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  1. Alexander Konstantinovich Glazunov [a] (10 August [ O.S. 29 July] 1865 – 21 March 1936) was a Russian composer, music teacher, and conductor of the late Russian Romantic period. He was director of the Saint Petersburg Conservatory between 1905 and 1928 and was instrumental in the reorganization of the institute into the Petrograd ...

  2. Aleksandr Konstantínovich Glazunov (en ruso Александр Константинович Глазунов; nótese que la pronunciación es glazunóv y no glazúnov); San Petersburgo, 10 de agosto de 1865 - París, 21 de marzo de 1936), conocido como Aleksandr Glazunov, fue un compositor, director de orquesta e influyente maestro de música ...

  3. Aleksandr Glazunov was the major Russian symphonic composer of the generation that followed Tchaikovsky. Glazunov’s mother, a piano pupil of Mily Balakirev, took her obviously talented son to her teacher, and on his advice the boy in 1880 began study with Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov.

  4. Russ. composer. Pupil of RimskyKorsakov 1880–1. Balakirev cond. his first sym. in 1882, the work being hailed as a precocious masterpiece. Glazunov later met Liszt at Weimar and was influenced by his and Wagner's mus. Cond. in Paris 1889 and London 1896–7.

  5. Glazunov made his conducting debut in 1888, becoming principal conductor of the Russian Symphonic Concerts in Saint Petersburg, organised by Mitrofan Belyayev. In 1896, he conducted the premiere of Tchaikovsky's student overture The Storm, which had never been performed during its author's lifetime.

  6. Alexander Glazunov was a Russian composer known for his exceptional musical talent and significant contributions to the classical music world. Early Life Born on August 10, 1865, in St. Petersburg, Glazunov showed early promise as a musician, receiving his initial music education from his musically inclined mother before entering the St ...

  7. His music linked his Russian compositions, which gave rise to much nationalism and pride in Russian culture, to those of a set European style of composing giving international recognition to his symphonies, tone poems, ballets, chamber music, choral works and concertos.