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{{Short description|American musicologist (born 1963)}}
'''Oleg Vitalyevich Timofeyev''' ({{lang-ru|Оле́г Вита́льевич Тимофе́ев}}, ''Oleg Vital'evič Timofeev''; born January 12, 1963 in [[Moscow]]), is an American [[Musicology|musicologist]] and musician of Russian origin, specializing in [[lute]] and [[Russian guitar]]. He is best known for his pioneering work in the discovery, promotion, interpretation, and authentic performance of the repertoire for the 19th- and 20th-century [[Russian guitar|Russian seven-string guitar]].
{{BLP sources|date=September 2023}}

{{Infobox musical artist | background = non_vocal_instrumentalist | instrument = [[guitar]], [[lute]]
{{Infobox musical artist
| background = non_vocal_instrumentalist
| instrument = [[guitar]], [[lute]]
| name = Oleg V. Timofeyev
| name = Oleg V. Timofeyev
| image = Oleg_timofeyev_may2007_400pxls.jpg
| image = Oleg timofeyev may2007 400pxls.jpg
| caption = Oleg Timofeyev, IARGUS 2007, Iowa City
| caption = Oleg Timofeyev, IARGUS 2007, Iowa City
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1963|1|12}}
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1963|1|12}}
|birth_place =[[Moscow]]
| birth_place =[[Moscow]]
| death_date =
| death_date =
| alias =
| alias =
Line 14: Line 16:
| website = [http://www.russian-guitar.com www.russian-guitar.com]
| website = [http://www.russian-guitar.com www.russian-guitar.com]
}}
}}
'''Oleg Vitalyevich Timofeyev''' ({{lang-ru|Оле́г Вита́льевич Тимофе́ев|link=no}}, Oleg Vital'evič Timofeev; born January 12, 1963, in [[Moscow]]), is an American [[Musicology|musicologist]], specializing in [[lute]] and [[Russian guitar]]. He is best known for his pioneering work in the discovery, promotion, interpretation, and authentic performance of the repertoire for the 19th- and 20th-century [[Russian guitar|Russian seven-string guitar]].


==Biography==
==Biography==
Timofeyev born into a musical family. His mother Natalia Timofeyeva, a cellist, is Jewish. His father was a [[Romani people|Roma]].<ref>https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/arts-letters/articles/seven-strings-over-iowa {{Bare URL inline|date=August 2024}}</ref>


===Studies===
===Studies===
Timofeyev comes from a musical family, being the son of cellist Natalia Timofeyeva. He began his study of the classical guitar in the early 1980s under the tutelage of [[:ru:Фраучи, Камилл Артурович|Kamill Frauchi]], about whom he later produced a documentary film, ''Frautschi'' {{Harv |Timofeyev|Gölz|2008}}. He holds an M.A. in Early Music Performance from the [[University of Southern California]] (1993), and a Ph.D. in Performance Practice from [[Duke University]] (1999) {{Harv |Timofeyev|1999}}. Since 1983 he has been performing early music on authentic instruments of the plucked family ([[lute]], [[guitar]]). In 1989 his musical interests brought him to the U.S., where he studied with [[Patrick O'Brien (musician)|Patrick O'Brien]], [[James Tyler (music)|James Tyler]], and [[Hopkinson Smith]].
Timofeyev began his study of the classical guitar in the early 1980s under the tutelage of Swiss-Russian guitarist {{ill|Kamill Frauchi|de|Kamill Arturowitsch Frautschi|ru|Фраучи, Камилл Артурович}}, about whom he later produced a documentary film titled ''Frautschi''.{{sfn|Timofeyev|Gölz|2008}} He holds an M.A. in Early Music Performance from the [[University of Southern California]] (1993), and a Ph.D. in Performance Practice from [[Duke University]] (1999).{{sfn|Timofeyev|1999}} Since 1983 he has been performing early music on authentic instruments of the plucked family ([[lute]], [[guitar]]). In 1989 his musical interests brought him to the U.S., where he studied with [[Patrick O'Brien (musician)|Patrick O'Brien]], [[James Tyler (musician)|James Tyler]], and [[Hopkinson Smith]].


