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Here is the list of the events planned by the association since 1997. (texte à rédiger)
DCIA internal events - Rue des Saints-Pères (Paris 6)
Ecole russe des Arts : concert de fin d’année
Oeuvres de Bach, Beethoven, Clémenti, Lyapunov, Mozart, Naulais, Noda, Pushechnikov, Schuman, Tchaïkovski & Chostakovitch.
M. Brenac, D. Brenac, D. Bourlon, C. Gurlitt, A. Bourlon, L. Mohel, N. Ivancic, P. Brenac, V. Lauraine, Y. Sedov, E. Lambert, N. Kukhtin, A. Dunkel, H. Arkhipoff, L. Klesta, M. Safarov, R. Yoshida, V. Ormanis.
Ecole présidée par Nikita Sorokine, oeuvres présentées par Dimitri Ouvaroff.
Voir le programme completDCIA internal events - Rue des Saints-Pères (Paris 6)
“Quand les compositeurs se souviennent …”
oeuvres d’Olivier Greif (Le Tombeau de Ravel)
Frédérick Martin (2 Petits Préludes pour piano extraits de l’opus 69 (2002) / À Versailles / Nuage de mousse du caramel virtuel
Cinéma muet opus 86 (2006) “In memoriam Dimitri Chostakovitch”
& Dimitri Chostakovitch : Symphonie n° 9 op 70 (réduction pour piano à 4 mains de l’auteur).
Flore Dupuy & Florence Ribot
piano à quatre mains sur piano Yamaha C3
Voir le programme completDCIA internal events - Rue des Saints-Pères (Paris 6)
Flore Dupuy et Florence Ribot (piano 4 mains)
Quand les compositeurs se souviennent …
Oeuvres de Olivier Greif, Frédérick Martin & Dimitri Chostakovitch
Flore Dupuy et Florence Ribot (piano 4 mains)
DCIA internal events - Rue des Saints-Pères (Paris 6)
Justine Metral & Mathilde Nguyen
Oeuvres pour violoncelle et piano de Ludwig van Beethoven, Claude Debussy, Nadia Boulanger, Rita Strohl & Dimitri Chostakovitch (sonate pour violoncelle et piano op 40).
répétition générale du Concours international de Musique de Chambre de Lyon.
Justine Metral (violoncelle)
Mathilde Nguyen (piano)
DCIA internal events - Rue des Saints-Pères (Paris 6)
Justine Metral & Mathilde Nguyen
Oeuvres de Beethoven, Boulanger, Debussy, Strohl
Justine Metral, violoncelle
Mathilde Nguyen, piano
DCIA internal events - Rue des Saints-Pères (Paris 6)
Bloas Saintmarc et les Préludes et Fugues op 87 de Dimitri Chostakovitch
n°2 en la mineur : Allegro – Allegretto
n°4 en mi mineur : Andante – Adagio, Più mosso
n°17 en la bémol majeur : Allegretto – Allegretto
n°18 en fa mineur : Moderato – Moderato con moto
n°21 en si bémol majeur : Allegro – Allegro non troppo
n°14 en mi bémol mineur : Adagio – Allegro non troppo
n°15 en ré bémol majeur : Allegretto – Allegro molto
Concerts and events supported by the DSIA
Bazorka : Polyphonies sacrées et profanes de Georgie
Soulkan Tzintsadze : Miniatures pour quatuor à cordes
Lale – Chanson – Chanson de berger – Chanson paysanne – Ma femme se rebelle – Le ruisseau – Envoie-toi, l’hirondelle – Gandagan
Quatuor Kharadze (Teona Kharadze / Yuri Kuroda / Archil Kharadze / Yulia Duchemin-Kharadze)
Ensemble Mariani
Voir le programme completDCIA internal events - Rue des Saints-Pères (Paris 6)
Guillaume Leroy, Aurélien Pascal & Victor Metral
Guillaume Leroy, viola
Aurélien Pascal, cello
Victor Metral, piano
Works from Henri Vieuxtemps, Robert Schumann, Igor Stravinsky, Guillaume Connesson, Eric Tanguy, Camille Pépin, Witold Lutoslawsky , & Dimitri Chostakovitch
DCIA internal events - Rue des Saints-Pères (Paris 6)
Trio Metral & Emmanuelle Jakubek
Chostakovitch : Trio n° 1 op 8, Sept Romances sur des poèmes d’Alexander Blok op 127 (extraits)
Haydn : Trio n° 39 “Les Tziganes”
Ravel : Trio
Trio Metral :
Joseph Metral, violon
Laure Hélène Michel
Victor Metral, piano
& Emmanuelle Jakubek, soprano
Voir le programme completDSIA partnerships for various editorial productions
Dmitri Schostakowitsch : Briefe an Iwan Sollertinski
Dmitri Schostakowitsch : Briefe an Iwan Sollertinski
herausgegeben von Dmitri Sollertinski und Ljudmila Kownazkaja
Shostakovich without a mask. Nowhere does the Soviet composer reveal himself as candidly as in his letters to his best friend Ivan Sollertinsky, Russia’s most brilliant musicologist. They met in Saint Petersburg (then Leningrad) when Shostakovich was 20 and Sollertinsky was 24. The two immediately became inseparable. And when they were apart, they wrote letters or postcards to each other. Only Shostakovich’s letters have survived. They paint a picture of two brilliant young artists who enthusiastically throw themselves into the current debates without forgetting to enjoy life. Nowhere else do we experience Shostakovich in such an intimate way. From 1935 onwards, with Stalin’s terror, the tone gradually changed. The two were no longer so sure that skill and arguments would prevail. The German invasion of the Soviet Union and the encirclement of Leningrad by Nazi troops separated the friends: Shostakovich was evacuated to Samara (then Kuibyshev), Sollertinsky to Novosibirsk. A happy ending seemed possible when Shostakovich moved to Moscow in 1943 and arranged a professorship for his friend at the Moscow Conservatory. But Sollertinski, weakened by the hardships of war and bullying at the Leningrad Philharmonic, succumbed to a heart attack in 1944 at the age of 41. For Shostakovich, this was a catastrophe. His letters form a monument to a great friendship and provide intimate insights into the cultural and political development of the Soviet Union. Translated from Russian by Ursula Keller
