Natalya Antonova

Natalya Antonova (Russian: Наталия Антонова) is a Russian pianist and educator at the Eastman School of Music.

Early life and career

Natalya began to study piano at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory when she was 4 years old. At 16, she made her first public appearance with the Saint Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, and shortly thereafter accepted a professorship at the Conservatory, as the youngest professor in the history of the school.[1]

She then traveled Europe, participating in music festivals across the continent. After a decade of travel, she returned to Russia to work as a professor at Gnessin State Musical College. Later on, she became a lecturer at the Conservatoire de Paris, Peabody Institute and New England Conservatory following by becoming a faculty member of the Seoul National University. She also served as a jury at the Corpus Christi and both Hilton Head and the Gina Bachauer International Piano Competition.[2] She played Scherzo No. 1 and performed his Preludes as well at the Humboldt State University.[3]

Present day

Today, Natalya continues to teach piano to music students, and regularly performs at classical venues, including Moscow Academy of Music, Conservatoire de Paris, the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, the Peabody Institute, the New England Conservatory of Music, Seoul National University, Singapore University, and National Taiwan University.[1][4] Recordings of her music are available at the University of Rochester Sibley Music Library.[5]

Natalya has quipped that her "only motivation is the love to make music."[6]

gollark: `pass` is the password input, `salt` is the salt, `iter` is how many times to run it (you want a value which makes it fairly slow but not so much that server admins will consume your soul), `dklen` is the... output key length? I'm not sure.
gollark: Er, you probably want that, yes.
gollark: I have no idea about that specific API, I'll check.
gollark: Modern password hashing functions are designed to be slow to run (and to be fastest on general-purpose computing hardware and not ASICs) to mitigate this sort of thing.
gollark: If you do *not* use that, then people can store a bunch of precalculated mappings from hashes to original passwords (rainbow tables, yes) and work out the original.

References

  1. "Natalya Antonova Master Class". February 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  2. "Natalya Antonova". Eastman School of Music. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
  3. "Legendary Pianist Natalya Antonova in Concert and in Class at HSU". Humboldt State University. September 28, 2010. Retrieved January 17, 2014.
  4. "Natalya Antonova, piano «  Eastman Theatre". Eastman Theatre. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  5. "ArchiveGrid : Natalya Antonova, piano [sound recording]". beta.worldcat.org. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  6. "Pianists from the Inside: NATALYA ANTONOVA" (PDF). pianistsfromtheinside.wordpress.com. June 2012. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
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