Rostislaw Wygranienko
hideThis article has multiple issues. Please help or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Rostisław Wygranienko (born 1978 in Simferopol, Ukraine) is a Polish concert organist, pianist and musicologist of Ukrainian origin. In 2003 he graduated from the Fryderyk Chopin Music Academy, Warsaw (Master of Arts with "excellent degree" diploma), where he studied with . Also he took part in lessons and masterclasses with Edith Picht-Axenfeld, Johannes Geffert, Edgar Krapp, Bernhard Haas, , Jon Laukvik, Martin Haselböck, Olivier Latry and others.
Prizes and awards[]
He won first prizes at the following competitions:
- 2002: Rumia[citation needed]
- 2003: St-Maurice ("Prix de l’Etat du Valais") [1]
- 2005: Feliks Nowowiejski Competition in Poznań [2]
Music activity[]
Concert activity in Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Czech Republic, Croatia, Slovakia, Poland, Belarus and Ukraine. He was a member of the Jury for the 19th Organ Conversatorium (Early Polish Organ Music Competition) in Legnica, Poland [3] and for the 5th International Organ Competition in Saint-Maurice, Switzerland.[4]
Rostislaw Wygranienko is specializing in early and romantic organ music of Poland. He recorded (as World Premiere Recording) the Complete Works by Adam of Wągrowiec, as well as complete Warsaw Organ Tablature (ca. 1680), Dumka by Feliks Nowowiejski and contemporary Polish music. Among his other recordings there are Nowowiejski's Organ symphonies as well as music by Petrus de Drusina, Piotr Żelechowski and others.
Discography[]
- "Adam z Wągrowca, , -- organ works" - Acte Préalable, 2008 (Opera Omnia by Adam of Wągrowiec is recorded for the 1st time) [5]
- "The Complete Warsaw Organ Tablature" - Acte Préalable, 2008 - World Premiere Recording [6]
- "Feliks Nowowiejski known and unknown" (with others) - Feliks Nowowiejski Society, 2006
- - Msza Legnicka (The Mass of Legnica) (for solo voices, mixed choir and organ) (with others) - DUX, 2006
- Twenty Years of Organ Conversatorium in Legnica: 1986-2005 (with others) - DUX, 2005
References[]
External links[]
- 1978 births
- Living people
- Polish classical pianists
- Male classical pianists
- Male organists
- Polish classical organists
- Polish people of Ukrainian descent
- 21st-century classical pianists
- 21st-century organists
- 21st-century male musicians