Vladimir Verbitsky Vidéos
chef d'orchestre
- musique classique
- Australie, Russie, Union soviétique
- chef ou cheffe d'orchestre
Dernière mise à jour
2024-05-19
Actualiser
Maxim Rysanov Franz Schubert Franz Liszt Desyatnikov Mozart Moore Janine Jansen Vilde Frang Nicola Benedetti Verdi Valery Gergiev Mikhail Pletnev Jiří Bělohlávek Andrey Boreyko Vasily Petrenko Petrenko Tugan Sokhiev Yuri Simonov Sir Mark Elder Philippe Herreweghe Eivind Gullberg Jensen Jensen Olari Elts Arvo Volmer Vladimir Verbitsky Eckehard Stier Yan Pascal Tortelier Tortelier Diego Matheuz Paul Watkins Watkins Matthias Bamert Michał Dworzyński Maxim Vengerov Mischa Maisky Gidon Kremer Vadim Repin Augustin Dumay Viktoria Mullova Alexander Sitkovetsky Sitkovetsky Sol Gabetta Leif Ove Andsnes Denis Matsuev Alessio Bax Bax Michael Collins Alexei Ogrintchouk Alice Coote Eldar Nebolsin Dobrinka Tabakova Lionel Tertis Valentino Bucchi Proms Mariinsky Gürzenich Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra London Mozart Players Scottish Ensemble Russian National Orchestra National Symphony Orchestra Detmold Chamber Orchestra Southbank Sinfonia Liepāja Symphony Orchestra Tallinn Chamber Orchestra Bbc Symphony Orchestra Seattle Symphony Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Gürzenich Orchestra Frankfurt Radio Symphony Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra Adelaide Symphony Orchestra West Australian Symphony Orchestra Auckland Symphony Orchestra Danish National Symphony Orchestra Ulster Orchestra European Union Youth Orchestra Orchestre Philharmonique Strasbourg 1780 2013 2017
5:30 Schubert: Sonatina (Sonatina) in G minor, D408 (Op. posth. 137 No. 3) 26:53 Franz Schubert - Franz Liszt: Four Songs 47:20 Akhunov: In Schubert’s company for viola & orchestra 1:05:10 Desyatnikov: Wie der alte Leiermann… 1:21:10 Schubert: Sonata in A minor 'Arpeggione', D821 Official website: (http•••) Facebook: (http•••) Award-winning Ukrainian-British violist and conductor Maxim Rysanov has established himself as one of the worldʼs most vibrant and charismatic musicians. As a violist, he is principally known as a frequent guest of the crème of the international music scene, such as BBC Last Night of the Proms and the festivals of Edinburgh, Salzburg and Verbier. now combines viola performance with a thriving career as a conductor. Conducting engagements include the Spanish Radio Orchestra, Basel Symphony Orchestra, Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra, Riga Sinfonietta, London Mozart Players, Baltic Neopolis Orchestra, Scottish Ensemble, Russian National Orchestra, Moscow Musica Viva, Kiev Soloists, Orquesta Sinfónica de Castilla y León, Georgian National Symphony Orchestra, Częstochowa Philharmonic Orchestra, Detmold Chamber Orchestra, Dala Sinfonietta, Southbank Sinfonia, Plovdiv Philharmonic, Sofia Opera Orchestra, Sofia Philharmonic, Royal College of Music String Orchestra, Badisches Staatsorchester, Liepāja Symphony Orchestra, as well as conducting at festivals in Dubrovnik (with Roger Moore as narrator), Utrecht (with Janine Jansen), Boswil (with Vilde Frang), Surrey Hills (with Nicola Benedetti) and the closing concert of the Beijing Viola Festival. Conducting appearances this season include return visits to the Verdi Orchestra Milan and the Dala Sinfonietta, and debuts with the Tallinn Chamber Orchestra, Sinfonietta Riga and Anima Musicae. Among his concerto highlights are the Mariinsky Orchestra (Valery Gergiev), Russian National Orchestra (Mikhail Pletnev), BBC Symphony Orchestra (Jiří Bělohlávek), Seattle Symphony (Andrey Boreyko), Orquesta Sinfónica de Castilla y León (Vasily Petrenko), Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin (Tugan Sokhiev), Moscow Philharmonic (Yuri Simonov), Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra (Vladimir Fedoseev), Gürzenich Orchestra Cologne (Sir Mark Elder), Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra (Philippe Herreweghe), NDR Philharmonic Orchestra (Eivind Gullberg Jensen), Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra (Juraj Valcuha), RTE Symphony Orchestra (Olari Elts), Adelaide Symphony Orchestra (Arvo Volmer), West Australian Symphony Orchestra (Vladimir Verbitsky), Auckland Symphony Orchestra (Eckehard Stier), Danish National Symphony Orchestra (Michael Schoenwandt), Malaysian Philharmonic (Yan Pascal Tortelier), Shanghai Symphony (Long Yu), Orquesta Sinfónica de Euskadi (Diego Matheuz), Ulster Orchestra (Paul Watkins), European Union Youth Orchestra (Matthias Bamert) and Orchestre Philharmonique de Strasbourg (Michał Dworzyński). Maxim is a keen chamber musician. His chamber partners include Maxim Vengerov, Janine Jansen, Mischa Maisky, Gidon Kremer, Nicola Benedetti, Vadim Repin, Augustin Dumay, Viktoria Mullova, Alexander Sitkovetsky, Sol Gabetta, Kristina Blaumane, Leif Ove Andsnes, Denis Matsuev, Alessio Bax, Michael Collins, Martin Frost, Alexei Ogrintchouk, Alice Coote, Eldar Nebolsin and Ashley Wass. Maxim's recordings have gained numerous award nominations including Gramophone Editor's Choice, ECHO, ICMA, and Grammy, as well as reaching the top of the iTunes charts in the USA. Maxim also featured as both soloist and conductor on the debut disc of composer Dobrinka Tabakova (ECM) in 2013 - a disc that reached number 2 in the UK classical charts and was shortlisted for a Grammy Award. In June 2017 Onyx released a double CD devoted to music by and inspired by Schubert, in which Maxim both conducted and played. It was listed as Classic FMʼs Best New Recordings, KDFC Album of the Week and KUSC Album of the Week. Maxim is a recipient of various awards, including the Gramophone Young Artist of the Year Award and the BBC Radio 3 New Generation Award. He is also a prize-winner at the Geneva, Lionel Tertis and Valentino Bucchi competitions. He is delighted to have a Giuseppe Guadagnini viola (1780) on extended loan from the Elise Mathilde Foundation.
Golovin Vladimir Verbitsky Evgeny Golubev Gnessin Klimov Witold Lutosławski Boris Tchaikovsky Tchaikovsky Rubtsov Bach Gounod 1950 1976 1979 1980 1981 1982 1986 1988 1989 1990 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2003 2006 2008 2013
Andrei Golovin (b. 1950) (Russie) Symphony n°3 (1986) Dir : Vladimir Verbitsky 1- Andante (8.38) 2- Adagio (16.27) With the authorization of the Russian composer Andrei Golovin. On collectionCB3 and collectionCB4 we can also listen to Andrei Golovin’s « Bambi » Little Musical Pictures to Felix Salten’s Tale (1980) and « Canto d’attesa » for violin and orchestra (1999). Andrey Golovin was born in 1950 in Moscow. In 1976 he graduated from the Moscow Conservatory, in the composition class of Evgeny Golubev, and the instrumentation class of Yuri Fortunatov. In 1979 he graduated from the post-graduate course of Moscow Conservatory. He taught at the Gnessin School of Music (since 1989) at the Gnessin Institute. Among his pupils was Pyotr Klimov. Since 1997 he has also been a lecturer there. Golovin’s music was performed in Germany, Austria, Finland, France, Italy, UK, Poland, Greece, and the USA. In 1998, Golovin was awarded by the Prize of Moscow (in the field of literature and the arts) for his opera "The First Love". Since 1994, Andrey Golovin also performs as a pianist and conductor of his own works. After some early works, some of which reveal the influence Witold Lutosławski, Golovin’s later works show a personal idiom, closely connected to the tradition of Russian music since the 19th century. It is characterized by clear tonal foundations, and by a rather dark, elegiac mood, close to the romance. The melodic component plays an important role. Often the composer uses small motivic fragments, which he develops into large structures. This approach reflects the influence of Boris Tchaikovsky, a composer that Golovin highly values. Golovin’s major works include : - Concerto-Symphony for Viola, Cello and Orchestra (Symphony No. 1) (1976) - Sonata breve for Viola and Piano (1979) - Elegy for Solo Cello (1979) - « Bambi », Little Musical Pictures to Felix Salten’s Tale, for Soloists Ensemble (1980 ; rev. 1992) - Two Pieces for Flute and Piano (1981) - Sinfonia Concertante for Viola, Piano and Orchestra (Symphony No. 2) (1981) - String Quartet (1982) - Symphony No. 3 (1986) - « Plain Songs », Cantata to Verses by Nikolai Rubtsov for Mezzo-Soprano, Bass, Piano and Chamber Orchestra (1988) - Music for Strings (1988 ; orchestration of the « String Quartet », 1982) - « Distant Past » for Piano (1990) - « Two Songs Without Words », for Soloists Ensemble (1993) - « Twilight », Two Poems by Evgeny Baratynsky for Mezzo-Soprano and Piano (1995) - « The First Love », opera based on Ivan Turgenev’s novel (1996) - « Canto d’attesa » (« Song of Expectancy ») for Violin and Orchestra (1999) - « Ave Maria » - Version for Cello and String Orchestra (2003) of Bach-Gounod's work - « Eight Poems by Count Vasily Komarovsky » for Soprano and Orchestra (2006) - Canzone for Cello and String Orchestra (2008) - Symphony No. 4 « Light Unapproachable » (2013) LIST OF UPLOADS OF COLLECTIONCB, COLLECTIONCB2 and COLLECTIONCB3 and IDEAL "DISCOTHEQUE" OF MORE THAN 1,400 ORCHESTRAL WORKS OF FEELINGS : (http•••)
Prokofiev Borisovsky Maxim Rysanov Moore Janine Jansen Vilde Frang Nicola Benedetti Kelemen Dobrinka Tabakova David Geringas Mischa Maisky Boris Brovtsyn Alexander Sitkovetsky Sitkovetsky Sergei Krylov Henkel Yusupov Leonard Elschenbroich Valery Gergiev Jiří Bělohlávek Andrey Boreyko Vasily Petrenko Petrenko Tugan Sokhiev Yuri Simonov Sir Mark Elder Philippe Herreweghe Eivind Gullberg Jensen Jensen Olari Elts Arvo Volmer Vladimir Verbitsky Eckehard Stier Yan Pascal Tortelier Tortelier Diego Matheuz Paul Watkins Watkins Matthias Bamert Alexander Sladkovsky Sinaisky Lionel Tertis Valentino Bucchi Richard Dubugnon Leonid Desyatnikov Giya Kancheli Penderecki Vasks Heilbron Martinu Proms Salzburg Festival Mariinsky Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra London Mozart Players Scottish Ensemble Russian National Orchestra Orquesta Sinfónica Castilla León National Symphony Orchestra Detmold Chamber Orchestra Southbank Sinfonia Budapest Festival Orchestra Sofia Philharmonic Bbc Symphony Orchestra Seattle Symphony Dso Berlin Frankfurt Radio Symphony Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra Adelaide Symphony Orchestra West Australian Symphony Orchestra Auckland Symphony Orchestra Danish National Symphony Orchestra Ulster Orchestra European Union Youth Orchestra Orchestre Philharmonique Strasbourg Bbc National Orchestra Wales Hong Kong Sinfonietta Scottish Chamber Orchestra 1780 2014 2015 2016
Prokofiev Suite from Romeo and Juliet, op. 64 (arr. Borisovsky) Maxim Rysanov, viola Da Sol Kim, piano 2015.07.25 Ukrainian-British violist and conductor Maxim Rysanov has established himself as one of the worlds most vibrant and charismatic musicians. He is principally known for his performances as a violist, guest of the crème of international music scene such as BBC Last Night of the Proms, Verbier, Great Mountain, Tran Siberian and Edinburgh Festival, Salzburg Festival among others. After having completed a conducting fellowship at The GSMD he started to combine his viola performance with a career as a conductor. Conducting engagements include the Spanish Radio Orchestra, Basel Symphony Orchestra, Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra, Riga Sinfonietta, London Mozart Players, Baltic Neopolis, Scottish Ensemble, Russian National Orchestra, and Moscow Musica Viva, Kiev Soloists, Orquesta Sinfónica de Castilla y León, Georgian National Symphony Orchestra, Częstochowa Philharmonic Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra Chaarts, Detmold Chamber Orchestra, Dala Sinfonietta, Southbank Sinfonia, Voronezh Youth Orchestra, Danubia Symphony as well as conducting at festivals in Dubrovnik (with Roger Moore as narrator), Utrecht (with Janine Jansen), Boswil (with Vilde Frang), Surrey Hills (with Nicola BenedettI), Budapest Festival Orchestra (Kelemen Quartet), and the finale of the Beijing Viola Festival, Plovdiv Philharmonic (Kristina Blaumane), Sofia Opera Orchestra and Chorus (Bulgarian premier of Cantata by Dobrinka Tabakova), Sofia Philharmonic, Royal College of Music String Orchestra, Lviv Philharmonic, Detmold Chamber Orchestra, Lepaje Symphony Orchestra (soloist David Geringas) and the Pforzheim Stadtsorchester. As a conductor Maxim worked with such soloists