fbpx
Wikipedia

Moscow Conservatory

The Moscow Conservatory, also officially Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory (Russian: Московская государственная консерватория им. П. И. Чайковского, romanizedMoskovskaya gosudarstvennaya 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.

Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory
The Great Hall, the main performance auditorium
Established1866; 158 years ago (1866)
RectorProf. Alexander Sergeyevich Sokolov
Address13, Bolshaya Nikitskaya Street, Moscow, 125009
Location
Websitehttp://www.mosconsv.ru

History edit

Background edit

In 1766, the future site of the conservatory was bought by Princess Ekaterina Romanovna Dashkova (1743-1810), later president of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Russian Academy. The building was completed in the 1790s. Its author was Vasily Bazhenov, the design of the building was corrected by the hostess herself. Toward the end of her life, she spent winters here.

In 1810, the building was inherited by her nephew, Count Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov, a future war hero, participant in the Battle of Borodino, then governor of Novorossiya and Bessarabia, governor of the Caucasus. He was renting out the house. The house burned in 1812, rebuilt by 1824.[1]

Establishment of a conservatory edit

The idea of establishing a conservatory in Moscow was first suggested in 1819 by Friedrich Scholz, Kapellmeister of the Bolshoi Theater, but the idea was not supported. Eleven years later, in 1830, he managed to get permission to open at his home "free teaching of figured bass and composition". In 1860, Nikolai Rubinstein, together with Vasily Kologrivov, organized in Moscow musical classes of the Moscow branch of the Imperial Russian Musical Society. Rubinstein's co-founder was Prince Nikolai Petrovitch Troubetzkoy, chairman of the Moscow branch of the Russian Musical Society (1863-1876). Initially, the music classes were held in Rubinstein's apartment (who lived on Sadovaya Street, in Volotsky's house). First of all, classes in choral singing (Konstantin Albrecht) and elementary music theory (Eduard Langer, then Nikolai Rubinstein and Nikolay Kashkin) were organized. Since the fall of 1863, most of the classes moved to the new address of Rubinstein's residence (Myasnoy alley, house of Burkin). Solo singing (Bertha Walzek and Adolf Osberg) and playing various instruments began to be taught: violin (Karl Klamroth and Vasily Bezekirsky), piano (Nikolai Rubinstein, Eduard Langer and Nikolay Kashkin), cello (Karl Ezef), flute (Ferdinand Büchner), trumpet (Fyodor Richter). In 1864 the number of pupils exceeded two hundred, and the Russian Musical Society rented Voeikova's house on Mokhovaya Street, where Rubinstein's apartment was located. In 1866, teachers Ludwig Minkus (violin), Józef Wieniawski and Anton Door (piano), and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (elementary music theory) joined.[2]

In 1862, a conservatory was established in Saint Petersburg, and there was a need for a higher musical institution in Moscow. The report of the Russian Musical Society for 1863/1864 already mentioned a concert organized "for the benefit of the conservatory to be opened in Moscow"[3]

Conservatory in Moscow was co-founded in 1866 as the Moscow Imperial Conservatory by Nikolai Rubinstein and Prince Nikolai Troubetzkoy. The grand opening was held on September 1.[4] 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.

Conservatory edit

The highest permission for the opening of the Moscow Conservatory, at the request of the August Patroness of the Society, Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, followed on December 24, 1865. Pianist N.G. Rubinstein was approved as its director on February 6, 1866. Konstantin Albrecht was appointed inspector of the conservatory. By the day of the opening of the Conservatory a house was rented at the corner of Vozdvizhenka and the Arbatskie Gates passage, in the house of Baroness Cherkasova. The house has not survived; in 1941, during an air raid on Moscow, the building was destroyed by a bomb.[5] In 1871 the Moscow Conservatory rented Dashkova's house, and in 1878 bought it for 185 thousand rubles.

The Conservatory was financed by the income of the Russian Musical Society from concert activities, as well as city and government subsidies, donations from private individuals and tuition fees. The course of study at the conservatory took six years until 1879, then was increased to nine years. It covered both music classes (instrumental, vocal, orchestral, choral, opera, and theory) and general education. Until 1917, tuition was paid.

