout the USSR, and led to a nationwide concert tour. However, the stresses of touring led Gilels to curtail his touring and to return to Odessa, to conclude his studies, even declining an invitation to transfer to the Moscow Conservatory. Gilels subsequently regarded Reingbald as his true teacher, mentor and lifelong friend.

Gilels graduated from the Odessa Conservatory in the autumn of 1935. Subsequently, he was accepted into the class of Heinrich Neuhaus as a postgraduate student at the Moscow Conservatory, and Gilels renewed his commitment to giving concerts. In 1936, he participated in his first international competition, the International Vienna Music Academy Competition. Gilels took the second place award, while his friend and fellow student Yakov Flier was the first prize winner. Two years later, in 1938, both Gilels and Flier participated in the Ysaÿe International Festival (Queen Elisabeth Competition) in Brussels. Gilels was awarded first prize, and Flier took third prize. Gilels completed his studies in Moscow in 1938.

Career edit

Following his activities in Brussels, a scheduled tour and American debut at the 1939 New York World's Fair was aborted because of the outbreak of the Second World War. Sergei Rachmaninoff, living in exile from Russia, had heard of the reputation of Gilels, and began to listen to Gilels' radio performances. Rachmaninoff subsequently regarded Gilels as his pianistic successor, and sent him his medal and diploma. This medal, engraved with the profile of Anton Rubinstein, and the diploma were once presented to Rachmaninoff to symbolize his succession from Rubinstein, and Rachmaninoff himself added Gilels’ name to the document. Gilels treasured these relics all his life.[8]

In 1944, Gilels premiered Prokofiev's 8th Piano Sonata.[9] During World War II, Gilels entertained Soviet troops with morale-boosting open-air recitals on the frontline, of which film archive footage exists.[10] In 1945, he formed a chamber music trio with the violinist Leonid Kogan (his brother-in-law) and the cellist Mstislav Rostropovich. Gilels was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1946. After the war, he toured the Soviet Bloc countries of Eastern Europe as a soloist. He also gave two-piano recitals with Yakov Flier, as well as concerts with his violinist sister, Elizaveta. In 1952, he became a professor at the Moscow Conservatory, where his students included Valery Afanassiev, Irina Zaritskaya, Marina Goglidze-Mdivani, Irina Smorodinova [ru] (a Laureate of the International Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud piano competition in Paris), Igor Zhukov, Vladimir Blok and Felix Gottlieb [ru]. He was chair of the jury of the International Tchaikovsky Competition at the inaugural competition in 1958, which awarded first prize to Van Cliburn. He presided over the competition for many years.

Gilels was one of the first Soviet artists, along with David Oistrakh, allowed to travel and give concerts in the West. His American debut was in October 1955, with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Eugene Ormandy.[4] His British debut was in Coventry in 1951, where he performed alongside Igor Oistrakh, Galina Vischnevskaya, Mark Raizin and the composer Kabalevsky. In 1952 he played at the Royal Albert Hall.[11] Gilels made his Salzburg Festival debut in 1969 with a piano recital of Weber, Prokofiev and Beethoven at the Mozarteum, followed by a performance of Beethoven's Third Piano Concerto with George Szell and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.

In 1981, Gilels suffered a heart attack after a recital at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam and suffered declining health thereafter. He died unexpectedly during a medical checkup in Moscow on 14 October 1985, only a few days before his 69th birthday. Sviatoslav Richter, who knew Gilels well and was a fellow student in the class of Heinrich Neuhaus at the Moscow Conservatory, believed that Gilels was killed accidentally when a drug was wrongly injected during a routine checkup, at the Kremlin hospital.[12] However, Danish composer and writer Karl Aage Rasmussen, in his biography of Richter, denies this possibility and contends that it was just a false rumour.[13]

Gilels was married twice. He was first married to pianist Rosa Tamarkina in 1940. His second wife was Fariset (Lala) Hutsistova, a graduate of Moscow Conservatoire, whom he married in 1947. They had a daughter, Elena, a pianist who graduated from Flier’s class at the Moscow Conservatoire, and who performed and recorded with her father.

