- Alexander Uninsky
Alexander Uninsky (Russian: Александр Юнинский, "Aleksandr Yuninskij") (OldStyleDate|2 February|1910|20 January,
Kiev ,Russia nowUkraine ) -19 December 1972 ,Dallas ,USA ) was a classical pianist.Life and career
Uninsky (pronounced "You-nin-skee") was born in Kiev. He initially studied piano there in the conservatory which had been opened in 1913, and whose other graduates included
Vladimir Horowitz andAlexander Brailowsky . [ [http://www.ninasvetlanova.com/Kogan/GrigoryKogan.html Grigory Kogan ] ]He subsequently moved to
Paris in 1923, where he studied withLazare Levy . He was awarded the conservatory's first prize for piano. In 1932 he was the second winner of theInternational Frederick Chopin Piano Competition (the first winner wasLev Oborin in 1927). In fact, Uninsky tied for first place with the blind Hungarian pianistImre Ungar . The judges decided to award victory on the basis of the toss of a coin. Ungar lost.In 1955, he took up a teaching post at the conservatory of
Toronto , where he numbered among his pupils the Canadian composerBruce Mather . Mather commemorated his teacher in his 1974 composition "In memoriam Alexander Uninsky" [ [http://composers21.com/compdocs/matherb.htm Bruce Mather ] ]Subsequently he taught at the
Southern Methodist University inDallas . His pupils includedJeffrey Swann , David Morgan, Carmen Alvarez, Henry Doskey, andDubravka Tomšič Srebotnjak .Recorded legacy and reputation
Uninsky was quickly signed up in the early 1950s by the newly formed
Philips recording company. HisChopin playing is well represented in his recordings, including the completeEtude s, recorded in the 1950s, the completeMazurka s andImpromptu s recorded between 1959 and 1971, theScherzo s andWaltz es, as well as the piano concertos. His other recordings included works byLiszt .His style is greatly reminiscent of
Nikita Magaloff , who underwent the same influences of pre-revolutionary Russia and post-revolutionary Paris. His playing is unsentimental and elegant, but with a rubato that marks him as coming from an essentially early twentieth century aesthetic. It is not surprising that his clean, sober playing impressed the jury of the second Chopin Competition, which has been founded to combat the mannered, virtuoso tradition of Chopin playing which had marked the late 19th century [http://www.chopin.org/uploads/File/articles/JasinskiAndrzej.pdf] . An indication of the 'modernness' of Uninsky's playing comes from a comment byDinu Lipatti in a review he wrote in 1937 for "Libertatea " in which he says "How is it possible that Emil Sauer must play in the smallSalle Érard , despite his glorious past, when a Brailowsky or Uninsky can pack theSalle Pleyel ?" [ [http://www.marstonrecords.com/sauer/sauer_liner.htm Marston - Emil von Sauer ] ]References
External links
* [http://www.difilm.com.ar/fotografias/u/uninskyalejandro.htm Archive photo of Uninsky]
* [http://www.klassicaa.com/magazine_ReSonancia_ver.asp?idNota=5031&idPais=1 Spanish concert programme] from 1942 with photo and brief biography which was used as one of the sources for this entry.
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