In the early years of the Conservatory, the level of requirements for admission to the Conservatory was by necessity very low. Only those who had studied earlier in the Music Society classes had some theoretical training. All others were required to begin music theory with an elementary course, in which everyone was enrolled regardless of proficiency in any instrument, mainly piano. In the first school year of 1866/1867, the professorial (senior) classes had 38 pupils on the piano; the junior classes (adjunct classes) had 43. In May, 1867, general examinations were held, on the basis of which the students were assigned to courses.[6]

In the early years of its activity the Conservatory was taught by professors: piano - Nikolai Rubinstein, Józef Wieniawski, C. F. Wilshau (adjunct), Anton Door, C. E. Weber (adjunct), Alexandre Dubuque, A. K. Zander (adjunct), Karl Klindworth (from 1868), Nikolay Kashkin, E. L. Langer (adjunct), L. F. Langer (from 1869), Nikolai Zverev (junior piano classes from 1870); solo singing - A. D. Alexandrova-Kochetova, B. O. Walzek, Vladimir Kashperov, A. R. Osberg, J. Galvani (from 1869); violin - Ferdinand Laub, Ludwig Minkus, Jan Hřímalý (from 1869 - adjunct, from 1874 - professor), G. Shradik (adjunct); cello - B. Kosman, Wilhelm Fitzenhagen (from 1870); double bass - G. F. Spekin; flute - F. F. Büchner; oboe - E. F. Meder; clarinet - W. Guth; French horn - M. Barthold, trumpet - F. B. Richter, bassoon - K. F. Ezer; history and theory of church singing in Russia - D. V. Razumovsky; music-theoretical subjects - Konstantin Albrecht, N. A. Hubert, Nikolay Kashkin, E. L. Langer, Herman Laroche, A. S. Razmadze; elementary music theory and harmony - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (since 1870 - instrumentation and free composition).[3]

In 1899 the Italian singer, composer and teacher U. A. Masetti was invited, who raised solo singing to the highest level, creatively combining the best of the Italian and Russian schools.

The building rented for the conservatory soon became insufficient due to the ever-increasing number of students. In the summer of 1877, Prince M. S. Vorontsov's house on Nikitskaya Street was finally acquired by the Moscow branch of the Russian Musical Society. This building met the educational needs of the Conservatory for fifteen years, but by the end of this period it had become cramped again, as the number of students had increased considerably (in the 1868-1869 school year there were 184 students, and in 1893-1894 there were already 430). In addition, the need for its own concert hall began to be felt. However, the old building was mortgaged to the Moscow City Credit Society, and a number of proposals were considered for the purchase of various plots of land in Moscow for construction. On November 27, 1893 it was decided to build a conservatory designed by academician of architecture V. P. Zagorsky on the site of Prince Vorontsov's house. In 1894, after the transfer of the Conservatory to temporary hired premises in the house of Prince Golitsyn on Volkhonka, the dismantling of the old building began, and on June 27, 1895 the solemn laying of the new building of the Conservatory took place. In 1898 the Conservatory already began its classes in new classrooms, and on October 25 of the same year the Small Hall was consecrated and opened. Works on the arrangement and decoration of the Great Hall were finished only by 1901, and on April 7, 1901 the grand opening of the hall took place.[7][a]

In 1932-1933, the three-storey building was built on the project of I. Y. Bondarenko. In 1983, the building of the Synodal School of Church Singing (former Kolychevy House, in the style of classicism, built in the late 18th century by an unknown architect of the school M. F. Kazakov; since 1925 it housed the law faculty of Moscow State University) was added to the conservatory, which was granted the status of the third academic building of the conservatory.

During the Soviet period, the Sunday Working Conservatory (1927-1933) and the Music Work Faculty (1929-1935) were organized to prepare the children of workers and peasants for admission to the Moscow Conservatory. For the admission of representatives of the Union republics extra-competitive (target) places were allocated annually. In 1931-1932, solving the «task of proletarianisation», Narkompros decided to rename the Moscow Conservatory into «Feliks Kon Higher Music School». In these years, attempts were made to simplify the curricula, «to bring them into agreement with the Marxist method». In late 1932, the former name and academic profile of the institution were restored.[8]

In 1935, the Military Conductor's Faculty was established on the basis of the Military Kapellmeister's Department of the Conservatory.[9][10] As of June 22, 1941, there were 30 students in the military faculty. In the 2000s, this faculty was transferred from the subordination of the Moscow Conservatory to the subordination of the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia, and then to the Military University of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation.

