Pavel Kogan (Conductor)
Maestro Pavel Kogan’s career has spanned over 40 years and five continents
and has led him to becoming one of the most respected and widely known Russian
conductors of our time.
He was born into a distinguished musical family – his parents are legendary
violinists Leonid Kogan and Elizaveta Gilels and his uncle is the inimitable
pianist Emil Gilels. From an early age Maestro Kogan’s artistic development was
divided between conducting and violin. He was granted special permission to
study both disciplines at the same time which was an extreme rarity in the
Soviet Union.
In 1970, eighteen-year-old Pavel Kogan, a violin pupil of Yuri Yankelevich at
the Moscow Conservatory, won 1st prize in the Sibelius Violin Competition in
Helsinki. Thereafter, he appeared regularly as a violinist in concerts around
the world.
As a conducting pupil of Ilya Musin and Leo Ginsburg, in 1972 the young
Maestro gave his debut with the USSR State Symphony Orchestra, and subsequently
focused more on conducting. In the years that followed, he conducted the leading
Soviet Orchestras both at home and on tour abroad at the invitation of
Mravinsky, Kondrashin, Svetlanov and Rozhdestvensky.
In 1988, as conductor of the Bolshoi Opera, Kogan opened the season with a
new production of Verdi’s La Traviata. That same year he became the head of the
Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra.
Since 1989 Pavel Kogan has been the Music Director and Chief Conductor of the
eminent Moscow State Symphony Orchestra (MSSO), building it into one of Russia’s
most widely known and highly acclaimed orchestras. Maestro has expanded and
enriched the orchestras’ repertoire with complete symphonic works of numerous
composers such as Brahms, Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, R. Strauss, Berlioz,
Debussy, Ravel, Mendelssohn, Bruckner, Mahler, Sibelius, Dvorak, Tchaikovsky,
Glazunov, Rimsky-Korsakov, Rachmaninoff, Prokofiev, Shostakovich and Scriabin,
as well as a large number of contemporary pieces.
From 1998-2005 he served as principal guest conductor of the Utah Symphony
Orchestra.
Maestro Kogan appeared with many prominent orchestras including the St.
Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra, USSR State
Radio & TV Symphony Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles
Philharmonic, Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Munich Philharmonic, Orchestre
National de Belgique, Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra, RTVE Symphony Orchestra,
Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Staatskapelle Dresden, Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional
de México, L'Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, Orchestre National de France,
Houston Symphony, Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse and the Luxembourg
Philharmonic Orchestra.
Pavel Kogan has recorded countless works with the MSSO and other ensembles,
most notably by Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, Berlioz, Shostakovich and
Rimsky-Korsakov. Many of his albums have garnered great acclaim from critics and
audiences alike. Gramophone called Kogan’s Rachmaninoff cycle (Symphonies 1, 2,
3, Symphonic Dances, «Isle of the Dead,» «Vocalize & Scherzo») «…sparkly,
strongly communicative Rachmaninoff... vibrant, soulful and involving.»
Maestro Kogan was awarded the State Prize of the Russian Federation for his
performance of the complete symphonies and vocal cycles of Gustav Mahler. He is
a member of the Russian Academy of Arts and recipient of the «Order of Merit» of
Russia and of the title «Peoples’ Artist of Russia» among other Russian and
overseas awards.
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