Friedrich Robertovitch Lips (born November, 18th 1948 in Yemanzhelinsk) is a Russian bayanist/accordionist of German origin. Since 1989 he has been professor of the bayan accordion department at the Gnesin Russian Academy of Music, one of two music academies in Moscow. He worked as a soloist, chamber musician, arranger, book author and teacher. In 1994 he was honored as a People's Artist of the Russian Federation.

Biography edit

Friedrich Lips[1] was born in 1948 to parents of German origin in the city of Yemanzhelinsk (Chelyabinsk district). In 1967 he finished his education at the "Mikhail Glinka" music school in Magnitogorsk in the class of E. Kudinov (bayan, conducting). He then went to Moscow to the Gnesin State Institute for Music Education, where he was a master student of Sergey Kolobkov and took his exams in his class in 1972 (bayan, conducting) and completed his postgraduate education in 1974.

From 1971 onwards he himself worked as a teacher at the Gnesin Institute. In 1980 he was appointed lecturer and in 1989 professor. Since 1996 he has been head of the Folk Instruments Department - to which the bayan accordion is assigned - at the institute, which has since been renamed the Russian Academy of Music.[2] As a visiting professor, he taught at institutions and academies in Irun, Spain; Groningen, Netherlands; Royal Academy of Music, London; Tianjin, Shanghai, China. As a guest lecturer, he is internationally active in seminars, master classes and educational courses[3] and also acted as a juror in music competitions. In 1989 he founded the international music festival "Bayan and Bayanists" in Moscow, which he chairs as Artistic Director, and initiated the Moscow Music Prize "Silver Disc" for bayan/accordion soloists.

During his work as a teacher, many musicians emerged from his classes who have since become award winners of national and international competitions, concert musicians and educators. As a performing artist, Friedrich Lips was first prize winner at the international music competition in Klingenthal (GDR) in 1969.[4] In 1970 he was signed to the state Soviet concert agency Goskoncert. This is how he started his career as a concert virtuoso and chamber musician. In the following 30 years of uninterrupted concert activity, concerts took him to the US,[5] Canada, China, France, Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, Japan, Norway, Denmark, to concert halls (including the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Suntory Hall Tokyo, Lincoln Center New York,[6] JF Kennedy Center Washington, to the musicians Gidon Kremer,[7] Vladimir Igolinsky, Yo-Yo Ma, Vladimir Tonkha, Mark Pekarski and to the composers Sergey Berinsky, Mikhail Bronner, Alexander Kholminov , Evgeny Derbenko, Edison Denisov, Sofia Gubaidulina,[8] Efrem Podgaits, Alfred Schnittke, Vladislav Zolotaryov,[9] Kirill Volkov, Roman Ledenyov, Tatyana Sergeyeva, Vladimir Ryabov.

Significance edit

He has worked in chamber music ensembles and has given concerts with orchestras under the direction of Gennady Rozhdestvensky, Vladimir Spivakov, Yuri Bashmet, Oleg Agarkov, Timur Mynbayev, Yuri Nikolayevsky,Yūji Takahashi, Luca Pfaff, Lev Markis, Dmitry Liss, and Valery Gergiev. Many works were dedicated to him personally, more than 50 works were premiered by himself and 100 compositions - on more than 30 CDs - recorded and published in various countries in America, Europe and Asia.[10][11] The CD Seven Words, released in Moscow, was awarded the "Diapason d’or" as CD of the year in Paris in 1991. In the US, the CD "Russian and Trepak" was awarded the 3rd prize in a competition organized by Just Plain Folks Music Awards 2006 in the category classical among solo albums with 25,500 nominated CDs.

He is also the author of music theory writings, articles and specialist books of importance. e.g. The Art of Bayan Playing (Kamen, 1991),[12] The Art of Bayan Playing (Kamen, 2000), The Art of Editing Classical Music for Accordion (Kamen, 2017), The Art of Arranging Classical music for Accordion (Kamen, 2018),[13] It seems like yesterday ... (Moscow, 2018).

Awards edit

  • 1993 Silver disc of the festival "Bayan and bayanists"
  • 2001 Order of Friendship
  • 2005 Children's Art School No. 1 in Yemanzhelinsk was named after its first graduate Friedrich Lips
  • 2006 honorary citizen of the Yemanzhelinsk district of the Chelyabinsk region
  • 2008 "Bright Past" award from the O. Mityaev Foundation and the government of the Chelyabinsk region
  • 2008 Gold medal of the Moscow Security Committee on the twentieth anniversary of the Moscow Autumn Festival
  • 2008 "Merit Award" of the Confédération Internationale des Accordéonistes[14]
  • 2009 Russian Performing Arts Foundation: Golden Talent of Russia Diploma
  • 2010 Honorary Professor at the London Academy of Music (Great Britain)
  • 2011 Moscow City Prize
  • 2015 laureate of the International Music Education Prize Ippolitova-Ivanova named after him
  • 2019 As part of the "2019 World Music Awards", Friedrich Lips was voted "Musician of the Year" by the Accordion Stars Illustrated Magazine in New York, he received a "Lifetime Achievement Award" and was inducted into the "Accordion World Hall of Fame".