On May 7, 1940, by the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the Moscow Conservatory was named after P. I. Tchaikovsky and scholarships named after P. I. Tchaikovsky were established for especially gifted students of the Faculty of Composition.

In 1954 a monument to Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was unveiled in front of the Great Hall of the Conservatory.

On March 18, 1958, the First International Tchaikovsky Competition was opened at the Conservatory. Until 2019, in the years of this competition, the Conservatory's curricula were cut by one month for the comfortable preparation of participants and jury members: usually the main wave of the summer session took place from May 20 to the end of June, but in the years of the competition - from the end of April to June 5.

Choral faculty edit

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.

Halls edit

  • Great Hall (a renovation of the hall was completed in 2011)
  • Small Hall
  • Rachmaninov Hall (built in 1890)
  • Conference Hall
  • N.Y. Myaskovsky Concert Hall
  • The Oval and Exhibition Halls at the Rubinstein Museum

Some notable graduates edit

Notable current professors edit

 
The Moscow Conservatory in 1940

Conservatory directors and rectors edit

No. Years Rector
1 1866—1881 Nikolai Grigoryevich Rubinstein
2 1881—1883 Nikolai Albertovich Hubert
3 1883—1885 Konstantin Karlovich Albrecht
4 1885—1889 Sergey Ivanovich Taneyev
5 1889—1906 Vasily Ilyich Safonov
6 1906—1922 Mikhail Mikhailovich Ippolitov-Ivanov
7 1922—1924 Alexander Borisovich Goldenweiser
8 1924—1929 Konstantin Nikolayevich Igumnov
9 1929—1932 Boleslaw Stanislavovich Przybyszewski
10 1932—1934 Stanislav Teofilovich Shatsky
11 1935—1937 Heinrich Gustav Neuhaus
12 1937—1939 Valentina Nikolayevna Shatskaya
13 1939—1942 Alexander Borisovich Goldenweiser
14 1942—1948 Vissarion Yakovlevich Shebalin
15 1948—1974 Alexander Vasilyevich Sveshnikov
16 1974—1990 Boris Ivanovich Kulikov
17 1991—2000 Mikhail Alekseevich Ovchinnikov
18 2001—2004 Aleksandr Sergeyevich Sokolov
19 2004—2005 Vladimir Vladimirovich Sukhanov
20 2005―2009 Tigran Abramovich Alikhanov
21 since 2009 Aleksandr Sergeyevich Sokolov

Conservatory structure edit

At present, the Conservatory has the following faculties:[12]

  • vocal
  • conducting (Choral and Opera and Symphony Conducting Departments)
  • compositional
  • orchestral
  • piano
  • historical and contemporary performing arts
  • a number of interfaculty departments

The conservatory consists of:

  • S. I. Taneyev Scientific and Musical Library (one of the largest music libraries in the Russian Federation)
  • Sound recording laboratory ("phonotheque", since 1947)
  • Scientific and Publishing Center "Moscow Conservatory"
  • N.G. Rubinstein Museum
  • opera studio
  • postgraduate studies, assistantships and doctoral studies
  • Training and methodological center of practices with evening music school
  • Information and Computing Center

Scientific subdivisions (institutes) of the Conservatory:

  • Problem research laboratory
  • Church Music Research Center
  • Scientific Center of Folk Music named after Klyment Kvitka
  • Research Center for the Methodology of Historical Musicology
  • Scientific and Creative Center for Contemporary Music
  • Scientific and Creative Center "Musical Cultures of the World"

The Conservatory's staff consists of about 500 faculty members, 1,500 undergraduate and graduate students, and 500 technical and administrative staff.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Nicholas II allocated 100 thousand rubles for the completion of the Great Hall of the Conservatory at the request of his uncle, Konstantin Konstantinovich, who wrote to him: "...it would be a great happiness for the Russian Musical Society if, in memory of the days you spent in the ancient capital, a generous favor were granted to the Moscow Conservatory; the fact is that the construction of her new building on B. Nikitskaya is nearing completion and another 120,000 rubles are needed for the decoration of a large concert hall. This amount is so large that I hesitate to ask for its allocation from the State Treasury..."

