Reinhold Glière was born in Kiev but was of German-Polish heritage; he
changed his surname from Glier to Glière in 1900, giving rise to the
notion that he was of Gallic ancestry. His education began in Kiev
before he embarked on studies at the Moscow Conservatory in 1894,
learning composition with the likes of Arensky, Taneyev, and
Ippolitov-Ivanov (who in turn had been taught by Rimsky-Korsakov). A few
years after graduation came a move to Berlin, in 1905, but Glière
returned to his roots both at the Kiev Conservatory (between 1913 and
1920), and back at the Moscow Conservatory (1920-41). His teaching
career spanned some 40 years, and his students included Aram
Khachaturian and the conductor Serge Koussevitzky. Glière’s works found
favour with the Soviet authorities owing to their blend of nationalism
and conservatism. Today, he is generally best known for his sumptuous
orchestral and ballet scores, but his chamber works reward closer
attention. Indeed, the composer himself was a violinist, and a chamber
musician of some note. (Joanna Wyld)
Following her recital debut at Carnegie’s Weill Hall, The Strad
hailed cellist Maja Bogdanovic for “an outstanding performance of
exceptional tonal beauty and great maturity of interpretation.”
Born in Belgrade/Serbia, Ms. Bogdanovic began playing cello at a very
early age, studying with Professor Nada Jovanovic at the Music School
Kosta Manojlovic in Zemun. She graduated with the First Prize from the
Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris, where
she completed her postgraduate course with Michel Strauss, and pursued
further studies at the Universität der Künste Berlin with Professor Jens
Peter Maintz.
Laureate of numerous international competitions, Ms. Bogdanovic won
First Prize at the Aldo Parisot Cello Competition in South Korea, and
received Second Prize and the Special Audience Award at the Gaspar
Cassado International Competition in Tokyo.
The Russian-born pianist Maria Belooussova’s early soundscape was
nourished by music and Russian folk-tales, leading her to embrace new
and classical repertoires, expressed most profoundly by her extensive
work as a chamber music and vocal accompanist.
Trained from the age of five at the musical school for talented
children in her hometown, then at the Ural State Conservatory and later
at Moscow’s prestigious Gnessin Institute under Vladimir Tropp, she
furthered her studies with Christian Ivaldi at the Paris Conservatoire,
eventually settling there.
Her poetic and inspired performances have led her to play with such
leading artists as Gérard Jarry, Jean-Jacques Kantorow, Ivry Gitlis,
Vladimir Mendeslssohn, Michel Strauss, Bernard Greenhouse and Joseph
Silverstein, and she is a favourite of the Austrian baritone Wolfganz
Holzmair. In so doing, she has performed at New York’s Carnegie Hall,
Amsterdam’s Concertegebouw, and in leading European Festivals.
Maria Belooussova’s passion for the music of our time has led her to
work with internationnally recognized composers, including Krzysztof
Penderecki, Sofia Goubaïdoulina, Philippe Hersant and Thierry Escaich,
to name but a few. She has been a member of the contemporary ensemble Musique Oblique since 1999.
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