Saratov Conservatory
Саратовская государственная
консерватория имени Л.В. Собинова | |
Type | State music conservatory |
---|---|
Established | 1912 |
Location | , Russia |
Website | sarcons |
Sobinov Theatre Institute of the Saratov State Conservatory (Russian: Саратовская государственная консерватория имени Л.В. Собинова is a music conservatory in Russia.
The conservatory in Saratov, was founded in 1912, and was the first provincial conservatory to be founded in Russia, after St Petersburg Conservatory and Moscow Conservatory. Saratov was, at the time, Russia's third city. The main building of the conservatory had been built in 1902 by architect Alexander Yulyevich Yagn, and originally it housed a music school. Before the opening of the conservatory in 1912, the building was reconstructed by the architect Semyon Akimovich Kallistratov. When Saratov Conservatory opened in September 1912, it immediately had 1,000 students ready to begin their studies.[1] In 1935 the Conservatory was named after the tenor Leonid Sobinov.
Former Directors
- Stanislav Kasparovich Echsner (Exner, Eksner) (1912–1914)
- Josef Ivanovich Slivinskii, Polish: Józef Śliwiński (1914–1916)
- George Edvardovich Konyus, English: Georgi Conus (1917–1919)
- Emil Hájek, Russian: Эмиль Ярославович Гаек (1920–1921)
Notable teachers
- Karl Wilhelm (Vasily Georgievich) Brandt, (trumpeter)
- Ivan Lipaev (trombone and music history)
- Józef Śliwiński
- Roman Moiseyev
- Konstanty Gorski
- Mikhail Bukinik
- Tatiana Stepanova - ballet
- Arnold Azrikan
- Nisson Shkarovsky
Alumni
- Alyona Apina, lead vocalist of Kombinaciya
- Fatma Mukhtarova
- Lidia Ruslanova
- Anna Yevdokimova (pen name Anna t'Haron) — a Russian pianist, Artist, grant holder of the “Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds” (Netherlands).
- Franciszek Zachara, graduated 1919
Exchange programme schools
Saratov Symphony Orchestra
Saratov Conservatory has an associated orchestra, the Saratov Conservatory Symphony Orchestra founded in 1912.
See also
References
- ^ Paul Du Quenoy Stage fright: politics and the performing arts in late Imperial Russia 2009 p99