Boris Mironowitsch Pergamenschtschikow

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boris Mironovich Pergamenschtschikow ( Russian Борис Миронович Пергаменщиков ., Scientific transliteration Boris Mironovič Pergamenščikov in Germany also Pergamenschikow * 14. August 1948 in Leningrad ; † thirtieth April 2004 in Berlin ) was a Russian cellist .

Life

Boris Pergamenschtschikow achieved first fame while studying with Emmanuel Fischmann in Leningrad and played with the Moscow State Orchestra, among others. In 1974 he received the gold medal at the 5th Tchaikovsky Competition. In 1977 he emigrated with his family and accepted a professorship at the Cologne University of Music and Dance . Since 1998 he has been teaching at the Hanns Eisler Academy of Music in Berlin .

He played with the conductors Claudio Abbado , Yehudi Menuhin and Mstislaw Rostropowitsch as well as with Krzysztof Penderecki and made music with major orchestras such as the Munich Philharmonic and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra London at concerts and international festivals. He also played modern and classical chamber music with the Amadeus Quartet and the Alban Berg Quartet .

Pergamenschtschikow also played as a soloist, for example on the CD Violoncello Solo from 1989 (AULOS records), on which the rarely played Sonata for Violoncello by Paul Hindemith (op 25, No. 3) and the Sacher Variations for Violoncello Solo by Witold Lutosławski are located.

The Boris Pergamenschikow Prize was named after him.

Boris Pergamenschtschikow died in Berlin in 2004 at the age of 55. His grave is in the Dahlem forest cemetery .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hans-Jürgen Mende: Lexicon of Berlin burial places . Pharus-Plan, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-86514-206-1 , p. 586.