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・ Alexander Tulloch
・ Alexander Tumansky
・ Alexander Turgenev
・ Alexander Turk
・ Alexander Turnbull
・ Alexander Turnbull (bibliophile)
・ Alexander Turnbull (lacrosse)
・ Alexander T. Gray
・ Alexander T. McGill
・ Alexander Tadevosyan
・ Alexander Taffel
・ Alexander Tahy
・ Alexander Tairov
・ Alexander Talbot Rice
・ Alexander Tamanian
Alexander Taneyev
・ Alexander Tarasov
・ Alexander Tarasov (ice hockey)
・ Alexander Tarasov-Rodionov
・ Alexander Tatarenko
・ Alexander Tatarinov
・ Alexander Tatarsky
・ Alexander Taylor
・ Alexander Taylor Innes
・ Alexander Taylor Rankin House
・ Alexander Tchayka
・ Alexander Tcherepnin
・ Alexander Tchigir
・ Alexander technique
・ Alexander Technological Educational Institute of Thessaloniki


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Alexander Taneyev : ウィキペディア英語版
Alexander Taneyev


Alexander Sergeyevich Taneyev ((ロシア語:Алекса́ндр Серге́евич Тане́ев), also transliterated as Taneiev, Tanaiev, Taneieff, and Taneyeff in English; January 17, 1850, Saint Petersburg – February 7, 1918, Petrograd) was a Russian state official and composer of the late Romantic era, specifically of the nationalist school. Among his better-known works were three string quartets, believed to have been composed between 1898–1900.
Alexander Taneyev is not well known outside Russia. His name is often confused with that of his distant cousin Sergei Taneyev (1856–1915).
A member of Russian aristocracy, Taneyev was a high-ranking state official, serving for 22 years as the head of His Imperial Majesty's Own Chancellery. His daughter Anna Vyrubova was a lady in waiting and best friend of Tsarina Alexandra. Vyrubova is best known for her friendship with the Romanov family and with the starets Grigori Rasputin.
==Background==
Alexander Taneyev inherited an enthusiasm for music from his parents. He was dissuaded from pursuing a career as a musician due to his position in the Russian upper class. After studying at university, he entered the Russian civil service, succeeding his father as Director of the Imperial Chancellery. After 1900 he was the head of the folksong collection project of the Russian Geographical Society. Several of the songs collected during this period were later arranged and published by Anatoly Lyadov.
Taneyev pursued musical studies in Germany and later in Petersburg, where he became a student of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. Taneyev's situation at this time bore similarities to that of fellow composer Alexander Borodin. Both were composers whose main occupation was not in music (Borodin was a chemistry professor; Taneyev held a bureaucratic post). It was rumored that Taneyev kept a score that he was working on hidden beneath official documents so that he might pen a few notes between appointments.
Taneyev's compositional output was large: two operas, four symphonies, several pieces for orchestra, numerous choral works, and a considerable amount of chamber music including three string quartets. The influence on his work of the other Russian composers, such as Rimsky-Korsakov, Balakirev and Lyadov, is often noted.

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