World premieres edit

Year Place Composer Piece
1971 Moscow (Soviet Union) Vladislav Solotaryov Sonata N° 2 (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
1972 Sonata N° 3 (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
1975 Alexander Shurbin Fantasy and Fugue (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Toccata (neue Bearbeitung)
Vladislav Solotaryov Five compositions
Children Suite N° 4
Children Suite N° 6
1976 Vladislav Solotaryov Spanish Rhapsody "Ispaniada" (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Monastery of Ferapont
Children Suite N° 5
1977 Kirill Volkov Sonata N° 1 (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Vladislav Solotaryov "Concert Symphony N° 1" for bayan and symphony orchestra
1978 Alexander Shurbin Concert-Diptych (new arrangement)
Vladimir Podgorny Prelude in memory of Vl. Solotaryov
1979 Nikita Bogoslovsky Three Russian Pieces: Fairy tale, Round dance, Dance
1980 Kirill Volkov Sonata N° 2
Sofia Gubaidulina De profundis (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
1982 Alexander Shurbin Sonata N° 2 "Nostalgia" (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Pyotr Londonov Scherzo-Toccata
Sofia Gubaidulina Partita "Seven Words" for bayan, violoncello and chamber orchestra (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Vladimir Tonkha)
1984 Alexander Shurbin Sonata N° 3 "Walk through Neskutchny sad" (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Vladimir Podgorny Fantasy on the Ukrainian folk song "Hey Thou Wind, blow up your country", 2nd arrangement (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
1986 Oslo (Norway) Trygve Madsen Partita in 4 parts for 2 bayans
1987 Moscow (Soviet Union) Sofia Gubaidulina Sonate "Et exspecto" in 5 Sätzen (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Jewgenij Derbenko Toccata (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Edison Denisov Fantasy on Soviet songs from the 1930s "The steamer drives past the harbor" for bayan, piano and percussion
1989 Karstula (Finland) Yevgeny Derbenko Prelude and Toccata
1990 Sotshi (Soviet Union) Vladimir Belyayev Sonata N° 1 (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
1991 Moscow (Soviet Union) Sergey Berinsky "Il dolce dolore" for bayan and violoncello
Alexander Rosenblat "Waltz and Blues for two" for bayan and violoncello
Vladislav Solotaryov "Concert Symphony N° 2" for bayan and symphony orchestra
Kirill Wolkow "Stichera" for bayan and violoncello (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Vladimir Tonkha)
Brussels (Belgium) Sergey Berinsky Partita "Also sprach Zarathustra" (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
1992 Amsterdam (Netherlands) Bogdan Precz Praeambulum and Toccata (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Moscow (Soviet Union)
– Russian premiere
Sofia Gubaidulina "Silenzio", Five Pieces for bayan, violin and violoncello
1993 Moscow (Russia) Sergey Berinsky Three pieces in "mauvais" style
1994 Gioacchino Rossini/Yevgeny Derbenko Tarantella
Sergey Berinsky "Miserere" for soprano, bayan and piano (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Svyatoslav Lips)
1995 Klingenthal (Germany) Vladimir Kobekin "Holiday for two" for bayan and percussion
Amsterdam (Netherlands) Boudewijn Tarenskeen "Requiem" for bayan and violoncello
Alexander Larin Three pieces for bayan
1996 Moscow (Russia) Sergej Berinskij Symphony N° 3 "... and the sky darkened" (Apocalypse, chapter 6) for bayan and symphony orchestra
Alexander Wustin "The Disappearance" for bayan, violoncello and chamber orchestra (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Vladimir Tonka)
Edison Denisov "From dusk to light" for bayan
1997 Amsterdam (Netherlands) Alfred Schnittke "Two little pieces for organ" (Version for bayan)
Wladimir Rjabow "The River of Love", Capriccio for bayan (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Groningen (Niederlande) Sergey Berinsky "Light waves" (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Miny Dekkers)
Portogruaro (Italien) "Sea World", Poem for violin and bayan
Moscow (Russia) Sergey Berinsky "Cinema"
Mikhail Bronner "Dream Garden" for bayan and violoncello (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Vladimir Tonkha)
1998 Moscow (Russia) Roman Ledenyov "... against the background of a Russian landscape" (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Tatyana Sergeyeva "Yasmine", Tango for bayan and piano (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Svyatoslav Lips)
Portogruaro (Italy) Mikhail Bronner "Evenings near Moscow" for bayan, clarinet, violin, cello and double bass
1999 Moscow (Russia) Mikhail Bronner "Judas-Passion" for bayan and chamber orchestra (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Alexander Kholminow "Symphony" for bayan solo (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Efrem Podgaits "Fantasy in memory of Alfred Schnittke" (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
2000 Kuhmo (Finland) Merab Gagnidze "No comment" for bayan
2001 Moscow (Russia) Tatyana Sergeyeva "Dark-red rose" Tango for Quintett "Piazzolla-Studio"
2002 Klingenthal (Deutschland) Efrem Podgaits "Lips Concert" for bayan and symphony orchestra
2003 Stockholm (Sweden) Sofia Gubaidulina "Under the Sign of Scorpio" (Variations on Six Hexachords) for bayan and symphony orchestra
Milwaukee (USA) Efrem Podgaits "Ex Animo" for bayan and string quartet (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Fine Arts Quartet)
2004 Moscow (Russia) Mikhail Bronner "Katuv" for bayan, piano and symphony orchestra (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Svyatoslav Lips)
2006 Moscow (Russia) Roman Ledenyov "Evening love songs" for bayan (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Alexander Kholminov "Autumn melody" for bayan (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Efrem Podgaits Sonata in 3 movements (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Milwaukee (USA) Yehuda Yannay "Bayannayab" for 2 bayans
2008 Moscow (Russia) Giya Kancheli "KAPOTE" for bayan and chamber orchestra (Russian premiere)
Efrem Podgaits "Viva voce" – Concert N° 2 for chamber orchestra (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
"Ave Maria" for violoncello and bayan (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Vladimir Tonkha)
"Cocktail Rio Rita " for bayan, violin, violoncello, piano and percussion (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Mikhael Bronner "Eclipse" (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
Roman Ledenyov "Ave Maria" for violoncello and bayan
2009 Tatyana Sergeyeva "Amaryllis" for bayan and piano (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Svyatoslav Lips)
2010 Alexander Kholminov Concert for bayan and large symphony orchestra (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
2011 Tatyana Sergeyeva "Night Flowers" for bayan and piano (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips and Svyatoslav Lips)
Sofia Gubaidulina "Tatarian dance" for bayan and two double basses (Russian premiere)
"Fachwerk" for bayan and strings (Russian premiere)
2012 Mikhael Bronner "Seven Jewish Songs" for bayan and chamber orchestra
2013 Minsk (Belarus) Konstantin Yaskov "Hymn to Aphrodite" for bayan and chamber orchestra
Evora (Portugal) Alexander Kholminov "Moment" for bayan (dedicated to Fridrikh Lips)
2017 Moskau (Russia) Mikhail Bronner "I float on waves of love", eight sonnets for bayan and chamber orchestra
2018 Efrem Podgaits "Double Mirror" for bayan, violoncello and symphony orchestra
"Odessa-Quodlibet" for violin, bayan, violoncello and piano
2020 Alexander Tchaikovsky Sonata in two parts
2021 Mikhail Bronner "Jewish Holidays"
Dolce appassionato

