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  2. Miscellaneous solo piano compositions (Rachmaninoff)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miscellaneous_solo_piano...

    Fragments, Four Improvisations, Oriental Sketch, Piano Piece in D minor, 2 Preludes: Free scores at the International Music Score Library Project. (in Russian) Piano.ru - Sheet music download (in Russian) Chubrik.ru - Audio download

  3. Polina Osetinskaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polina_Osetinskaya

    Osetinskaya created and headed the "Polina Osetinskaya Professional Health Support Center for Musicians", [6] which helps musicians and people of creative professions in solving problems related to the peculiarities of the profession, such as overplayed hands, muscle cramps, fear of going on stage, vegetative stress and many others.

  4. Nikolai Kapustin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolai_Kapustin

    Nikolai Girshevich Kapustin (Russian: Никола́й Ги́ршевич Капу́стин Russian pronunciation: [kɐˈpustʲɪn]; 22 November 1937 – 2 July 2020) was a Soviet [1] [2] composer and pianist of Russian-Jewish descent. [2] He played with early Soviet jazz bands such as the Oleg Lundstrem Orchestra.

  5. Anastasia Huppmann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anastasia_Huppmann

    At the age of five, she started playing the piano. Soon after, the music school board recognised her musical talent and Anastasia began receiving individual lessons for gifted children in piano, composition and music theory. At the age of seven she appeared playing her own music-compositions live on TV and won her first piano competition.

  6. Gusli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gusli

    The Keyboard Gusli ["Claviroobraznie Gusli" | (Russian: Клавирообразные гусли)] is a heavily strung 19th-century variant with an iron frame, supported on a stand or with table legs. It has a one-octave piano-type chromatic keyboard. Pressing a key raises the dampers on all strings of that note.

  7. Garmon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garmon

    The khromka (хромка) was invented in 1870 in Tula by Russian musician Nikolay Beloborodov. It was a unisonoric (like the bayan or piano accordion), diatonic accordion but on the right keyboard there were also two or three chromatic buttons, usually g 1 ♯, d 2 ♯, f 2 ♯, hence the name khromka.

  8. Vladimir Sofronitsky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Sofronitsky

    Vladimir Sofronitsky was born in St. Petersburg.His father was a physics teacher and his mother came from an artistic family. In 1903, his family moved to Warsaw, where he started piano lessons with Anna Lebedeva-Getcevich (a student of Nikolai Rubinstein), [1] and later (at the age of nine) with Aleksander Michałowski.

  9. Vyacheslav Gryaznov - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vyacheslav_Gryaznov

    Vyacheslav Gryaznov (Russian: Вячеслав Грязнов; born 15 January 1982) is a Russian classical pianist and arranger. His diverse repertoire ranges from Baroque figures such as Domenico Scarlatti to Russian composers and more recent music. He is particularly well known for his many piano transcriptions of older masterworks. [1]