Eduard Khanok

Eduard Semyonovich Khanok (Russian: Эдуард Семёнович Ханок, Belarusian: Эдуард Сямёнавіч Ханок; born 1940) is a Soviet and Belarusian musician and composer.[2] Honored Worker of Culture of the Byelorussian SSR (1982). People's Artist of Belarus (1996).[3][4]

Eduard Khanok
Yevgeny Ksenevich and Eduard Khanok
Born
Eduard Semyonovich Khanok

(1940-04-18) 18 April 1940[1]
OccupationComposer
AwardsLira 2013

Biography

Born April 18, 1940 in Kazakhstan in a military family. In his childhood he moved to the city of Brest, where he graduated from high school. In 1962 he graduated from the Minsk State Musical College, in 1969 the Moscow Conservatory, learning in which he wrote his first song. Member of Union of Soviet Composers since 1973.[4]

Creation

Works in different genres — vocal-symphonic, chamber-instrumental, chamber-vocal, but most fruitfully in song. From his works the repertoires of ensembles Verasy, Syabry, and Pesnyary were formed.[2] He is the author of popular songs.[5][6]

gollark: Lasers and brains are both confusing and complicated and therefore equivalent.
gollark: I still don't really care very much if people go around testing... weird brain things... on others, as long as everyone involved agrees to it, licenses or not.
gollark: You can talk here and ping whoever you're replying to.
gollark: You mention near-infrared, which is apparently absorbed somewhat less than other wavelengths by skin and such, but based on my 30 second duckduckgo search it's still scattered and absorbed a decent amount by that and probably is blocked by the skull, which is where the brain is.
gollark: In any case, would most lasers *not* just be blocked by the skull and not interact with brain tissue anyway?

References

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