References edit

  1. ^ "Friedrich Lips: Kurzbiographie, Bibliographie, Diskographie". Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  2. ^ "Russian Gnessin Academy of Music". Russian Academy of Music. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  3. ^ "Meisterklasse Friedrich Lips, Akkordeon - Musik und Kunst Privatuniversität der Stadt Wien". muk.ac.at (in Austrian German). Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  4. ^ "Friedrich Lips - Royal Academy of Music".
  5. ^ "Soviet accordionist Friedrich Lips". Lawrence Journal-World. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  6. ^ "The New York Times - Search". www.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
  7. ^ "Gidon Kremer – Classical violinist". Gidon Kremer. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
  8. ^ Gubaidulina, Sofia (2006-10-31). "The music of Sofia Gubaidulina". BBC Press Office. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
  9. ^ Klause, Inna (2005). Das Leben Des Komponisten Vladislav Andreevic Zolotarev (in German). BoD – Books on Demand. ISBN 978-3-8334-3088-6.
  10. ^ "Universal Edition". www.universaledition.com. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  11. ^ "Noten / CDs / DVDs | Internationale Musikverlage Hans Sikorski". www.sikorski.de. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  12. ^ "Katalog der Bayrischen Staatsbibliothek". Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  13. ^ "Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek". Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  14. ^ "Index page, Confédération Internationale des Accordéonistes (CIA), IMC, UNESCO". Retrieved 2022-02-03.

External links edit