Nina I. Korganova , real name Nune Hovsepovna Korganyan , stage name Darial (Darialli, Dariali) ( February 18, 1852 - March 24 [March 7, 1895 - opera singer ( mezzo-soprano ) and vocal teacher. Armenian by origin. Sister of singers E. Teryan- Korganova and M. Korganova (Svetada), singers Ivan and Konstantin Korganov, composer and pianist G. Korganov .
| Nina I. Korganova | |
|---|---|
| basic information | |
| Birth name | Nune Hovsepovna Korganyan |
| Date of Birth | 1852 |
| Place of Birth | Tiflis , Russian Empire |
| Date of death | February 24 ( March 7 ) 1895 |
| A country | |
| Professions | opera singer , vocal music teacher |
| Singing voice | mezzo soprano |
| Genres | opera |
| Aliases | Darialli (Dariali), Darial |
Content
- 1 Biography
- 2 family
- 3 Repertoire
- 4 notes
- 5 Literature
- 6 References
Biography
Born in Tiflis. She had three brothers and five sisters. Almost all the children in the family were distinguished by musical talents and some of them gained world fame.
After leaving Tiflis, she attended Bestuzhev courses in St. Petersburg. Fluent in Russian, Georgian, French, English, Italian, Spanish and German. In Paris ( France ), with the assistance of I. S. Turgenev , she took singing lessons from Polina Viardot . Later she improved her vocals with Francesco Lamperti and A. Buzzi in Milan ( Italy ).
In 1870-1880, she was an artist of the court theater of William I in Berlin [1] . She took part in a musical and literary evening organized by Turgenev in Paris on February 2 (14), 1881 [2] . Until 1885, she successfully toured with concerts and performed on the stages of opera houses in Paris, London , Madrid , Berlin , Odessa . In Russia and Europe, she became famous under the stage name Darial (Dariali, Dariali).
The parties of Vani (“Life for the Tsar”) and Ratmir (“Ruslan and Lyudmila”) were considered the best. The party of Vani was the last role on the stage of the St. Petersburg Mariinsky Tetra in 1885. After the state of health left the scene.
She was an active teacher. She taught in the music classes of the Odessa branch of the Imperial Russian Musical Society from 1885 to 1890 [3] . In 1891, together with M. N. Klimentova-Muromtseva organized a private school of singing in Moscow [4] . Classes with Russian, Armenian and Georgian young singers were conducted free of charge. Since 1893, she taught vocal courses on her own.
I did not accept students without the ability to take courses and advised them to abandon music classes. She was attentive to her students, did not spare time and money for them. She established scholarships after the artist Petros Adamyan, her father O. Korganov and brother G. Korganian . Among the students - A. S. Kostanyan .
She died on February 24 (March 7), 1895.
Family
- Father - Korganov Osip
- Sister - Elena Iosifovna Teryan Korganova , opera and chamber singer, vocal teacher;
- Sister - Maria Iosifovna Korganova (stage name Svetade), opera and chamber singer, vocal teacher;
- Brother - Ivan Osipovich Korganov (real name and surname Hovhannes Korganyan), chamber singer (tenor);
- Brother - Konstantin Osipovich Korganov (real name Korgananyan, stage name Tersky), chamber singer (baritone) and operetta artist;
- Brother - Genary Osipovich Korganov , composer and pianist.
Repertoire
- Vanya - “ Life for the Tsar ” by Glinka ;
- Ratmir - " Ruslan and Lyudmila " Glinka.
Notes
- Sources
- ↑ // Murina E. Panorama of the arts: collection. - M: Soviet artist, 1980. - Vol. 3 . - S. 311 .
- ↑ Minsky M.N. Three hours at Turgenev // Literary Review: newspaper. - 1993. - No. 11 (12) . - S. 11-13 .
- ↑ Novorossiysk calendar for 1891. - Odessa: City Printing House, 1890. - S. 189.
- ↑ Moscow Conservatory. From the origins to the present day. Historical and biographical reference book / M.A. Mironova. - M: Progress-Tradition, 2007 .-- S. 269. - ISBN 5-89826-232-6 .
Literature
- Korganov V. D. Caucasian music: a collection of articles. - Tiflis, 1908. - 84 p.
- Shaverdyan A. I. Essays on the history of Armenian music of the 19th — 20th centuries: pre-Soviet period. - M: State. Musical publishing house, 1959. - S. 100.