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・ Dmitri Shlyakhtin
・ Dmitri Shomko
・ Dmitri Shorokhov
・ Dmitri Shostakovich
・ Dmitri Shoukov
・ Dmitri Shovgenov
・ Dmitri Sidorenko
・ Dmitri Silin
・ Dmitri Sinkevich
・ Dmitri Sinodi-Popov
・ Dmitri Sitak
・ Dmitri Skobeltsyn
・ Dmitri Skoblyakov
・ Dmitri Skorikov
・ Dmitri Skozabtsov
Dmitri Smirnov (composer)
・ Dmitri Smirnov (footballer, born 1969)
・ Dmitri Smirnov (tenor)
・ Dmitri Smolnikov
・ Dmitri Sokolov
・ Dmitri Sokolov (basketball)
・ Dmitri Solodkov
・ Dmitri Solodyankin
・ Dmitri Solodyannikov
・ Dmitri Soloviev
・ Dmitri Solsky
・ Dmitri Starodub
・ Dmitri Stolyarov
・ Dmitri Stratan
・ Dmitri Stulov


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Dmitri Smirnov (composer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Dmitri Smirnov (composer)

Dmitri Nikolaevich Smirnov ((ロシア語:Дми́трий Никола́евич Смирно́в); born 2 November 1948, Minsk), also known by his pen names Dmitri N. Smirnov and D. Smirnov-Sadovsky, is a Russian and British (since 1991) composer.
==Biography==
He was born in Minsk into a family of opera singers Nikolay Senkin-Sadovsky and Eugenia Smirnova. He studied at the Moscow Conservatory 1967–1972 under Nikolai Sidelnikov, Yuri Kholopov and Edison Denisov. He also studied privately with Philip Herschkowitz, a pupil of both Berg and Webern. He is married to the composer Elena Firsova. Their children are Philip Firsov (an artist and sculptor), and Alissa Firsova (a composer, pianist and conductor).
His ''Solo for Harp'' won First Prize in a competition in Maastricht (1976). His two operas ''Tiriel'' and ''Thel'' on a text by William Blake were premiered in 1989 (the first at the Freiburg Festival, Germany, and the second at the Almeida Festival in London). The same year his First Symphony (''The Seasons'') was performed at the Tanglewood Festival, United States. His orchestral ''Mozart-Variations'' were staged as a ballet in Pforzheim in Germany (1992). Other premieres include the oratorio ''A Song of Liberty'' (Leeds, UK – 1993), Cello Concerto (Manchester, UK – 1996), cantata ''Song of Songs'', (Geneva, Switzerland – 2001) Triple Concerto 2 (LSO, Barbican, London – 2004). Many of Smirnov's works reflect his fascination with the poetry and art of William Blake.
In 1979 he was blacklisted as one of the "Khrennikov's Seven" at the Sixth Congress of the Union of Soviet Composers for unapproved participation in some festivals of Soviet music in the West. He was one of the founders of Russia's new ''ACM - Association for Contemporary Music'', established in Moscow in 1990. Since 1991 Smirnov have been resident of England. He was a ''Composer-in-Residence'' at University of Cambridge (St John's College), at Dartington, and ''Visiting Professor'' at Keele University (1993-8). In 1998 Smirnov and his family settled in St Albans. From 2003 he has taught at the Goldsmiths College, University of London.
His work has been performed by many notable conductors, including: Riccardo Muti, Sir Andrew Davis, Dennis Russell Davies, Peter Eötvös, Oliver Knussen, Vassily Sinaisky, Pavel Kogan, Gennady Rozhdestvensky, Gunther Schuller, and Yan Pascal Tortelier. Scores of selected works are available from various publishers including: Hans Sikorski, Hamburg, Boosey & Hawkes, London, and G. Schirmer, New York.
His books ("A Geometer of Sound Crystals" ) ssm 34 ("studia slavica musicologica", vol. 34), 2003 ISBN 3-928864-99-8 and ("The Anatomy of Theme in Beethoven's Piano Sonatas" ), ssm 46, ("studia slavica musicologica", vol. 46), 2008, ISBN 978-3-936637-19-9 were published by Ernst Kuhn, Berlin (both books published in English).

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