Vladimir Yesipov
Vladimir M. Yesipov (Владимир М. Есипов) (fl. 1960s) was a Russian conductor active during the 1960s and 1970s.
He conducted a Tchaikovsky concert in Beijing in 1960.[1] He was mentioned in Soviet Music (1965) along with Yuri Aranovich for his "creative energy".[2] He conducted at the Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko Moscow Music Theatre during the 1970s, including Der Bettelstudent in 1971, and Massenet's Manon in 1973.[3]
Discography
- Bizet - Don Procopio in Russian, 1967
- Yevstigney Fomin - Orpheus and Eurydice (Орфей и Эвридика) 1967
- Rachmaninov - Aleko
- Kozlovsky - Requiem Mass, Melodija 1988
- Mussorgsky - Sorochinsky Fair
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gollark: `install and use rust`
gollark: Funnily enough, I made an esolang called WHY.
gollark: "Science isn't about WHY, it's about WHY NOT? WHY is so much of our sciencedangerous, WHY NOT marry safe science if you love it so much. In fact, why notinvent a special safety door that won't kick you on the butt on the way outbecause you are fired."
References
- Beijing Zhoubao 3, 1960 "At a special commemorative concert in Peking, several works of the composer, including Symphony No. 5 and Capriccio Italienne, were performed by a Chinese orchestra under the baton of Soviet conductor Yesipov."
- Советская музыка: Vol.1-6 published Союз композиторов СССР., Совиет Унион. Министерство культуры - 1965 "... Творческая энергия дирижеров Юрия Арановича и Владимира Есипова обеспечила успех ряда крупных сочинений, ..."
- schedule
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