Zurab Andjaparidze News
Georgian tenor
- tenor
- Soviet Union, Georgia
- opera singer
Last update
2024-03-28
Refresh
2020-09-28 14:19:31
[…] “thinking” musician. She was also born on October 1st, in 1929, in Moscow. She studied with Heinrich Neuhaus at the Moscow Conservatory and then taught there for 50 years. One of her pupils, Vassily Primakov, was instrumental in publishing Gornostayeva’s CDs and bringing her art to the attention of the American public. She became a favorite of the listeners of WFMT, a Chicago classical music station. Gornostayeva had many students, among them Alexander Slobodyanik, Eteri Andjaparidze and Sergei Babayan. David Oistrakh was also born this week, on September 30th of 1908. As a violinist he occupies a place in the musical pantheon similar to Horowitz. Oistrakh was bon in Odessa, that cradle of Jewish violin virtuosos. Oistrakh studied with Pyotr Stolyarsky, as did Nathan Milstein, and played a concert with him in 1914. Oistrakh made his big debut in Leningrad in 1928, the year Horowitz made his debut in […]
2018-10-12 23:28:00
Jeremy Jordan Performs in Recital at Chicago's DePaul University Nov. 10, 5 PM
[…] ‘live’ interview on Chicago’s WFMT Radio program Impromptu with Kerry Frumkin where he performed his own transcriptions of Liszt/Horowitz, Wagner, and Saint Saens. December 2018 finds Mr. Jordan on a five-city tour of Japan in collaboration concerts with Canadian Brass trumpeter Brandon Ridenour. Jeremy studied with distinguished pianists Matti Raekallio, Yoshie Akimoto, and Regina Syrkin; and received tutoring from renowned artists including Andre Watts, Jerome Lowenthal, Eteri Andjaparidze, Steve Million, and Ron Perillo.
2014-07-17 14:00:29
“Ya proklinayu tebya, moy rokovaya krasota!”
One of the late Mike Richter‘s most endearing traits was his fascination with rare or downright offbeat recordings, such as this complete 1963 performance of Verdi’s Don Carlos in Russian by artists of the Bolshoi. Mike wrote on his “WWW Site on a Disc Volume 3″: Russian recording did not get around to Don Carlos until 1963 when A. Naidenov led a four-Act version with the forces of the Bolshoi. Only two of the soloists were major names in the West: Irina Arkhipova as Eboli and Ivan Petrov as Philip. The title rôle was allotted to the Georgian, Zurab Andjaparidze. Elisabetta is Tamara Milashkina; Rodrigo, Vladimir Valaitis. There is a flavor to this recording which is somehow both Italianate and Russian. Overall, the flavor is Italian, the line is Verdian and the sonority is familiar. Yet individual singers, notably Andjaparidze and Milashkina, have qualities often identified as Russian so that […]
The Boston Musical Intelligencer
2012-05-19 14:19:15
[…] then created some shading for the slow movement. But in her concerto, Prokofiev’s first, she was merely efficient, banging out her big cadenza rather brutally. I could tell by the expressions on the other jurors’ faces that nobody else thought much of her either; one of them mimicked hammering nails into a wall, and that while she was playing quietly. Her orchestral accompaniment was played in a piano arrangement by one of the jurors, Eteri Andjaparidze (she and Feltsman shared the accompanying duties), and there was much more nuance in the “orchestra” than in the solo. After a brief pause for the air conditioner to cool the room off a bit, the second pianist began. His Bach seemed bland to me. He played a piece of Liszt that I normally can’t stand, the Sonata after Reading Dante, but he minimized the music’s bombast and built climaxes well. He was also […]
No more?
Every day soclassiq looks for new articles, videos, concerts and so on about classical music and opera, their artists, venues, orchestras...
Zurab Andjaparidze ? We have not gathered a lot of content on this topic yet but we continue to search.
or
- timeline: Lyrical singers (Europe).
- Indexes (by alphabetical order): A...