===Professional work===
===Professional work===


====Revival of the Russian seven-string guitar====
====Revival of the Russian seven-string guitar====
Since earning his doctorate he has worked for the revival of Russian music played with authentic technique on the seven-string guitar, often in collaboration with other artists, including the Russian [[Romani people|Roma]] guitarist [[Sasha Kolpakov]], the Kolpakov Trio (Timofeyev, Kolpakov Trio and Talisman 2005), and the American guitarist John Schneiderman (Timofeyev and Schneiderman 2006). Among the fruits of his research has been his rediscovery and recording the music of [[Matvej Pavlov-Azancheev]] (1888–1963), who was among the rare composers for the seven-string guitar in the first half of the twentieth century.
Since earning his doctorate he has worked for the revival of Russian music played with authentic technique on the seven-string guitar, often in collaboration with other artists, including the Russian [[Romani people|Roma]] guitarist [[Sasha Kolpakov]], the Kolpakov Trio (Timofeyev, Kolpakov Trio and Talisman 2005), and the American guitarist [[John Schneiderman]] (Timofeyev and Schneiderman 2006). Among the fruits of his research has been his rediscovery and recording the music of Matvej Pavlov-Azancheev]] (1888–1963), who was among the rare composers for the seven-string guitar in the first half of the twentieth century.


Timofeyev has performed and taught widely in Europe and the United States. A recipient of numerous scholarly awards, including [[International Research & Exchanges Board|IREX]] and [[Fulbright Program|Fulbright]] fellowships, he has taught and lectured at Maimonides State Academy (Moscow), [[Duke University]], the [[University of Kansas]], [[Northwestern University]], [[Princeton University]], the [[University of Iowa]], [[Grinnell College]], and the [[Smithsonian Institution|Smithsonian]].
Timofeyev has performed and taught widely in Europe and the United States. A recipient of numerous scholarly awards, including [[International Research & Exchanges Board|IREX]] and [[Fulbright Program|Fulbright]] fellowships, he has taught and lectured at Maimonides State Academy (Moscow), [[Duke University]], the [[University of Kansas]], [[Northwestern University]], [[Princeton University]], the [[University of Iowa]], [[Grinnell College]], and the [[Smithsonian Institution|Smithsonian]].


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
Line 33: Line 37:
| last = Timofeyev
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| first = Oleg
| author-link = Oleg Timofeyev
| title = Francesco and Matelart in a Moscow Music Shop
| title = Francesco and Matelart in a Moscow Music Shop
| journal = Lute Society Quarterly
| journal = Lute Society Quarterly
Line 39: Line 42:
| issue = 4
| issue = 4
| pages = 16–23
| pages = 16–23
| year = 1996
| year = 1996|ref=none
}}
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None--> }}


*{{Cite journal
*{{Cite journal
| last = Timofeyev
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| first = Oleg
| title = Marco Bazzotti. La Chitarra Eptacorde Nella Cultura Russa dell'Ottocento
| author-link = Oleg Timofeyev
| title = [[Marco Bazzotti (musicologist)|Marco Bazzotti]]. La Chitarra Eptacorde Nella Cultura Russa dell’Ottocento
| journal = Il Fronimo
| journal = Il Fronimo
| volume = 103
| volume = 103
| pages = 27–40
| pages = 27–40
| date = 1998a
| date = 1998a|ref=none
}}
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None--> }}


*{{Cite document
*{{Cite document
| last = Timofeyev
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| first = Oleg
| author-link = Oleg Timofeyev
| title = [[Thomas Ford (composer)|Thomas Ford]]. Lyra Viol Duets. Critical edition with a scholarly introduction and commentary.
| title = [[Thomas Ford (composer)|Thomas Ford]]. Lyra Viol Duets. Critical edition with a scholarly introduction and commentary.
| place = Madison
| place = Madison
| publisher = A-R Editions,
| publisher = A-R Editions
| year = 1998b
| year = 1998b|ref=none
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None--> }}

