Lev Vladimirovich Berezovsky (1898–1960) - Soviet cellist, Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1947).
| Lev Vladimirovich Berezovsky | |
|---|---|
![]() Photo from the memorial plaque | |
| basic information | |
| Date of Birth | September 23 ( October 5 ) 1898 |
| Place of Birth | Smila , Cherkassy County , Kiev Province , Russian empire (now Kiev region of Ukraine) |
| Date of death | March 26, 1960 (61 years) |
| Place of death | Moscow , USSR |
| Buried | |
| A country | |
| Professions | cellist |
| Awards | |
Biography
Born on September 23 ( October 5 in a new style) in 1898 in the town of Smela, Kiev province , in the family of the hereditary musician Klezmer Wolf Abramovich Berezovsky, grandson of the famous klezmer Avrum-Itzik (Mitzi) Berezovsky (1844-1888) [1] [2] .
He studied cello at the Kiev Musical College at the school of F.V. Mulert and at the Petrograd Conservatory (class I.I. Press ), which he graduated in 1920.
Immediately after graduating from the conservatory, he worked in Moscow. He was a member of the State Quartet of the Musical Department of the People's Commissariat of Education of the People's Commissariat of Education, accompanist of Persimfans (1922-1932), the Bolshoi Theater Orchestra (1923-1932), and the USSR State Symphony Orchestra (since 1936).
In Moscow, he lived on Krivokolenny Lane , 14 [3] , which is an architectural monument [4] .
Died March 26, 1960 in Moscow. He was buried in the columbaria of the Novodevichy cemetery (section 119-2-4). [5] Together with Berezovsky, his wife, Rosa Grigorievna Fritlinskaya (1906-1977), was buried.
Notes
- ↑ Clezmers
- Moses Beregovsky : The five sons of his great-grandfather, violinist Isroel-Gersh Berezovsky (1813–1873), became klezmer. Uncle L. V. Berezovsky - Mark Isaakovich Rabinovich (1870–1940) - in 1937–1938 he headed the “State Ensemble of Jewish Folk Music of the Ukrainian SSR under the direction of M. I. Rabinovich” in Kiev .
- ↑ Krivokolenny Lane, Building 14
- ↑ Building with bay windows and balconies in Krivokolenny Lane
- ↑ BEREZOVSKY Lev Vladimirovich (1898–1960)