Recordings edit

Gilels is universally admired for his superb technical control and burnished tone.[14] Gilels had a repertoire ranging from baroque to late Romantic and 20th century classical composers. His interpretations of the central German-Austrian classics formed the core of his repertoire, in particular Beethoven, Brahms, and Schumann; but he was equally illuminative with Scarlatti and 20th-century composers such as Debussy, Rachmaninoff, and Prokofiev. His recordings of Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 9 and Sonata in B minor have acquired classic status in some circles.[15]

Gilels' recordings for most of his recording history were for the state record company for classical music repertoire, Melodiya. These recordings, in turn, were licensed in the west under EMI Records, and in the United States under Angel Records (and EMI's budget Seraphim Records). In 2013 Warner Classics absorbed EMI Classics, thereby acquiring the bulk of Gilels' recordings.

Gilels was in the midst of completing a recording cycle of Beethoven's piano sonatas for the German record company Deutsche Grammophon when he died unexpectedly in a hospital in Moscow.[16][17] His recording of the "Hammerklavier" Sonata received a Gramophone Award in 1984. Gilels recorded with his daughter, including Mozart's double piano concerto with Karl Böhm and the Vienna Philharmonic and Schubert's Fantasie in F minor for piano duet. He also made some chamber-music recordings with the violinist Leonid Kogan and the cellist Mstislav Rostropovich.

Notable recordings edit

Prizes, awards and honors edit

Soviet Union
Foreign

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sometimes transliterated Hilels.[1][2]

References edit

  1. ^ Johnson, Hewlett (1941). The Soviet Power; the Socialist Sixth of the World. New York: International Publishers. p. 214. OCLC 407142.
  2. ^ U.S.S.R. Speaks for Itself Volume Three: Democracy in Practice. London: Lawrence & Wishart. 1941. p. 46. OCLC 13487651.
  3. ^ "The 20 Greatest Pianists of all time". Classical Music. Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  4. ^ a b c John Rockwell (1985-10-16). "Emil Gilels, Soviet Pianist, Dies at 68". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-01-10.
  5. ^ "The 10 Greatest Pianists Of All Time". Limelight Magazine. January 7, 2015. Retrieved October 20, 2017.
  6. ^ Carrick, Phil (2013-09-21). . Music Makers (ABC Classic FM). Archived from the original on 2015-01-26. Retrieved 2015-01-10.
  7. ^ a b Mach, Elyse (1980). Great Contemporary Pianists Speak for Themselves. Courier Corporation. ISBN 978-0-486-26695-4.
  8. ^ "Triumph in Brussels (1938 – 1941)". Emil Gilels Foundation. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  9. ^ Berman, Boris (2008). Prokofiev's Piano Sonatas: A Guide for the Listener and the Performer. Yale University Press. p. xii. ISBN 978-0-300-14500-7.
  10. ^ "Emil Gilels Plays", Russian television documentary, VHS release on Japanese label IVC, cat. no. IVCV-64144
  11. ^ "CalmView: Overview".
  12. ^ Monsaingeon, Bruno (2002). Sviatoslav Richter: Notebooks and Conversations. Translated by Spencer, Stewart. Princeton University Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-691-09549-3.
  13. ^ Rasmussen, Karl Aage (2010). Sviatoslav Richter: Pianist. University Press of New England. ISBN 978-1-55553-710-4.
  14. ^ "Emil Gilels", In Memory of Emil Gilels, 2007. Accessed June 3, 2007.
  15. ^ International Piano Quarterly, Winter 2001, Orpheus Publications Limited
  16. ^ Andrew Clements (2006-12-21). "Emil Gilels: The Early Recordings". The Guardian. Retrieved 2015-01-10.
  17. ^ John Rockwell (1985-10-16). "Emil Gilels, Soviet Pianist, Dies at 68". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  18. ^ "(2009) Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 3, Op. 37 (Live Recording, Lausanne 1970)". Claves Records. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  19. ^ J.O.C. . Gramophone Magazine. Archived from the original on 2009-07-10.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Emil Gilels: a Discography
  • Gramophone magazine (UK) page on Gilels