References edit

  1. ^ "Moscow Conservatory". Retrieved 1 March 2024.
  2. ^ "Первое двадцатипятилетие Московской консерватории - Создание Московской консерватории". www.mosconsv.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 3 March 2024.
  3. ^ a b Moiseyev, Grigory; Gurevich, Eugenia; Pavlinova, Varvara (2012). Nikolaj Rubinštejn i ego vremja: k 150-letiju Moskovskoj Konservatorii ; [alʹbom] (in Russian). Moskva: Naučno-Izdat. Centr Moskovskaja Konservatorija. p. 120. ISBN 978-5-89598-279-2. Retrieved 3 March 2024.
  4. ^ "Московская государственная консерватория им. П.И. Чайковского". Культура.РФ (in Russian). Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  5. ^ Васькин, Александр (2009). От снесенного Военторга до сгоревшего Манежа. Спутник+. p. 167. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  6. ^ "Первое двадцатипятилетие Московской консерватории - 1866-1868 гг". www.mosconsv.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  7. ^ "Отчёт по постройке и торжественному открытию здания консерватории - Очерк постройки нового здания Московской консерватории". www.mosconsv.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  8. ^ Власова, Екатерина. "Российский музыкант » Конская школа". Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  9. ^ Пахомова, Мария. "Российский музыкант » «Основная миссия военных дирижеров – просветительство»". Российский музыкант. Retrieved 7 March 2024.
  10. ^ "Военно-дирижёрский факультет при Московской консерватории". Gufo. Retrieved 7 March 2024.
  11. ^ Levin, Neil M. Biography: Jacob Weinberg 1879–1956. Milken Archive. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
  12. ^ . 15 September 2008. Archived from the original on 15 September 2008. Retrieved 7 March 2024.
  • 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 edit

  • Moscow Conservatory website (in Russian)
  • Moscow Conservatory website (in English)

