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Alexander Tcherepnin


 

Alexander Nikolayevich Tcherepnin (January 20,1899September 29,1977) was a Russian composer, and pianist. His father, Nikolay Tcherepnin and his son, Ivan Tcherepnin were also composers. His mother, nee Benois, was a niece of Alexandre Benois.

Related Topics:
January 20 - 1899 - September 29 - 1977 - Russia - Composer - Pianist - Nikolay Tcherepnin - Ivan Tcherepnin - Alexandre Benois

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His early works were fairly original and some of his pieces had enduring popularity. His output includes four symphonies, six piano concertos, and a large amount of solo piano music. His first symphony is remarkable for including the first symphonic movement ever written completely for unpitched percussion. Another symphony, left incomplete at his death, would have been for percussion alone. Tcherepnin invented his own harmonic language by combining minor and major hexachords, pentatonic scales, old Russian modal tunes and Georgian harmonies.

Related Topics:
Symphonies - Piano concertos

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He was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia. After the Russian revolution, he defected and lived in France and the United States. He visited the Far East between 1934 and 1937. He promoted composers in Japan (Akira Ifukube and others) and China. He married a Chinese pianist, Lee Hsien Ming while in China.

Related Topics:
Saint Petersburg, Russia - Russian revolution - France - United States - 1934 - 1937 - Japan - Akira Ifukube - China - Lee Hsien Ming

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During World War II, he lived in France. In 1948, he went to the United States, and in 1958, he acquired United States citizenship. He taught at DePaul University in Chicago, where the Chicago Symphony Orchestra premiered his second symphony with Rafael Kubelik conducting. His students there included Gloria Coates and John Downey. He died in Paris.

Related Topics:
World War II - 1948 - United States - 1958 - DePaul University - Chicago Symphony Orchestra - Rafael Kubelik - Paris

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