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and her ballet troupe as composer and conductor (1922–4) and made concert tours around Europe and the United States but abandoned his concert career in 1933 because of a deterioration in his hearing. In 1925 he founded the
Russian Conservatory in Paris and served as its director for a number of years
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and a degree in piano under K.K. Fan-Arkh. His talents and high family status earned him a job as the orchestral teacher at the Court Chapel in 1899. For six years he taught there before returning to the St. Petersburg
Conservatory to teach there. During his 13-year tenure (from 1909 onward as
90:. Young Nikolai's mother died when he was a baby, and when his father remarried, was replaced by an ambivalent stepmother. As a child, Nikolai's father beat him regularly and enforced a general code of strict discipline.
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From 1905 to 1917, he was principal of the conservatory of St. Petersburg, where he taught conducting. In 1918 he was invited to take the post of director of the
National Conservatory of
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248:(1925–9 and 1938–45). In 1926 he became a member of the board of trustees of the Belyayev publishing house, where he later became president from 1937 until his death in 1945 in
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187:. He conducted for the entire first season and returned to conduct multiple times over the next five years. He conducted performances with the Ballets Russes in
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Nikolai
Tcherepnin was born in 1873 to a well-known and wealthy physician of the same name. The elder Nikolai moved in elite circles of artists including
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At his father's insistence, Nikolai earned a law degree, though during this time he composed steadily. In 1895 he graduated with his degree in
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Savenko, Svetlana, et al. "Tcherepnin: (1) Nikolay
Tcherepnin". 2002. New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. 7 June 2008.
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in London. In addition to his professorship and his commitments with the Ballet, in 1908, he became conductor at the
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In 1907, during his time at the
Conservatory, he wrote possibly his most famous work, the
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and lived there for the rest of his life. While in France, he worked with
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163:(‘World of Art’) movement. Tcherepnin was a friend of the musicologist
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215:. At this post, he directed the Paris premiere of Rimsky-Korsakov's
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Memoirs by
Nikolai Tcherepnin at the Tcherepnin Society website
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See article on the
Tcherepnin family in the Grove Dictionary
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May 3] 1873 – 26 June 1945) was a
Russian
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professor) he taught many notable students, including
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Burials at Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois
Russian Cemetery
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Der Eintritt des Judischen in die Welt der Kunstmusik
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Nikolai's biography on the Tcherepnin Society Website
101:. In 1898, he earned a degree in composition under
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34:: Николай Николаевич Черепнин; May 15 [
736:Academic staff of Saint Petersburg Conservatory
145:’s Historic Concerts as well conducting at the
125:In 1902 he became the regular conductor of the
385:Piano Concerto in C-sharp minor, Op. 30 (1905)
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751:Emigrants from the Russian Empire to France
676:Biography at the Tcherepnin Society website
761:Conductors (music) from the Russian Empire
493:(1899–1977), grandsons (son of Alexander)
129:and later made guest appearances with the
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478:The Miller-Wizard, Cheat and Matchmaker
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347:The Descent of the Virgin Mary to Hell
153:circle, he was also involved with the
501:, and great-grandsons (sons of Ivan)
407:Tale about the Fisherman and the Fish
376:(after act 4, scene 1), Op. 12 (1902)
653:', ed. Stanley Sadie (London, 1992)
615:Ericson, Raymond (1 October 1977).
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62:. He conducted for the first
60:Saint Petersburg Conservatory
726:Russian male opera composers
16:Russian composer and pianist
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319:A Magical Russian Fairytale
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149:(1906–9). A member of the
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127:Russian Symphony Concerts
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391:(symphonic poem) (1909)
364:a play of the same name
131:Russian Musical Society
103:Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
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56:Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
509:, are also composers.
442:6 Horn Quartets (1910)
360:La princesse lointaine
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395:The Enchanted Kingdom
239:in 1921, he moved to
231:, the capital of the
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491:Alexander Tcherepnin
294:Le Pavillon d'Armide
257:Alexander Tcherepnin
176:Le Pavillon d'Armide
647:Tcherepnin, Nikolay
452:Cadence fantastique
250:Issy-les-Moulineaux
221:The Golden Cockerel
622:The New York Times
565:Grove Music Online
448:, for Piano (1910)
341:The Song of Sappho
165:Alexander Ossovsky
84:Fyodor Dostoyevsky
54:and studied under
50:. He was born in
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23:Nikolai Tcherepnin
741:Tcherepnin family
604:Naxos's biography
586:. October 8, 1911
507:Stefan Tcherepnin
503:Sergei Tcherepnin
465:Modest Mussorgsky
380:From Land to Land
337:2 Choruses (1899)
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235:. Following the
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700:Categories
590:2008-07-16
513:References
354:Orchestral
203:, and the
183:legendary
66:season of
563:Savenko,
97:from the
48:conductor
628:28 April
489:His son
151:Belyayev
40:composer
692:(IMSLP)
688:at the
641:Sources
415:Destiny
403:Pushkin
374:Macbeth
313:Bacchus
229:Tbilisi
58:at the
44:pianist
32:Russian
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485:Family
480:(1925)
473:(1923)
434:Melody
417:(1938)
411:(1917)
397:(1910)
382:(1903)
343:(1899)
332:Choral
327:(1924)
321:(1923)
315:(1922)
309:(1915)
303:(1911)
297:(1907)
287:Ballet
282:(1933)
276:(1930)
189:Berlin
172:ballet
137:, the
133:, the
46:, and
580:(PDF)
268:Opera
263:Works
241:Paris
217:opera
197:Paris
64:Paris
655:ISBN
630:2021
505:and
405:'s "
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141:and
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78:Life
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