Russia mourns a piano Tsar

Russia mourns a piano Tsar

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norman lebrecht

February 26, 2020

Russian pianists are sharing news of the death of Sergei Dorensky, probably the country’s most influential piano teacher. He was 88.

A student of Grigory Ginsburg, Dorensky won a couple of international prizes in 1955. Two years later he began teaching at the Moscow Conservatoire, where he remained on staff until 1997.

As vice-president of the Chopin and Rachmaninov societies and a regular judge of the Tchaikovsky competition, he served as a threshold to many careers.

The pianist Denis Matsuev writes (rough translation):

Dorensky died.
Words here are impossible. Gone from life is, I think, the last of the great Russian/Soviet executive and educational schools. A man who created a unique system of teaching, which raised a record number of winners of international competitions. Everyone who knew him, because the environment we all lived in and “cooked” was special: apart from teaching he managed to create a warm family inside the class. In 24 years of communication from the moment I came to him in 1996, I realized that I had not only a mentor, but a very close and native person who was always worried about me, always standing there is a mountain for me, as for every absolutely student, of whom he made great artists. This is a huge loss for all the world music culture and of course, for the Moscow conservative and all of us, because the closest person left to us, who, no matter when you finished the conservative, has continued to work with you on a new ritual. If you didn’t bring Dorensky to listen to a new piece in the repertoire, it means you knew that you hadn’t even got into it and it was not ready yet. He always came to your concerts, sat in the 6 row of the Big Hall… I can’t comment on anything else. Emptiness.

Comments

  • Ilona says:

    Pavel Nersessian – and Matsuev, who are the other students?

  • Lohengrinloh says:

    R.I.P. Maestro

  • Jeffrey Biegel says:

    So sorry to learn of his passing. His legacy will live on through his many students, and within those who had the opportunity to know him and learn from him.

  • Edgar Self says:

    As Matsuev’s testimonial and comments here attest, Sergei Dorensky, a revered pianist and teacherand , had a long, influential, and productive life. His Melodiya tape of lRachaninoff’s Paganini Rhapsodys was one of the best Soviet versions before Pletnev’s. Dorensky also recorded Samuel Barber’s concerto and Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue”. Even Richter played “Concerto in F”; there’s a live recording.

    The most tonally rich and imaginative Paganini Rhapsody I know, excepting Rachmaninoff’s , is by another Russian, Benno Moiseiwitsch, who today would be thought of as Ukrainian, for he was born in Odessa, but Richter liked Gary Graffman’s version so much that he didn’t record it himself. I also like Pletnev’s very much, and still value Dorensky’s.

    Nikolai Lugansky may have studied also with Dorensky but wa the s long-time student of Tatiana Nikolayeva since childhood. She called him “the next one”. .

  • christopher storey says:

    Wonderfully atmospheric and colourful playing of Beethoven Op.110 . I had never heard him play before. RIP

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