*{{Cite document
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg Vitalyevich
| author-link = Oleg Timofeyev
| last2 =
| first2 =
| author2-link =
| title = The Golden Age of the Russian Guitar: Repertoire, Performance Practice, and Social Function of the Russian Seven-String Guitar Music, 1800–1850 (Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Music, Duke University)
| location = Ann Arbor, MI
| publisher = UMI Dissertation Services (UMI Number: 9928880)
| pages = xviii + 584
| year = 1999
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
*{{Cite journal
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| contribution = Guitar (Russia)
| year = 2001a
| title = The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
*{{Cite journal
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| contribution = Aksyonov, Semyon Nikolayevich
| year = 2001b
| title = The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
*{{Cite journal
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| contribution = Alexandrov, Nikolaj Ivanovich
| year = 2001c
| title = The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
*{{Cite journal
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| contribution = Morkov, Vladimir Ivanovich
| year = 2001d
| title = The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
*{{Cite journal
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| contribution = Sarenko, Vasily Stepanovich
| year = 2001e
| title = The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
*{{Cite journal
| last = Timofeyev
| first = Oleg
| contribution = Zimmerman, Fyodor Mikhajlovich
| year = 2001f
| title = The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
}}

*{{cite book
|last = Timofeyev
|first = Oleg
|date = 2023
|title= The Seven-String Guitar in Russia: Its Origins, Repertoire, and Performance Practice, 1800-1850
|location = Cambridge
|publisher = Cambridge Scholars Publishing
|isbn= 978-1-5275-9285-8
}}


===Film- and discography===
===Film- and discography===
Line 175: Line 112:
|title = Guitar in the GULag: Guitar Music by Matvei Pavlov-Azancheev, 1888–1963
|title = Guitar in the GULag: Guitar Music by Matvei Pavlov-Azancheev, 1888–1963
|medium = CD
|medium = CD
|publisher = Hänssler Records
|publisher = Hänssler Records
|id = 098458000
|id = 098458000
}}
}}
Line 191: Line 128:
|title = Music Of Mikhail Glinka / The Czar's Guitars
|title = Music Of Mikhail Glinka / The Czar's Guitars
|medium = CD
|medium = CD
|publisher = Profil - Edition Günter Hänssler
|publisher = Profil Edition Günter Hänssler
|id = PH-07008
|id = PH-07008
}}
}}
Line 207: Line 144:
|title = Shavlego: Guitar Music by Georgian Composers
|title = Shavlego: Guitar Music by Georgian Composers
|medium = CD
|medium = CD
|publisher = Profil - Edition Günter Hänssler
|publisher = Profil Edition Günter Hänssler
|id = PH-07072
|id = PH-07072
}}
}}

*{{Cite video
==References==
| people = Timofeyev, Oleg & Sabine I. Gölz
{{reflist}}
| title = Frautschi

| medium = DVD
'''Sources'''
| publisher = Arbatfilm
*{{Cite thesis|last=Timofeyev|first=Oleg Vitalyevich|title=The Golden Age of the Russian Guitar: Repertoire, Performance Practice, and Social Function of the Russian Seven-String Guitar Music, 1800–1850|type=Ph.D. dissertation (UMI Number: 9928880)|publisher=Department of Music, [[Duke University]]|location=Ann Arbor, Michigan|year=1999}}
| location =
*{{Cite AV media|last1=Timofeyev|first1=Oleg|last2=Gölz|first2=Sabine I.|title=Frautschi|medium=DVD|publisher=Arbatfilm|date=2008}}
|date = 2008 }}


