Ivo pogorelich children

The Croatian1 pianist, Ivo Pogorelich [Pogorelić], received his first piano lessons in Belgrade when he was seven. Five years later, he was invited to Moscow to continue his studies at the Central Music School with Evgeny Timakin. Later he graduated from the Moscow Conservatory. In 1976 he began studying intensively with the pianist and teacher Aliza Kezeradze, who passed on to him the tradition of the Liszt-Siloti school. They were married from 1980 until her death in 1996. He won the Casagrande Competition in Terni, Italy in 1978 and the Montreal International Music Competition in 1980. However he became famous for the prize he didn't win. In 1980 he entered the International Frederick Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw and was eliminated in the third round. The Argentine pianist Martha Argerich proclaimed him a genius and left the jury in protest.

Ivo Pogorelich gave his debut recital in New York's Carnegie Hall in 1981. He debuted in London the same year. Since then, he has created a sensation with his performances in all the great concert halls throughout the world:

The most comprehensive classical music streaming service

Chill with exquisite performances from over 32,000 jazz musicians, from legends to contemporary stars

Explore vibrant ethnic and world music from all across the globe

A collection of beautifully told stories by extraordinary storytellers

Indulge watching the best productions of opera, ballet, classical concerts and documentaries

Your go-to site for information about orchestral and chamber music works

A terrific resource for kids to instill a lifelong love of music

Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin [1] (Moscow, 6 January 1872—Moscow, 27 April 1915) is a Russian composer and pianist who initially created a highly lyrical and idiosyncratic tonal language inspired by the music of Frédéric Chopin. Unlike the later Nikolai Roslavets and Arnold Schönberg, Scriabin developed a growing atonal system, which was in accordance with his idea of mysticism, preceding the Schönberg’s twelve-tone technique and other serial music. He can be considered the primary figure of Russian musical symbolism and the proclaimer of serialism.

Scriabin was born at the time when the Russian literary temperament was changing—a period known as the Silver Age of Russian Poetry. It was a movement that encompassed a number of strong artistic personalities of different worldviews (from mysticism and aestheticism to apocalypticism), and many artists of the time were also influenced by Marx’s and Nietzsche’s philosophies, by Helena Blavatsky’s theosophy, and by Rudolf Steiner’s anthroposophy. Poets and writers such as Alexander Blok, Konstantin Ba

Copyright ©hayduty.pages.dev 2025