03-21-2021, 12:58 AM
Yevgeny Yevgenievich Nesterenko (Евгений Евгеньевич Нестеренко, 8 January 1938 – 20 March 2021) was a Soviet and Russian operatic bass.
Nesterenko's first profession was architecture, and in fact he graduated from the Saint-Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering in Leningrad. But he was called to music, and he studied under Vasily Lukanin[1] at the Leningrad Conservatory.[2] At his last year at the conservatory (1965) Nesterenko was invited to sing at Leningrad's Maly Opera (now Mikhailovsky) Theatre and after graduation joined the famous Mariinsky Opera and Ballet Theatre. He won the gold medal at the 4th Moscow International Tchaikovsky Competition, which gave him entrée to Moscow's Bolshoi Theatre.[2]
Altogether Nesterenko has sung over 50 leading bass parts and performed 21 operas in their original languages. He performed the main parts in operas by Glinka, Mussorgsky, Tchaikovsky and Borodin, and was the first to perform many works by Shostakovich, Sviridov and Taktakishvili.[2]
Nesterenko's enormous repertoire ranges from deep bass to baritone parts in operas by classical Russian and West-European composers. His finest role is frequently considered to be Tsar Boris in Mussorgsky's opera Boris Godunov, which won him the "Golden Viotti" medal in Italy in 1981.
The stages on which Nesterenko has performed include many of the world's best and most prestigious ones, such as Covent Garden, the Vienna State Opera and La Scala. He has been awarded the highest Austrian, Italian, German and Russian awards for his singing.[2] He is the winner of the Giovanni Zenatello Prize "For an outstanding embodiment of the central character in the opera Attila by Verdi". He is the recepient of the Chaliapin Prize of the Creativity Academy, and of many other titles and awards.[2]'
Nesterenko has made around 70 recordings, including 20 complete operas. He was also an outstanding chamber singer with a subtle taste, expressiveness and sense of style.
Latterly he has also become known as an outstanding teacher. He taught at the Moscow Conservatory and the Music and Arts University of the City of Vienna.[2] Nesterenko is the author of two books - My Way of Working with Singers and Reflections on My Profession - and is the author of over 200 printed articles.[2] In addition, he was one of the most experienced music competition jurors.
Nesterenko died on 20 March 2021 of COVID-19 in Vienna, Austria.[3]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yevgeny_Nesterenko
Nesterenko's first profession was architecture, and in fact he graduated from the Saint-Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering in Leningrad. But he was called to music, and he studied under Vasily Lukanin[1] at the Leningrad Conservatory.[2] At his last year at the conservatory (1965) Nesterenko was invited to sing at Leningrad's Maly Opera (now Mikhailovsky) Theatre and after graduation joined the famous Mariinsky Opera and Ballet Theatre. He won the gold medal at the 4th Moscow International Tchaikovsky Competition, which gave him entrée to Moscow's Bolshoi Theatre.[2]
Altogether Nesterenko has sung over 50 leading bass parts and performed 21 operas in their original languages. He performed the main parts in operas by Glinka, Mussorgsky, Tchaikovsky and Borodin, and was the first to perform many works by Shostakovich, Sviridov and Taktakishvili.[2]
Nesterenko's enormous repertoire ranges from deep bass to baritone parts in operas by classical Russian and West-European composers. His finest role is frequently considered to be Tsar Boris in Mussorgsky's opera Boris Godunov, which won him the "Golden Viotti" medal in Italy in 1981.
The stages on which Nesterenko has performed include many of the world's best and most prestigious ones, such as Covent Garden, the Vienna State Opera and La Scala. He has been awarded the highest Austrian, Italian, German and Russian awards for his singing.[2] He is the winner of the Giovanni Zenatello Prize "For an outstanding embodiment of the central character in the opera Attila by Verdi". He is the recepient of the Chaliapin Prize of the Creativity Academy, and of many other titles and awards.[2]'
Nesterenko has made around 70 recordings, including 20 complete operas. He was also an outstanding chamber singer with a subtle taste, expressiveness and sense of style.
Latterly he has also become known as an outstanding teacher. He taught at the Moscow Conservatory and the Music and Arts University of the City of Vienna.[2] Nesterenko is the author of two books - My Way of Working with Singers and Reflections on My Profession - and is the author of over 200 printed articles.[2] In addition, he was one of the most experienced music competition jurors.
Nesterenko died on 20 March 2021 of COVID-19 in Vienna, Austria.[3]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yevgeny_Nesterenko
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.