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://abc-guitar.narod.ru/pages/timofeyev.htm Олег Витальевич Тимофеев] - Biography in Russian in the ''Illustrated Biographical Encyclopedic Dictionary: Guitarists and Composers'' by V. V. and S. V. Tavrovskij (В.В. и С.В Тавровские, ред., Иллюстрированный биографический энциклопедический словарь: Гитаристы и композиторы)
*[http://abc-guitar.narod.ru/pages/timofeyev.htm Олег Витальевич Тимофеев] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100609111203/http://abc-guitar.narod.ru/pages/timofeyev.htm |date=2010-06-09 }} – Biography in Russian in the ''Illustrated Biographical Encyclopedic Dictionary: Guitarists and Composers'' by V. V. and S. V. Tavrovskij (В.В. и С.В Тавровские, ред., Иллюстрированный биографический энциклопедический словарь: Гитаристы и композиторы)
*[http://www.russian-guitar.com www.russian-guitar.com] - Timofeyev's personal website
*[http://www.russian-guitar.com www.russian-guitar.com] Timofeyev's personal website
*[http://www.iarmac.org/ International Academy for Russian Musica, Arts, and Culture] - Foundation for the promotion of the Russian seven-string guitar, its music, and tradition
*[http://www.iarmac.org/ International Academy for Russian Musica, Arts, and Culture], foundation for the promotion of the Russian seven-string guitar, its music, and tradition
*[http://www.iowaartscouncil.org/programs/folk-and-traditional-arts/iowa-roots/season-three/oleg-timofeyev.shtml ''Iowa Roots'': Oleg Timofeyev, Russian Jewish Guitarist] - Interview with audio files and text by the Iowa Arts Council
*[http://www.iowaartscouncil.org/programs/folk-and-traditional-arts/iowa-roots/season-three/oleg-timofeyev.shtml ''Iowa Roots'': Oleg Timofeyev, Russian Jewish Guitarist], interview with audio files and text by the Iowa Arts Council
*[http://www.melbay.com/authors.asp?author=336 Mel Bay Artist's Profile: Oleg Timofeyev]
*[http://www.melbay.com/authors.asp?author=336 Mel Bay Artist's Profile: Oleg Timofeyev]
*[http://www.talismanmusic.org/ Talisman Ensemble]
*[http://www.talismanmusic.org/ Talisman Ensemble]


{{Classical guitar}}
{{Portal bar|Biography|Classical music}}

{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME =Timofeyev, Oleg
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American musician
| DATE OF BIRTH =January 12, 1963
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Moscow]]
| DATE OF DEATH =
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Timofeyev, Oleg}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Timofeyev, Oleg}}
[[Category:1963 births]]
[[Category:1963 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:American classical guitarists]]
[[Category:American classical guitarists]]
[[Category:American male guitarists]]
[[Category:Russian classical guitarists]]
[[Category:Russian classical guitarists]]
[[Category:Russian male guitarists]]
[[Category:Soviet classical guitarists]]
[[Category:Soviet musicologists]]
[[Category:American lutenists]]
[[Category:American lutenists]]
[[Category:Russian lutenists]]
[[Category:Russian lutenists]]
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[[Category:Viol players]]
[[Category:Viol players]]
[[Category:Torbanists]]
[[Category:Torbanists]]
[[Category:Performers of early music]]
[[Category:American performers of early music]]
[[Category:Contemporary classical music performers]]
[[Category:American contemporary classical music performers]]
[[Category:Musicians from Moscow]]
[[Category:Musicians from Moscow]]
[[Category:People from Iowa]]
[[Category:People from Iowa]]
[[Category:American documentary filmmakers]]
[[Category:American documentary filmmakers]]
[[Category:Ethnomusicologists]]
[[Category:American ethnomusicologists]]
[[Category:Jewish musicians]]
[[Category:Klezmer musicians]]
[[Category:Klezmer musicians]]
[[Category:American musicologists]]
[[Category:USC Thornton School of Music alumni]]
[[Category:Thornton School of Music alumni]]
[[Category:Duke University alumni]]
[[Category:Duke University alumni]]
[[Category:20th-century American guitarists]]
[[Category:20th-century American male musicians]]
[[Category:Soviet emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:Russian emigrants to the United States]]

Latest revision as of 05:37, 6 September 2024

Oleg V. Timofeyev
Oleg Timofeyev, IARGUS 2007, Iowa City
Oleg Timofeyev, IARGUS 2007, Iowa City
Background information
Born (1963-01-12) 12 January 1963 (age 61)
Moscow
GenresClassical music
Occupation(s)Guitarist, lutenist and musicologist.
Instrument(s)guitar, lute
LabelsCentaur, Dorian, Hänssler Classic, Naxos
Websitewww.russian-guitar.com

Oleg Vitalyevich Timofeyev (Russian: Оле́г Вита́льевич Тимофе́ев, Oleg Vital'evič Timofeev; born January 12, 1963, in Moscow), is an American musicologist, specializing in lute and Russian guitar. He is best known for his pioneering work in the discovery, promotion, interpretation, and authentic performance of the repertoire for the 19th- and 20th-century Russian seven-string guitar.