55°45′23″N 37°36′16″E / 55.75639°N 37.60444°E / 55.75639; 37.60444

moscow, conservatory, confused, with, music, college, also, officially, tchaikovsky, moscow, state, conservatory, russian, Московская, государственная, консерватория, им, Чайковского, romanized, moskovskaya, gosudarstvennaya, konservatoriya, chaykovskogo, musi. Not to be confused with Moscow Conservatory Music College The Moscow Conservatory also officially Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory Russian Moskovskaya gosudarstvennaya konservatoriya im P I Chajkovskogo romanized Moskovskaya gosudarstvennaya 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 Moscow State Tchaikovsky ConservatoryThe Great Hall the main performance auditoriumEstablished1866 158 years ago 1866 RectorProf Alexander Sergeyevich SokolovAddress13 Bolshaya Nikitskaya Street Moscow 125009LocationMoscowWebsitehttp www mosconsv ru Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Establishment of a conservatory 1 3 Conservatory 2 Choral faculty 3 Halls 4 Some notable graduates 5 Notable current professors 6 Conservatory directors and rectors 7 Conservatory structure 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory editBackground edit In 1766 the future site of the conservatory was bought by Princess Ekaterina Romanovna Dashkova 1743 1810 later president of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Russian Academy The building was completed in the 1790s Its author was Vasily Bazhenov the design of the building was corrected by the hostess herself Toward the end of her life she spent winters here In 1810 the building was inherited by her nephew Count Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov a future war hero participant in the Battle of Borodino then governor of Novorossiya and Bessarabia governor of the Caucasus He was renting out the house The house burned in 1812 rebuilt by 1824 1 Establishment of a conservatory edit The idea of establishing a conservatory in Moscow was first suggested in 1819 by Friedrich Scholz Kapellmeister of the Bolshoi Theater but the idea was not supported Eleven years later in 1830 he managed to get permission to open at his home free teaching of figured bass and composition In 1860 Nikolai Rubinstein together with Vasily Kologrivov organized in Moscow musical classes of the Moscow branch of the Imperial Russian Musical Society Rubinstein s co founder was Prince Nikolai Petrovitch Troubetzkoy chairman of the Moscow branch of the Russian Musical Society 1863 1876 Initially the music classes were held in Rubinstein s apartment who lived on Sadovaya Street in Volotsky s house First of all classes in choral singing Konstantin Albrecht and elementary music theory Eduard Langer then Nikolai Rubinstein and Nikolay Kashkin were organized Since the fall of 1863 most of the classes moved to the new address of Rubinstein s residence Myasnoy alley house of Burkin Solo singing Bertha Walzek and Adolf Osberg and playing various instruments began to be taught violin Karl Klamroth and Vasily Bezekirsky piano Nikolai Rubinstein Eduard Langer and Nikolay Kashkin cello Karl Ezef flute Ferdinand Buchner trumpet Fyodor Richter In 1864 the number of pupils exceeded two hundred and the Russian Musical Society rented Voeikova s house on Mokhovaya Street where Rubinstein s apartment was located In 1866 teachers Ludwig Minkus violin Jozef Wieniawski and Anton Door piano and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky elementary music theory joined 2 In 1862 a conservatory was established in Saint Petersburg and there was a need for a higher musical institution in Moscow The report of the Russian Musical Society for 1863 1864 already mentioned a concert organized for the benefit of the conservatory to be opened in Moscow 3 Conservatory in Moscow was co founded in 1866 as the Moscow Imperial Conservatory by Nikolai Rubinstein and Prince Nikolai Troubetzkoy The grand opening was held on September 1 4 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 Conservatory edit The highest permission for the opening of the Moscow Conservatory at the request of the August Patroness of the Society Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna followed on December 24 1865 Pianist N G Rubinstein was approved as its director on February 6 1866 Konstantin Albrecht was appointed inspector of the conservatory By the day of the opening of the Conservatory a house was rented at the corner of Vozdvizhenka and the Arbatskie Gates passage in the house of Baroness Cherkasova The house has not survived in 1941 during an air raid on Moscow the building was destroyed by a bomb 5 In 1871 the Moscow Conservatory rented Dashkova s house and in 1878 bought it for 185 thousand rubles The Conservatory was financed by the income of the Russian Musical Society from concert activities as well as city and government subsidies donations from private individuals and tuition fees The course of study at the conservatory took six years until 1879 then was increased to nine years It covered both music classes instrumental vocal orchestral choral opera and theory and general education Until 1917 tuition was paid In the early years of the Conservatory the level of requirements for admission to the Conservatory was by necessity very low Only those who had studied earlier in the Music Society classes had some theoretical training All others were required to begin music theory with an elementary course in which everyone was enrolled regardless of proficiency in any instrument mainly piano In the first school year of 1866 1867 the professorial senior classes had 38 pupils on the piano the junior classes adjunct classes had 43 In May 1867 general examinations were held on the basis of which