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Encyclopedia > Alexander Gretchaninov

Alexander Grechaninov (October 25, 1864 Moscow, – January 3, 1956 New York) was a Russian Romantic composer, a student of Sergei Taneyev and Nikolai Rimsky_Korsakov known for his liturgical and other choral music. He left Russia in 1917 for London and Prague, and became an American citizen in the late 1940s. He wrote five symphonies, the first premiered by Rimsky-Korsakov; four string quartets, two piano trios, several operas and much other music, in which the Romantic style of his first works was gradually somewhat infiltrated by increasing harmonic dissonance and rhythmic odd-edges.










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OefenCD - Gretchaninov (393 words)
Alexander Tikhonovich Gretchaninov (Александр Тихонович Гречанинов) werd geboren op 25 Oktober 1864 te Moskou, en overleed 3 januari 1956 in New York.
Gretchaninov begon zijn muziekstudie vrij laat omdat zijn vader, een zakenman, verwachtte dat zijn zoon het familiebedrijf zou voortzetten.
Gretchaninov zélf verhaalde dat hij tot zijn 14e nog nooit een piano had gezien toen hij, zonder medeweten en toestemming van zijn ouders aan het Moskou's Conservatorium begon in 1881.
Alexander Tikhonovitch Gretchaninov (477 words)
Composer Alexander Tikhonovitch Gretchaninov was born on 25 OCT 1864 in Moscow and was the son of a small businessman.
At 10 years of age Gretchaninov in a Moscow High School he became a skillfull choir solo singer.
Gretchaninov completes compositions in many different styles with influences of Tchaikowsky, Borodin and Rimsky Korsakov.
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