Gnessin State Musical College

The Gnessin State Musical College (Russian: Государственный музыкальный колледж имени Гнесиных) and Gnessin Russian Academy of Music (Russian: Российская академия музыки имени Гнесиных) is a prominent music school in Moscow, Russia.[1]
History
Originally known as the Gnessin Institute, it was established on February 15, 1895 by three sisters: Evgenia Fabianovna, Elena Fabianovna, and Maria Fabianovna Gnessin.[2] Each of the Gnessin sisters had studied piano and graduated with distinction from the Moscow Conservatory.[3] The college quickly became, and remains, an elite music school, considered second only to the Moscow Conservatory.[4]
Founders
The Gnessin sisters were born in Rostov-on-Don, the children of Rostov Rabbi Fabian Osipovich Gnessin.[5] The entire family appears to have possessed musical talent.[6] Their brother, Mikhail Fabianovich Gnessin, was a celebrated composer and teacher who later served (1945-1957) as head of Gnessin State Musical College.[7]
Alumni
Russian unkess otherwise stated
- Georgy Andryushchenko, opera singer
 - Alexey Arhipovsky, balalaika virtuoso
 - Yulianna Avdeeva, pianist
 - Irina Loskova, German pianist
 - Sonya Belousova, Russian-American composer, pianist and recording artist
 - Evgeny Belyaev, singer
 - Olga Romanko, Russian-Italian singer
 - Boris Berezovsky, pianist
 - Ludmila Berlinskaia, pianist
 - Dima Bilan, singer and Eurovision winner
 - Artyom Bogucharsky, actor and clarinetist
 - Hilary Bown, flutist
 - Alexandr Brill, jazz saxophonist
 - Dmitri Brill, jazz saxophonist
 - Ivan S. Bukreev, singer
 - Roberto Cani, violinist
 - Nikolai Choubine, pianist
 - Mauricio Daza, Colombian bassist
 - Boris Elkis, composer
 - Ivan Farmakovsky, jazz pianist and composer
 - Misha Fomin, pianist
 - Alexander Goldstein, composer
 - Alexander (Sasha) Gryzlov, violinist
 - Alina Ibragimova, violinist
 - Alexander Ivashkin, cellist
 - Eugene Izotov, oboist
 - Mungonzazal Janshindulam, Mongolian pianist
 - Yuriy Karnyushin, singer
 - Yuri Katz, Israeli-American music producer
 - Sati Kazanova, singer
 - Yakov Kazyansky, composer and jazz pianist
 - Evgeny Kissin, pianist
 - Lev Knipper, composer
 - Alexander Knyazev, cellist
 - Joseph Kobzon, Russian vocalist
 - Michael Korn. American conductor
 - Oleg Kroll, Russian jazz pianist
 - Elena Kuznetsova, pianist and teacher
 - Edward M. Labkovsky, singer
 - Irina Lankova, pianist
 - Konstantin Lifschitz, pianist
 - Irina Loskova, German pianist
 - Oleg Maisenberg, pianist
 - Eduardo Mirabal, Venezuelan pianist and teacher
 - Maxim Mironov, tenor
 - Michael Miropolsky, violinist and conductor
 - Roman Moiseyev, conductor
 - Dr. Sofia Moshevich, Canadian scholar, pianist, and teacher[8][9][10]
 - Quynh Nguyen, Vietnamese pianist
 - Yury Nugmanov, guitar player
 - Yakov Okun, jazz pianist
 - Boris Parsadanian, Armenian-Estonian composer
 - Olga Pashchenko, pianist
 - Alla Pavlova, American composer
 - Elza Ritter, Russian-American pianist,teacher
 - Kirill Rodin, cellist
 - Kristina Rozhkova, harpist
 - Vadim L. Ruslanov, singer
 - Alexei T. Sergeev, singer
 - Konstantin Shamray, pianist
 - Vissarion Shebalin, composer
 - Natalia Sheludiakova, Russian-Australian pianist and teacher
 - Anatoly Sheludyakov, pianist
 - Vladimir Shkaptsov, singer
 - Vladislav Shoot, composer
 - Alexander S. Sibirtsev, singer
 - Viktor Suslin, composer
 - Svoy, Russian-American songwriter/producer
 - Mikael Tariverdiev, Georgian-Armenian composer
 - Valentina Tolkunova, singer
 - Daniil Trifonov, pianist
 - Dmitriy Varshavskiy, hard-rock/heavy metal singer and guitarist
 - Yulia Volkova, singer from the group t.A.T.u.
 - Aleksey Volodin, pianist
 - Marina Yakhlakova, pianist
 - Alexander Zemtsov, Russian-German violist,professor
 - Igor Zubkovsky, cellist
 - Boris Midney, Russian American composer, producer, arranger, multi-instrumentalist, sound eEngineer
 - Eugene (Evgeny) Svetlanov, conductor
 - Sergey Shirokov, TV director and producer
 - Mary Carne, jazz singer and actrees
 - Ilya Pepenak, musical director and producer, director of the State academical symphony orchestra of Russia
 - Alexander Alyoshinsky, pianist
 - Valentina Antipenko, violinist
 - Julia Kryakova, violinist
 - Victoria Volodina, violinist
 - Philipp Kirkorov, singer and actor
 - Nikolay Baskov, singer
 - Marina Devyatova, singer
 - Valeria (Perfilova), singer
 - Paolo Di Bartolo, tubas
 - Egor Bulatkin (KreeD), singer and creative producer
 - Prokhor Shalyapin, singer
 - Alexandra Platonova, opera and metal singer, musical producer, actrees
 - Leonid Ptashka, Russian and israeli jazz pianist and virtuoso
 - Valery Grokhovsky, jazz pianist and virtuoso, professor
 - Juliana Karaulova, singer
 - Anastasia Kraynova, singer, radio producer and presenter
 - Polina Nikolayeva, producer, composer, jazz singer and pianist
 - Dinara Daurova, producer and singer
 - Anna Tonkovid, producer and saxophonist, poet
 - Andrey Gaponov, musicologist, teacher and pianist
 - Ol'ga Moskvina, musicologist and teacher
 - Pavel Lutsker, musicologist and radio producer, professor
 - Nikolay Levinovsky, Russian and American saxophonist
 - Irina Otiyeva, jazz singer
 - Irina Nikolayeva, pianist, professor
 - Juliana Rogachyova, jazz singer
 
