Lev Vlassenko | |
Honorific Suffix: | People's Artist of the USSR |
Background: | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
Native Name: | Лев Никола́евич Вла́сенко |
Birth Name: | Lev Nikolaevich Vlassenko |
Birth Date: | 24 December 1928 |
Birth Place: | Tbilisi, Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic |
Death Place: | Brisbane, Australia |
Genre: | Classical music |
Occupation: | Pianist |
Instrument: | Piano |
Label: | Melodya |
Lev Nikolaevich Vlassenko (Russian: Лев Никола́евич Вла́сенко; 24 December 1928 – 24 August 1996), was a Soviet pianist and teacher.
Lev Vlassenko was born on 24 December 1928 in Tiflis, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union to Nikolai Appolonovich Vlassenko and Vera Solomonovna Benditskaya.
Lev Vlassenko's first music teacher was his mother Vera. Lev entered the music school for gifted children in Tiflis in the class of Anastasia Davidovna Virsaladze - herself a pupil of the renowned Anna Yesipova. Lev began to play in public at an early age. At the age of ten years, he played Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 1 with renowned conductor Odysseas Dimitriadis. In 1948, Lev Vlassenko entered the class of Yakov Flier at the Moscow Conservatory and completed his undergraduate and postgraduate studies.
He gained international recognition after winning the First Prize and Gold Medal at the Franz Liszt International Piano Competition in Budapest in 1956. He and Chinese pianist Liu Shikun came second to Van Cliburn at the inaugural International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in 1958.
Lev Vlassenko taught at the Moscow Conservatory for 39 years. He taught several world-renowned pianists such as Mikhail Pletnev, Victor Eresko,[1] Kalle Randalu, Mykola Suk, Lev Vinocour, Vladimir Daych, Gennady Dzubenko, Rena Shereshevskaya, Sergueï Kouznetsov, Natasha Vlassenko, Oleg Stepanov, Boris Petrov, Teofils Biķis, Karine Oganian, Jania Aubakirova, Justas Dvarionas, Alexander Strukov, Duncan Gifford and others. In the early 1990s he was professor in the United States at Indiana University and the New England Conservatory, Boston.
Lev Vlassenko was a jury member in many international piano competitions. They include the Paloma O'Shea Santander International Piano Competition (1984),[2] International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow, the Sydney International Piano Competition, the Leeds International Pianoforte Competition, the International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw, the Liszt Piano Competition in Budapest, the Arthur Rubinstein Piano Competition in Tel Aviv and others. Lev Vlassenko became the President of the International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition jury in 1994. He also headed the “International Association of Tchaikovsky Competition Stars”.
In 1991 he was decorated a People's Artist of the USSR.
During his final years, Vlassenko resided in Australia, teaching at the Queensland Conservatorium Griffith University. He was awarded an honorary doctorate by Griffith University in 1996 in recognition of his vast contribution to the development of the Conservatorium.
He died on 24 August 1996 in Brisbane, Australia.
Lev Vlassenko recorded 22 disks and 8 CDs.
In 1999, his daughter, Natasha Vlassenko, and son-in-law, Oleg Stepanov, founded the Lev Vlassenko Piano Competition in his memory. The competition takes place in Brisbane every two years since 1999.
One of the Moscow music schools is named after Lev Vlassenko.
Every year the Vlassenko Piano Competition for Children takes place in Moscow.
In 2009 the book "Lev Vlassenko. Articles, reminiscences, interviews" was published in Brisbane.
At the Sydney International Piano Competition, the Lev Vlassenko Memorial Prize is awarded for the best performance of a virtuoso study.