Russia ~ that vast, sprawling Eastern neighbour to Europe ~ has in its time produced much wonderful music and many fine musicians. How well acquainted are you with them?
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The 'bee piece' has been arranged (by others) for, and performed on, even the most improbable of instruments such as the tuba and the pedalboard of the organ
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This is the city of the famous Hermitage and Winter Palace, among many other fine institutions; the present capital, Moscow, did not necessarily loom so large in the past. It was at St Petersburg, for example, that Tchaikovsky received his Conservatory training
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The lively overture is enduringly and deservedly popular, but the rest of the work also contains many lovely moments
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The splendidly long-lived Leon Theremin (1896-1993) created the electronic instrument known by his name, as well as various other inventions in the fields of television and espionage technology. The instrument, based on the oscillator, produces a wavering, ethereal sound somewhat reminiscent of the fleeting shape of a large soap bubble floating in the air. This in turn lends itself to such uses as the signature tunes of mystery and detective serials. Theremin's biography (see Wikipedia, for instance) makes picaresque reading as one unusual man's progress through the chequered history of his own country, and others, during the 20th century
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Much of Khachaturian's music carries strong influences of local folk music heard during his childhood
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Another highly interesting and controversial cultural figure; the story of his Leningrad Symphony is particularly resonant
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He was undoubtedly among the very top cellists of the 20th century and had fruitful collaborations with many leading artists and composers worldwide. His roster of honours and awards is unusually extensive even for an artist of such standing, and reflects the warm esteem in which he was held wherever he played and directed
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This work sounds texturally like a concerto, but is in fact a suite of variations, each highly atmospheric. It might very fairly be argued that Rachmaninov inherited Tchaikovsky's mantle as 'Russian mood-musician par excellence'. One of his piano concertos was quickly seized upon to convey the emotional undercurrents in the otherwise apparently 'stiff-upper-lip' British film Brief Encounter in the early 1940s
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Answer 1 is an opera; the others are all ballets
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It was Stravinsky who was this enfant terrible!
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