the students were assigned to courses 6 In the early years of its activity the Conservatory was taught by professors piano Nikolai Rubinstein Jozef Wieniawski C F Wilshau adjunct Anton Door C E Weber adjunct Alexandre Dubuque A K Zander adjunct Karl Klindworth from 1868 Nikolay Kashkin E L Langer adjunct L F Langer from 1869 Nikolai Zverev junior piano classes from 1870 solo singing A D Alexandrova Kochetova B O Walzek Vladimir Kashperov A R Osberg J Galvani from 1869 violin Ferdinand Laub Ludwig Minkus Jan Hrimaly from 1869 adjunct from 1874 professor G Shradik adjunct cello B Kosman Wilhelm Fitzenhagen from 1870 double bass G F Spekin flute F F Buchner oboe E F Meder clarinet W Guth French horn M Barthold trumpet F B Richter bassoon K F Ezer history and theory of church singing in Russia D V Razumovsky music theoretical subjects Konstantin Albrecht N A Hubert Nikolay Kashkin E L Langer Herman Laroche A S Razmadze elementary music theory and harmony Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky since 1870 instrumentation and free composition 3 In 1899 the Italian singer composer and teacher U A Masetti was invited who raised solo singing to the highest level creatively combining the best of the Italian and Russian schools The building rented for the conservatory soon became insufficient due to the ever increasing number of students In the summer of 1877 Prince M S Vorontsov s house on Nikitskaya Street was finally acquired by the Moscow branch of the Russian Musical Society This building met the educational needs of the Conservatory for fifteen years but by the end of this period it had become cramped again as the number of students had increased considerably in the 1868 1869 school year there were 184 students and in 1893 1894 there were already 430 In addition the need for its own concert hall began to be felt However the old building was mortgaged to the Moscow City Credit Society and a number of proposals were considered for the purchase of various plots of land in Moscow for construction On November 27 1893 it was decided to build a conservatory designed by academician of architecture V P Zagorsky on the site of Prince Vorontsov s house In 1894 after the transfer of the Conservatory to temporary hired premises in the house of Prince Golitsyn on Volkhonka the dismantling of the old building began and on June 27 1895 the solemn laying of the new building of the Conservatory took place In 1898 the Conservatory already began its classes in new classrooms and on October 25 of the same year the Small Hall was consecrated and opened Works on the arrangement and decoration of the Great Hall were finished only by 1901 and on April 7 1901 the grand opening of the hall took place 7 a In 1932 1933 the three storey building was built on the project of I Y Bondarenko In 1983 the building of the Synodal School of Church Singing former Kolychevy House in the style of classicism built in the late 18th century by an unknown architect of the school M F Kazakov since 1925 it housed the law faculty of Moscow State University was added to the conservatory which was granted the status of the third academic building of the conservatory During the Soviet period the Sunday Working Conservatory 1927 1933 and the Music Work Faculty 1929 1935 were organized to prepare the children of workers and peasants for admission to the Moscow Conservatory For the admission of representatives of the Union republics extra competitive target places were allocated annually In 1931 1932 solving the task of proletarianisation Narkompros decided to rename the Moscow Conservatory into Feliks Kon Higher Music School In these years attempts were made to simplify the curricula to bring them into agreement with the Marxist method In late 1932 the former name and academic profile of the institution were restored 8 In 1935 the Military Conductor s Faculty was established on the basis of the Military Kapellmeister s Department of the Conservatory 9 10 As of June 22 1941 there were 30 students in the military faculty In the 2000s this faculty was transferred from the subordination of the Moscow Conservatory to the subordination of the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia and then to the Military University of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation On May 7 1940 by the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR the Moscow Conservatory was named after P I Tchaikovsky and scholarships named after P I Tchaikovsky were established for especially gifted students of the Faculty of Composition In 1954 a monument to Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was unveiled in front of the Great Hall of the Conservatory On March 18 1958 the First International Tchaikovsky Competition was opened at the Conservatory Until 2019 in the years of this competition the Conservatory s curricula were cut by one month for the comfortable preparation of participants and jury members usually the main wave of the summer session took place from May 20 to the end of June but in the years of the competition from the end of April to June 5 Choral faculty editPrior 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 Halls editGreat Hall a renovation of the hall was completed in 2011 Small Hall Rachmaninov Hall built in 1890 Conference Hall N Y Myaskovsky Concert Hall The Oval and Exhibition Halls at the Rubinstein MuseumSome notable graduates editValery 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 Stanislaw 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 Thai 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 Lhevinne pianist Rosina Lhevinne 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 Alvaro 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 