emil, gilels, emil, grigoryevich, gilels, russian, Эми, ль, Григо, рьевич, Ги, лельс, october, 1916, october, 1985, soviet, pianist, widely, regarded, greatest, pianists, time, sister, elizaveta, three, years, junior, renowned, violinist, daughter, elena, beca. Emil Grigoryevich Gilels a Russian Emi l Grigo revich Gi lels 19 October 1916 14 October 1985 was a Soviet 3 pianist He is widely regarded as one of the greatest pianists of all time 4 5 His sister Elizaveta three years his junior was a renowned violinist His daughter Elena became a successful pianist Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Recordings 3 1 Notable recordings 4 Prizes awards and honors 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and education editGilels was born to a Jewish family on 19 October 1916 6 October Old Style in Odessa then part of the Russian Empire and now Ukraine to Gesya and Grigory Gilels His father worked as a clerk in a sugar refinery nbsp Emil Gilels and his sister the violinist Elizabeth Gilels had perfect pitch and at the age of five and a half he began lessons with Yakov Tkach ru a famous piano pedagogue in Odessa 6 A quick learner he was playing all three volumes of Loeschhorn s studies within a few months and soon afterwards Clementi and Mozart sonatinas Gilels later credited this strict training with Tkach for establishing the foundation of his technique 7 In turn Tkach commented of Gilels using a diminutive Milya Gilels possesses the abilities of one who is born solely for the purpose of becoming a pianist and that with the required attention to his development the USSR would in the future enrich itself with the acquisition of a world renowned pianist nbsp Pianists Emil Gilels left and Yakov Flier who took first and third prizes respectively at the Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition in Brussels Belgium Pravda newspaper Soviet Union May 1938 In May 1929 aged 12 Gilels gave his first public concert 7 In 1929 Gilels was accepted to the Odessa Conservatory ru into the class of Bertha Reingbald ru Under the tutelage of Reingbald Gilels broadened his range of cultural interests with a particular aptitude for history and literature In 1932 Arthur Rubinstein visited the Odessa Conservatory and met Gilels and the two of them remained friends through the remainder of Rubinstein s life 4 Like Tkach Reingbald carefully guided Gilels in terms of allowing him to give live concerts and protected her student from excessive concert performances He competed in the All Soviet piano competition despite being below the age limit to participate but won a scholarship from the jury In 1932 Gilels first visited Heinrich Neuhaus In 1933 Gilels participated in the First All Union Competition of Performers in Moscow and won first prize by unanimous decision This win made Gilels famous throughout the USSR and led to a nationwide concert tour However the stresses of touring led Gilels to curtail his touring and to return to Odessa to conclude his studies even declining an invitation to transfer to the Moscow Conservatory Gilels subsequently regarded Reingbald as his true teacher mentor and lifelong friend Gilels graduated from the Odessa Conservatory in the autumn of 1935 Subsequently he was accepted into the class of Heinrich Neuhaus as a postgraduate student at the Moscow Conservatory and Gilels renewed his commitment to giving concerts In 1936 he participated in his first international competition the International Vienna Music Academy Competition Gilels took the second place award while his friend and fellow student Yakov Flier was the first prize winner Two years later in 1938 both Gilels and Flier participated in the Ysaye International Festival Queen Elisabeth Competition in Brussels Gilels was awarded first prize and Flier took third prize Gilels completed his studies in Moscow in 1938 Career editFollowing his activities in Brussels a scheduled tour and American debut at the 1939 New York World s Fair was aborted because of the outbreak of the Second World War Sergei Rachmaninoff living in exile from Russia had heard of the reputation of Gilels and began to listen to Gilels radio performances Rachmaninoff subsequently regarded Gilels as his pianistic successor and sent him his medal and diploma This medal engraved with the profile of Anton Rubinstein and the diploma were once presented to Rachmaninoff to symbolize his succession from Rubinstein and Rachmaninoff himself added Gilels name to the document Gilels treasured these relics all his life 8 In 1944 Gilels premiered Prokofiev s 8th Piano Sonata 9 During World War II Gilels entertained Soviet troops with morale boosting open air recitals on the frontline of which film archive footage exists 10 