as Mischa Maisky, Nicola Benedetti, Vilde Frang, Janine Jansen, Boris Brovtsyn, Alexander Sitkovetsky, Sergei Krylov, Susanna Yoko Henkel, Sergei Suvorov, Kristina Blaumane, Ashley Wass, Benjamin Yusupov, Leonard Elschenbroich, Dora Kokas and Kelemen Quartet among others. Among his concerto highlights are Mariinsky Orchestra (Valery Gergiev), Russian National Orchestra (MikhailPletnev), BBC Symphony Orchestra (Jiří Bělohlávek), Seattle Symphony (Andrey Boreyko), Orquesta de Castilla y Leon (Vasily Petrenko), DSO Berlin (Tugan Sokhiev), Moscow Philharmonic (Yuri Simonov), BSO (Vladimir Fedoseev), Gurzenich Orchestra (Sir Mark Elder), Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra (Philippe Herreweghe), NDR Philharmonic Orchestra (Eivind Gullberg Jensen), Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra (Juraj Valcuha), RTE Symphony Orchestra (Olari Elts), the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra (Arvo Volmer), the West Australian Symphony Orchestra (Vladimir Verbitsky), Auckland Symphony Orchestra (Eckehard Stier), Danish National Symphony Orchestra (Michael Schoenwandt), Malaysian Philharmonic (Yan Pascal Tortelier), Shanghai Symphony (Long Yu), Orquesta Sinfonica de Euskadi (Diego Matheuz), Ulster Orchestra (Paul Watkins), European Union Youth Orchestra (Matthias Bamert), Orchestre Philharmonique de Strasbourg (Michal Dworzynski), Kazan Symphony (Alexander Sladkovsky) and Strasburg (Vasily Sinaisky). Maxim has long been recognised by the international music scene and his list of prizes affirm that status. These include the Classic FM Gramophone Young Artist of the Year Award and the BBC Radio 3 New Generation Award, as well as the Geneva, Lionel Tertis and Valentino Bucchi competitions. Maxim is a keen promoter of new music. Recently he conducted the Russian premier of the Piano Concerto by Benjamin Yusupov. His enthusiasm for new music has generated collaborations, which have extended the viola repertoire. This includes world premieres by Dobrinka Tabakova, Richard Dubugnon and Sergei Akhunov. Other composers with whom Maxim has developed a close working relationship include Benjamin Yusupov, Leonid Desyatnikov, Giya Kancheli, Artyom Vassiliev and Elena Langer. In 2014 Maxim presented the Penderecki's double concerto in a Russian premiere. In 2016 he premieres a new viola concerto by Peteris Vasks that was co-commissioned by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, the Vale of Glamorgan Festival and the Orchestre Philharmonique de Strasbourg. Further performances include Turku Philharmonic, Riga Sinfonietta, Hong Kong Sinfonietta, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Wurttemburgisches Kammerorchester Heilbron and the Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra. Maxim's commercial CD have continually gained awards including Gramophone Editor's Choice and ECHO, ICMA, Gramophone and Grammy nominations as well as reaching the top of the iTunes charts in the USA. His recent recording of the Martinu Rhapsody – Concerto was shortlisted for the Gramophone Award. He is delighted to have a Giuseppe Guadagnini viola (1780) on extended loan from the Elise Mathilde Foundation.
David Krivitsky Vladimir Verbitsky
David Krivitsky Concerto for violin and orchestra No. 2 Symphony Orchestra of the Voronezh Regional Philharmonic Society Artistic Director and Chief Conductor People's Artist of the Russian Federation Vladimir Verbitsky Conductor Honored Artist of the Voronezh Region Igor Verbitsky Soloist Laureate of international competitions Hayk Kazazyan •••@••• davidkrivitsky.ru ARISMP / Artur Islam Media Production (All rights reserved) Давид Кривицкий Концерт для скрипки с оркестром №2 Симфонический оркестр Воронежской областной филармонии Художественный руководитель и главный дирижер Народный артист РФ Владимир Вербицкий Дирижер Заслуженный деятель искусств Воронежской области Игорь Вербицкий Солист Лауреат международных конкурсов Гайк Казазян •••@••• davidkrivitsky.ru ARISMP / Artur Islam Media Production (All rights reserved)
- chronologie: Chefs d’orchestre (Europe).
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): V...