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| | Arts Calendar / March 6 / Concerts |
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Ensemble of Soloists "Studio of New Music" performs Ligeti's "Continuum" for harpsichord, ten plays for the wind quintet, trio for violin, French horn and piano, "Hungarian Rock"; Reich's "Violin Phase", "Piano Phase" for two marimbaphones. Igor Dronov conducts. |
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Formed in 1989 by Pavel Zhagun, Moralny Kodeks saw true popularity and high critical acclaims with a vocalist/saxophonist Sergey Mazaev working out a new successful concept for the band. After recording several songs in English, the band focused on instrumental big-beat featuring INXS-like minimal guitar solo with dance elements and blues-boogie notes in the spirit of ZZ Top. In the 1990-2000s Moralny Kodeks keeps on writing songs and tours a lot. The band described as the "conservatory of the Russian national rock music" sells full houses at Moscow's clubs and has a regular exposure on radio and television. Come to enjoy extraordinary, elite style, refined lyrics and fine music. MMDM Svetlanov Hall |
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19:00 | Parade of Bass Singers |
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Quartet "Moscow Balalaika", Mikhail Egiazarian (piano), Sergey Artamonov, Leonid Boldin, Alexander Vedernikov, Mikhail Guzhov, Alexey Dedov, Otar Kunchulia, Evgeny Plekhanov, Dmitry Skorikov (all bass singers) perform opera arias, Russian romances and folk songs. MMDM Chamber Hall |
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19:00 | Ravel, Lalo, Saint-Saens |
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Pavel Kogan Symphony Orchestra performs Ravel's Suite "Mother Goose" for orchestra; Lalo's Concert for violoncello and orchestra; Saint-Saens’ Symphony No. 3 (with organ). Jean-Claude Casadesus (France). Soloists - Henri Demarquette (violoncello, France), Igor Goldenberg (organ). Tchaikovsky Concert Hall |
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Symphony Orchestra and Choir of the Bolshoi Theatre perform Ravel's Concert No. 1 for piano and orchestra; Stravinsky’s Music of the ballet "Le Sacre du printemps". Alexander Vedernikov conducts. Soloist - Simon Trpceski (piano, UK). Moscow Conservatory Great Hall |
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Three years ago three young men moved from Paris to London to be well received at any party, to become stars and tour with pretty groupies like Aerosmith, to date A-list actresses like Scarlett Johansson and to get piles of awards like The Killers. Well, nothing came out of it. But they said "Whatever" – and just recorded an album about their dreams. "Reality Check" is a twelve-track record about simple wishes of the talented no-accounts, witty sketches made with all due self-irony, mettlesome rock'n'roll celebrating wild parties, beautiful girls and other pleasure of the 20 year-olds. The rest was history: parties, tours, awards and immediate target audience's recognition. The Teenagers' songs are simple and synth rock, comic couplets plus bursting choruses. Singing about erotic tension, disco parties and trendy heavy-rimmed sunglasses The Teenagers set us an example of how to take it all easy and at the same time ironically tender. Sixteen Tons |
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