In 1945 he formed a chamber music trio with the violinist Leonid Kogan his brother in law and the cellist Mstislav Rostropovich Gilels was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1946 After the war he toured the Soviet Bloc countries of Eastern Europe as a soloist He also gave two piano recitals with Yakov Flier as well as concerts with his violinist sister Elizaveta In 1952 he became a professor at the Moscow Conservatory where his students included Valery Afanassiev Irina Zaritskaya Marina Goglidze Mdivani Irina Smorodinova ru a Laureate of the International Marguerite Long Jacques Thibaud piano competition in Paris Igor Zhukov Vladimir Blok and Felix Gottlieb ru He was chair of the jury of the International Tchaikovsky Competition at the inaugural competition in 1958 which awarded first prize to Van Cliburn He presided over the competition for many years Gilels was one of the first Soviet artists along with David Oistrakh allowed to travel and give concerts in the West His American debut was in October 1955 with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Eugene Ormandy 4 His British debut was in Coventry in 1951 where he performed alongside Igor Oistrakh Galina Vischnevskaya Mark Raizin and the composer Kabalevsky In 1952 he played at the Royal Albert Hall 11 Gilels made his Salzburg Festival debut in 1969 with a piano recital of Weber Prokofiev and Beethoven at the Mozarteum followed by a performance of Beethoven s Third Piano Concerto with George Szell and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra In 1981 Gilels suffered a heart attack after a recital at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam and suffered declining health thereafter He died unexpectedly during a medical checkup in Moscow on 14 October 1985 only a few days before his 69th birthday Sviatoslav Richter who knew Gilels well and was a fellow student in the class of Heinrich Neuhaus at the Moscow Conservatory believed that Gilels was killed accidentally when a drug was wrongly injected during a routine checkup at the Kremlin hospital 12 However Danish composer and writer Karl Aage Rasmussen in his biography of Richter denies this possibility and contends that it was just a false rumour 13 Gilels was married twice He was first married to pianist Rosa Tamarkina in 1940 His second wife was Fariset Lala Hutsistova a graduate of Moscow Conservatoire whom he married in 1947 They had a daughter Elena a pianist who graduated from Flier s class at the Moscow Conservatoire and who performed and recorded with her father Recordings editGilels is universally admired for his superb technical control and burnished tone 14 Gilels had a repertoire ranging from baroque to late Romantic and 20th century classical composers His interpretations of the central German Austrian classics formed the core of his repertoire in particular Beethoven Brahms and Schumann but he was equally illuminative with Scarlatti and 20th century composers such as Debussy Rachmaninoff and Prokofiev His recordings of Liszt s Hungarian Rhapsody No 9 and Sonata in B minor have acquired classic status in some circles 15 Gilels recordings for most of his recording history were for the state record company for classical music repertoire Melodiya These recordings in turn were licensed in the west under EMI Records and in the United States under Angel Records and EMI s budget Seraphim Records In 2013 Warner Classics absorbed EMI Classics thereby acquiring the bulk of Gilels recordings Gilels was in the midst of completing a recording cycle of Beethoven s piano sonatas for the German record company Deutsche Grammophon when he died unexpectedly in a hospital in Moscow 16 17 His recording of the Hammerklavier Sonata received a Gramophone Award in 1984 Gilels recorded with his daughter including Mozart s double piano concerto with Karl Bohm and the Vienna Philharmonic and Schubert s Fantasie in F minor for piano duet He also made some chamber music recordings with the violinist Leonid Kogan and the cellist Mstislav Rostropovich Notable recordings edit 1935 Liszt Fantasia on Themes from Mozart s Marriage of Figaro 1951 Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No 9 1954 Saint Saens Piano Concerto No 2 in G minor Op 22 cond Cluytens 1954 Medtner Piano Sonata No 5 in G Minor Op 22 1955 Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No 1 cond Fritz Reiner 1955 Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No 3 in D minor Op 30 cond Cluytens 1957 Beethoven Piano Concerto No 4 cond Ludwig 1957 Scriabin Piano Sonata No 4 in F sharp major Op 30 1957 Weinberg Piano Sonata No 4 in B Minor 1968 Beethoven Piano Concertos 1 5 solo piano pieces Beethoven Cleveland Orchestra cond George Szell 1958 