Biography

[edit]

Timofeyev born into a musical family. His mother Natalia Timofeyeva, a cellist, is Jewish. His father was a Roma.[1]

Studies

[edit]

Timofeyev began his study of the classical guitar in the early 1980s under the tutelage of Swiss-Russian guitarist Kamill Frauchi [de; ru], about whom he later produced a documentary film titled Frautschi.[2] He holds an M.A. in Early Music Performance from the University of Southern California (1993), and a Ph.D. in Performance Practice from Duke University (1999).[3] Since 1983 he has been performing early music on authentic instruments of the plucked family (lute, guitar). In 1989 his musical interests brought him to the U.S., where he studied with Patrick O'Brien, James Tyler, and Hopkinson Smith.

Professional work

[edit]

Revival of the Russian seven-string guitar

[edit]

Since earning his doctorate he has worked for the revival of Russian music played with authentic technique on the seven-string guitar, often in collaboration with other artists, including the Russian Roma guitarist Sasha Kolpakov, the Kolpakov Trio (Timofeyev, Kolpakov Trio and Talisman 2005), and the American guitarist John Schneiderman (Timofeyev and Schneiderman 2006). Among the fruits of his research has been his rediscovery and recording the music of Matvej Pavlov-Azancheev]] (1888–1963), who was among the rare composers for the seven-string guitar in the first half of the twentieth century.

Timofeyev has performed and taught widely in Europe and the United States. A recipient of numerous scholarly awards, including IREX and Fulbright fellowships, he has taught and lectured at Maimonides State Academy (Moscow), Duke University, the University of Kansas, Northwestern University, Princeton University, the University of Iowa, Grinnell College, and the Smithsonian.

Bibliography

[edit]

Scholarly publications

[edit]
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (1996). "Francesco and Matelart in a Moscow Music Shop". Lute Society Quarterly. 30 (4): 16–23.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (1998a). "Marco Bazzotti. La Chitarra Eptacorde Nella Cultura Russa dell'Ottocento". Il Fronimo. 103: 27–40.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (1998b). "Thomas Ford. Lyra Viol Duets. Critical edition with a scholarly introduction and commentary" (Document). Madison: A-R Editions.
*Timofeyev, Oleg (2023). The Seven-String Guitar in Russia: Its Origins, Repertoire, and Performance Practice, 1800-1850. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5275-9285-8.

Film- and discography

[edit]
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (1997). The Wandering Lutenist (CD). Centaur Records. CRC-2409.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (1999). The Golden Age of the Russian Guitar (CD). Dorian Recordings. DOR-93170.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (2000). The Golden Age of Russian Guitar, Vol. 2 (CD). Dorian Recordings. DOR-93203.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (Russian Seven-String Guitar, Artistic Director); Anne Harley (Soprano, Co-Director); Irina Rees (Harpsichord); Etienne Abelin (Baroque Violin) (2002). Music of Russian Princesses From the Court of Catherine the Great (CD). Dorian Recordings. DOR-93244.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (2004). Guitar in the GULag: Guitar Music by Matvei Pavlov-Azancheev, 1888–1963 (CD). Hänssler Records. 098458000.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg, Kolpakov Trio & Talisman (2005). A Tribute to Stesha: Early Music of Russian Gypsies (CD). Naxos World Music. 76065-2.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg & John Schneiderman (2006). Music Of Mikhail Glinka / The Czar's Guitars (CD). Profil – Edition Günter Hänssler. PH-07008.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (guitar), Natalia Timofeyeva (cello), Robert Paredes (clarinet), Matthew Burrier (accordion) & Daniel Moore (percussion) (2007). Rhapsody Judaica (CD). Marquis Music. MAR-349.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg (2007). Shavlego: Guitar Music by Georgian Composers (CD). Profil – Edition Günter Hänssler. PH-07072.

References

[edit]

Sources

  • Timofeyev, Oleg Vitalyevich (1999). The Golden Age of the Russian Guitar: Repertoire, Performance Practice, and Social Function of the Russian Seven-String Guitar Music, 1800–1850 (Ph.D. dissertation (UMI Number: 9928880)). Ann Arbor, Michigan: Department of Music, Duke University.
  • Timofeyev, Oleg; Gölz, Sabine I. (2008). Frautschi (DVD). Arbatfilm.
[edit]