Faculty
- Timofei Dokschitzer, Russian-Ukrainian trumpeter
 - Mikhail Fikhtengoltz, violinist
 - Alexander Frautschi, guitarist
 - Grigori Gamburg, conductor
 - Mikhail Gnessin, composer and brother of founding sisters
 - Maria Grinberg, Russian-Ukrainian pianist
 - Anna Kantor, pianist
 - Aram Khachaturian, Armenian composer
 - Alexander Kobrin, pianist
 - Georg Orentlicher, professor of chamber and vocal accompaniment
 - Nelli Shkolnikova, Russian-Australian violinist and teacher
 
References
- ↑ Moisenko, Rena. (1949) Realist Music: 25 Soviet Composers, London: Meridian Book, Ltd.
 - ↑ Phillips, Anthony & Prokofiev, Sergey. (2006). "Sergey Prokofiev Diaries, 1907-1914: Prodigious Youth", p. 498 Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
 - ↑ Phillips, Anthony & Prokofiev, Sergey. (2006). "Sergey Prokofiev Diaries, 1907-1914: Prodigious Youth", p. 498 Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
 - ↑ Phillips, Anthony & Prokofiev, Sergey. (2006). "Sergey Prokofiev Diaries, 1907-1914: Prodigious Youth", p. 498 Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
 - ↑ Hundert, Gershon David. (2008) The YIVO encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe: Volume 2, p. 1595 New Haven: Yale University Press
 - ↑ Moisenko, Rena. (1949) Realist Music: 25 Soviet Composers, London: Meridian Book, Ltd.
 - ↑ Moisenko, Rena. (1949) Realist Music: 25 Soviet Composers, London: Meridian Book, Ltd.
 - ↑ http://www.namibian.com.na/archive_pdf_19851990/1986_TheNamibian/6%20June%201986.pdf
 - ↑ http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/product_info.php?cPath=1037_3130_3167&products_id=807310
 - ↑ http://wiredspace.wits.ac.za/jspui/bitstream/10539/13021/1/Pg%201-120.pdf
 
External links
- Gnesin Academy of Music official website (Russian)
 - Gnessin State Musical College website (Russian)
 
Coordinates: 55°45′19″N 37°35′32″E / 55.7553°N 37.5921°E