Brahms Piano Concerto No 2 in B flat major Op 83 cond Reiner 1961 Bach Prelude in B minor BWV 855 arr Siloti Moscow 1968 Medtner Piano Sonata No 10 in A minor Op 38 No 1 Sonata Reminiscenza Moscow 1968 Liszt Rhapsodie espagnole Leningrad 1971 Brahms Piano Concerto No 2 in B flat major Op 83 cond Mario Rossi Koln 1970 Beethoven Piano Concerto No 3 in C Minor Op 37 Live Recording Lausanne Orchestre National de l ORTF Claves Records 18 1972 Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No 2 in G major Op 44 cond Maazel 1972 Brahms Piano Concerto No 1 in D minor Op 15 and Piano Concerto No 2 in B flat major Op 83 cond Jochum 1973 Beethoven Piano Sonata No 23 in F minor Op 57 Appassionata 1973 Debussy Images Book 1 1973 Mozart Piano Concerto No 27 in B flat major K595 cond Boehm 1974 Grieg Lyric Pieces 19 1974 Prokofiev Sonata No 3 in a minor Op 28 Koln 1974 Prokofiev Sonata No 8 in B flat major Op 84 1976 Schubert Forellenquintett Trout Quintet Quintet for Piano Violin Violoncello and Contrabass in A major D667 with Amadeus Quartet 1977 Rachmaninoff Prelude in C sharp minor Op 3 No 2 Moscow 1978 Chopin Piano Sonata No 3 in B minor Op 58 1979 Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No 1 New York 1982 Beethoven Piano Sonata No 29 in B flat major Op 106 Hammerklavier Berlin 1984 Beethoven Piano Sonata No 29 Moscow 1984 Scriabin Piano Sonata No 3 in F sharp minor Op 23 Moscow 1984 Schumann Symphonic Studies Live in concert in Japan 1985 Beethoven Piano Concerto No 5 in E flat Op 73Prizes awards and honors editThis section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available March 2019 Soviet Union 1st Prize All Soviet Union Piano Competition 1933 2nd Prize Vienna International Piano Competition 1936 1st Prize Concours Eugene Ysaye Brussels 1938 Stalin Prize USSR 1946 People s Artist of the USSR 1954 Three Orders of Lenin USSR including 1961 Lenin Prize 1962 Hero of Socialist Labour 1976 Order of the Red Banner of Labour Order of the Friendship of Peoples 1981 Order of the Badge of Honour Foreign Commandeur Ordre de Merite Culturel et Artistique de Paris fr 1967 Gold Medal of the City of Paris France Order of Leopold Belgium Honorary Member Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia Rome Honorary Member Royal Academy of Music London Honorary Professor Franz Liszt Academy of Music BudapestNotes edit Sometimes transliterated Hilels 1 2 References edit Johnson Hewlett 1941 The Soviet Power the Socialist Sixth of the World New York International Publishers p 214 OCLC 407142 U S S R Speaks for Itself Volume Three Democracy in Practice London Lawrence amp Wishart 1941 p 46 OCLC 13487651 The 20 Greatest Pianists of all time Classical Music Retrieved 2022 04 14 a b c John Rockwell 1985 10 16 Emil Gilels Soviet Pianist Dies at 68 The New York Times Retrieved 2015 01 10 The 10 Greatest Pianists Of All Time Limelight Magazine January 7 2015 Retrieved October 20 2017 Carrick Phil 2013 09 21 Emil Gilels A True Giant of the Keyboard Music Makers ABC Classic FM Archived from the original on 2015 01 26 Retrieved 2015 01 10 a b Mach Elyse 1980 Great Contemporary Pianists Speak for Themselves Courier Corporation ISBN 978 0 486 26695 4 Triumph in Brussels 1938 1941 Emil Gilels Foundation Retrieved 26 October 2020 Berman Boris 2008 Prokofiev s Piano Sonatas A Guide for the Listener and the Performer Yale University Press p xii ISBN 978 0 300 14500 7 Emil Gilels Plays Russian television documentary VHS release on Japanese label IVC cat no IVCV 64144 CalmView Overview Monsaingeon Bruno 2002 Sviatoslav Richter Notebooks and Conversations Translated by Spencer Stewart Princeton University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 691 09549 3 Rasmussen Karl Aage 2010 Sviatoslav Richter Pianist University Press of New England ISBN 978 1 55553 710 4 Emil Gilels In Memory of Emil Gilels 2007 Accessed June 3 2007 International Piano Quarterly Winter 2001 Orpheus Publications Limited Andrew Clements 2006 12 21 Emil Gilels The Early Recordings The Guardian Retrieved 2015 01 10 John Rockwell 1985 10 16 Emil Gilels Soviet Pianist Dies at 68 The New York Times Retrieved 2018 08 05 2009 Beethoven Piano Concerto No 3 Op 37 Live Recording Lausanne 1970 Claves Records Retrieved 2019 03 31 J O C Emil Gilels s searching recording of Grieg s Lyric Pieces Gramophone Magazine Archived from the original on 2009 07 10 External links editOfficial website nbsp Emil Gilels a Discography ICA Artists page on recording catalogue number ICAC 5108 Gramophone magazine UK page on Gilels Portals nbsp Classical music nbsp Biography nbsp Russia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emil Gilels amp oldid 1215468539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.