Weglowska pianist Alexandre Naoumenko singer Anahit Nersesyan pianist Heinrich Neuhaus pianist Stanislav Neuhaus pianist Tatiana Nikolayeva pianist Dmitri Novgorodsky pianist 11 Lev Oborin pianist David Oistrakh violinist Alexander Osminin pianist Aleksandra Pakhmutova composer Dmitry Paperno pianist Georgs Pelecis Latvian composer and musicologist Nikolai Petrov 1943 2011 pianist Gregor Piatigorsky cellist Mikhail Pletnev pianist composer conductor Ivo Pogorelic 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 Sasa Vectomov cellist Alexander Veprik composer Anastasia Vedyakova violinist and composer Eliso Virsaladze pianist Oleg Volkov pianist Mikhail Voskresensky pianist Jacob Weinberg pianist and composer Cesk Zadeja Albanian composer Marina Yakhlakova pianist Irina Zaritskaya pianist Igor Zubkovsky cellistNotable current professors edit nbsp The Moscow Conservatory in 1940 Yuri Bashmet viola Andrei Diev piano Natalia Gutman cello Alexei Lubimov piano and historical keyboards Valery Popov bassoon Kirill Rodin cello Yuri Slesarev piano Eliso Virsaladze piano Irina Zhurina voiceConservatory directors and rectors editNo Years Rector 1 1866 1881 Nikolai Grigoryevich Rubinstein 2 1881 1883 Nikolai Albertovich Hubert 3 1883 1885 Konstantin Karlovich Albrecht 4 1885 1889 Sergey Ivanovich Taneyev 5 1889 1906 Vasily Ilyich Safonov 6 1906 1922 Mikhail Mikhailovich Ippolitov Ivanov 7 1922 1924 Alexander Borisovich Goldenweiser 8 1924 1929 Konstantin Nikolayevich Igumnov 9 1929 1932 Boleslaw Stanislavovich Przybyszewski 10 1932 1934 Stanislav Teofilovich Shatsky 11 1935 1937 Heinrich Gustav Neuhaus 12 1937 1939 Valentina Nikolayevna Shatskaya 13 1939 1942 Alexander Borisovich Goldenweiser 14 1942 1948 Vissarion Yakovlevich Shebalin 15 1948 1974 Alexander Vasilyevich Sveshnikov 16 1974 1990 Boris Ivanovich Kulikov 17 1991 2000 Mikhail Alekseevich Ovchinnikov 18 2001 2004 Aleksandr Sergeyevich Sokolov 19 2004 2005 Vladimir Vladimirovich Sukhanov 20 2005 2009 Tigran Abramovich Alikhanov 21 since 2009 Aleksandr Sergeyevich SokolovConservatory structure editAt present the Conservatory has the following faculties 12 vocal conducting Choral and Opera and Symphony Conducting Departments compositional orchestral piano historical and contemporary performing arts a number of interfaculty departments The conservatory consists of S I Taneyev Scientific and Musical Library one of the largest music libraries in the Russian Federation Sound recording laboratory phonotheque since 1947 Scientific and Publishing Center Moscow Conservatory N G Rubinstein Museum opera studio postgraduate studies assistantships and doctoral studies Training and methodological center of practices with evening music school Information and Computing Center Scientific subdivisions institutes of the Conservatory Problem research laboratory Church Music Research Center Scientific Center of Folk Music named after Klyment Kvitka Research Center for the Methodology of Historical Musicology Scientific and Creative Center for Contemporary Music Scientific and Creative Center Musical Cultures of the World The Conservatory s staff consists of about 500 faculty members 1 500 undergraduate and graduate students and 500 technical and administrative staff Notes edit Nicholas II allocated 100 thousand rubles for the completion of the Great Hall of the Conservatory at the request of his uncle Konstantin Konstantinovich who wrote to him it would be a great happiness for the Russian Musical Society if in memory of the days you spent in the ancient capital a generous favor were granted to the Moscow Conservatory the fact is that the construction of her new building on B Nikitskaya is nearing completion and another 120 000 rubles are needed for the decoration of a large concert hall This amount is so large that I hesitate to ask for its allocation from the State Treasury References edit Moscow Conservatory Retrieved 1 March 2024 Pervoe dvadcatipyatiletie Moskovskoj konservatorii Sozdanie Moskovskoj konservatorii www mosconsv ru in Russian Retrieved 3 March 2024 a b Moiseyev Grigory Gurevich Eugenia Pavlinova Varvara 2012 Nikolaj Rubinstejn i ego vremja k 150 letiju Moskovskoj Konservatorii alʹbom in Russian Moskva Naucno Izdat Centr Moskovskaja Konservatorija p 120 ISBN 978 5 89598 279 2 Retrieved 3 March 2024 Moskovskaya gosudarstvennaya konservatoriya im P I Chajkovskogo Kultura RF in Russian Retrieved 10 December 2020 Vaskin Aleksandr 2009 Ot snesennogo Voentorga do sgorevshego Manezha Sputnik p 167 Retrieved 6 March 2024 Pervoe dvadcatipyatiletie Moskovskoj konservatorii 1866 1868 gg www mosconsv ru in Russian Retrieved 6 March 2024 Otchyot po postrojke i torzhestvennomu otkrytiyu zdaniya konservatorii Ocherk postrojki novogo zdaniya Moskovskoj konservatorii www mosconsv ru in Russian Retrieved 6 March 2024 Vlasova Ekaterina Rossijskij muzykant Konskaya shkola Retrieved 6 March 2024 Pahomova Mariya Rossijskij muzykant Osnovnaya missiya voennyh dirizherov prosvetitelstvo Rossijskij muzykant Retrieved 7 March 2024 Voenno dirizhyorskij fakultet pri Moskovskoj konservatorii Gufo Retrieved 7 March 2024 Levin Neil M Biography Jacob Weinberg 1879 1956 Milken Archive Retrieved 29 August 2014 Faculties 15 September 2008 Archived from the original on 15 September 2008 Retrieved 7 March 2024 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 TribuneExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moscow Conservatory Moscow Conservatory website in Russian Moscow Conservatory website in English 55 45 23 N 37 36 16 E 55 75639 N 37 60444 E 55 75639 37 60444 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moscow Conservatory amp oldid 1218634049, 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.