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Alexander Glazunov
Alexander Glazunov
Russian composer, music teacher and conductor
1
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Russian composer
2
Mily Balakirev
Mily Balakirev
Russian composer, pianist, and conductor
3
Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky
Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky
Russian composer (1839-1881)
4
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Russian composer
5
Nikolai Myaskovsky
Nikolai Myaskovsky
Russian composer
6
Mikhail Glinka
Mikhail Glinka
Russian composer
7
Nikolai Tcherepnin
Nikolai Tcherepnin
Russian composer
8
Anton Arensky
Anton Arensky
Russian composer, pianist and professor of music
9
Dmitri Shostakovich
Dmitri Shostakovich
Russian Soviet composer and pianist (1906-1975)
10
Reinhold Glière
Reinhold Glière
Soviet Ukrainian composer
11
Sergei Prokofiev
Sergei Prokofiev
Ukrainian & Russian Soviet pianist and composer
Alexander Borodin
Russian composer, doctor and chemist

Alexander Borodin

Intro
Russian composer, doctor and chemist
Member of, past and present
The Five

The Five

Borodin, c. 1865

Alexander Porfiryevich Borodin (Russian: Александр Порфирьевич Бородин, tr. Aleksandr Porfir’yevich Borodin, IPA: [ɐlʲɪkˈsandr pɐrˈfʲi rʲjɪvʲɪtɕ bərɐˈdʲin] (listen); 12 November 1833 – 27 February 1887) was a Russian chemist and Romantic musical composer of Georgian ancestry. He was one of the prominent 19th-century composers known as "The Five", a group dedicated to producing a uniquely Russian kind of Classical music. Borodin is known best for his symphonies, his two string quartets, the symphonic poem In the Steppes of Central Asia and his opera Prince Igor.

A doctor and chemist by profession and training, Borodin made important early contributions to organic chemistry. Although he is presently known better as a composer, he regarded medicine and science as his primary occupations, only practicing music and composition in his spare time or when he was ill. As a chemist, Borodin is known best for his work concerning organic synthesis, including being among the first chemists to demonstrate nucleophilic substitution, as well as being the co-discoverer of the aldol reaction. Borodin was a promoter of education in Russia and founded the School of Medicine for Women in Saint Petersburg, where he taught until 1885.


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