Misplaced Pages

Leonid Nikolayev (pianist)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Leonid Vladimirovich Nikolayev) Russian composer and pianist
Leonid Vladimirovich Nikolayev
Леонид Владимирович Николаев
BornAugust 13, 1878
Kyiv
DiedOctober 11, 1942
Tashkent
Occupation(s)Pianist, composer, pedagogue
HonoursPeople's Artist of the RSFSR (1938)

Leonid Vladimirovich Nikolayev (Russian: Леони́д Влади́мирович Никола́ев, August 13, 1878 – October 11, 1942) was a Russian and Soviet pianist, composer and pedagogue. People's Artist of the RSFSR (1938).

Biography

Nikolayev was born in Kyiv in 1878. He studied at the Moscow Conservatory with Sergei Taneyev and Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov. For many years Nikolayev was a professor of piano at the Leningrad Conservatory, and was for a short and unsuccessful period director of the institution. His students at the Conservatory included Vladimir Sofronitsky, Maria Yudina, Dmitri Shostakovich, Vera Razumovskaya, Nathan Perelman, Wiktor Łabuński, Vera Vinogradova, Samary Savshinsky, Nadia Reisenberg, and Alexander Zakin.

He became close friends with Shostakovich, who "admired him as a first-class musician and a man of great wisdom and learning" and also said of him: "He trained not simply pianists, but in the first place thinking musicians. He didn't create a school in the specific sense of some single narrow professional direction. He shaped and nurtured a broad aesthetic trend in the sphere of pianistic art." Shostakovich's 1943 Piano Sonata No. 2 was dedicated to his former teacher.

Nikolayev was evacuated to Tashkent along with other musicians, after Germany invaded Russia in 1941, and died there in 1942.

His compositional output includes symphonic works, choral works, string quartets, and solo works for violin, cello, and piano.

Notes

  1. ^ Laurel Fay, Shostakovich: A Life p. 18
  2. The gramophone. C. Mackenzie. 1 January 2006. Retrieved 18 December 2011.
  3. Shostakovich, ed. Glikman, p.233

References

External links

Categories: