Results of the XI WIN-WIN contemporary art market, October 13, 2025.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

On October 11 and 12, the Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art hosted 11th Win-Win Contemporary Art Market, where more than 100 participants presented their works of art in all media – from painting and ceramics to photography and sculpture.

The market was visited by Irena Ponaroshku, Vika Chuma, Anastasia Postrigai, Polina Bondareva, Victoria Gumerova, Gosha Rushev, Dania Furs, Anna Ekomasova, Alexandra Zhilenko, Anastasia Karpova, Petr Ivanov, Ekaterina Dementyeva and more than 4,000 other people.

"The market has grown again, both in quality and quantity of works sold. We'll summarize the financial results a bit later; many participants sold more than half of their submitted works. This time, the market space in the White Workshop was organized with plenty of space, allowing visitors to freely browse the art and interact with the artists," said Ekaterina Savina, curator of the WIN-WIN market.

The WIN-WIN autumn market was supported by an independent educational organization program for contemporary artists "Basics".

The SHROOM SHROOM functional beverage laboratory set up a coffee station and developed two specialty drinks for market guests: one, a LOVE CACAO cocktail with non-alcoholic rum and Amaretto liqueur. The second, a creative take on the White Russian cocktail, features coffee liqueur, cream, and BRAIN CACAO.

The lounge area and library were organized by the market's partner, School Masters. Water was provided by Shambala — Mountain Water of Altai.

During the market, a shop was opened in the Red Workshop. Winery.Store, where one could purchase rare books, exhibition catalogues and Winzavod Centre for Contemporary Art merchandise.

In parallel with the 11th WIN-WIN, the Winzavod.Children program for children aged 6 to 14 was held. On the first day of the market, October 11, young visitors had the opportunity to create their own exhibition, explore the visual language of the urban environment, design a collective architectural model of the Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art using scrap materials, and explore street art in the Street Art Lab.

On Sunday, October 12, a "Theater Laboratory" workshop and a master class on creating a tabletop theater took place. In the Children's Space in the Fermentation Workshop, guests could participate in a free Game Library hosted by Prosveshchenie-Soyuz Publishing House.

Over the course of the WIN-WIN market's history, more than 1,000 artists have been selected to participate, selling over 6,000 works for a total of over 55.5 million rubles (according to a survey of over 80% of participants). The market was held as part of the Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art's strategic direction, "Art Market," and was held for the eleventh time.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Opening of the fall season. Evening of Vernissages at the Winzavod Contemporary Art Center, September 3, 2025.

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Source: Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

On September 2, the Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art hosted an Evening of Vernissages. Eleven resident galleries presented new exhibitions, and the Winzavod Open Studios hosted a performance by Andrey Soul, the 12th season's resident.

Winzavod's Open Studios hosted a music and dance performance, "Sudden Rave," by artist Andrey Soul as part of the season's final exhibition, "This Is Not Enough, This Is Too Much, This Is Enough." At 15-minute intervals, the conventional space of the gallery's white cube transformed into a nighttime party—a platform for the artist's self-expression, where Andrey and other participants "took over" the space with sound, light, and dance.

The pop/off/art gallery presented Vasily Kononov-Gredin's exhibition "Interior Option." For the duration of the project, the gallery space became a total installation, featuring a new series of photographs, sculpture, and art objects. The space features altered objects with familiar characteristics—an exploration of subjectivity, individual experience, deep memory, and the limits of autonomy.

The exhibition will run until October 12.

XL Gallery opened Igor Samolet's solo exhibition "Choice." The project is based on the artist's reflections on the decision-making process: mundane or critical, simple or unthinkable. Exploring uncertainty as a distinct phenomenon, Samolet used his own experiences as the basis for a complex image—a kinetic "choice setting."

The exhibition will run until October 11.

Vasily Slonov's exhibition "Who Are We to Each Other?" opened at the 11.12 Gallery. This new project presents a vision of an artistic universe brought to life by the artist. Using just one element—a brick—Slonov reimagines the world in all its diversity.

The exhibition will run until October 18.

VLADEY Space opened a solo exhibition, "Funny Room," by artist Inal. In this new series, the artist revisits his own childhood experiences with reflections in the funhouse mirrors of traditional funhouses and their subsequent interpretations. In fairy tales and popular culture, characters depicted in funhouse mirrors are often considered evil—but is this really the case?

The exhibition will run until October 17.

The a-s-t-r-a Gallery presented a memorial exhibition, "The Way to Cronus," by Valentin Korzhov (1975–2022), marking the artist's 50th anniversary. Korzhov created diverse and seemingly disparate works, yet always united by a common purpose. Through them, he found and defined himself.

The exhibition will run until October 17.

PENNLAB Gallery has opened a new project, "Digital Shadows of Words," by artist Yulia Pavlova. This research explores the memory of Chechen poet Arbi Mamakayev and attempts to rethink how the ways of preserving and reproducing the past are being shaped today. The project asks what forms of memory are preserved today, as physical media lose their significance and digital media remain unstable and susceptible to manipulation.

The exhibition will run until October 15.

HSE ART Gallery, in partnership with the Gallllery platform, presented the curatorial project "Are You Ready for the Future?" by collector Pierre-Christian Brochet. The exhibition is less a display of his collection than a reflection on the institutional nature of collecting.

The exhibition will run until October 14.

FUTURO Gallery opened a duet exhibition by Daniil Antropov and Sergey Karev, "Objects of Surface, Space, and Beauty." The exhibition brings together two artists who address similar issues: what are the limits of visual art's expressive potential, and where do the boundaries between traditional artistic forms and media blur? The project's distinctiveness lies in the way both artists subvert traditional notions of artistic mediums.

The exhibition will run until October 17.

On the evening of the Vernissage, the Triangle Gallery transformed into an open studio for Chinese artist Yirui Fan, who was preparing new works for an upcoming exhibition at the gallery. In his work, Yirui Fan explores the intersection of Eastern and Western visual traditions with contemporary philosophical thought, using abstract painting as the primary vehicle for his conceptual practice.

Totibadze Gallery opened Yulia Kirakosyan's exhibition "The Story of One Summer." The artist's works are highly decorative, typically composed of multiple planes that create a mosaic of images. The gallery's new project is dedicated to Yulia Kirakosyan's summers—fresh, airy, filled with symbols and signs that evoke images and memories.

The exhibition will run until October 12.

FINEART Gallery presented Alexander Rukavishnikov's solo project "3/4 Sleeve." The artist is a sculptor and martial artist. Art occupies 3/4 of Alexander's life, and martial arts the rest. These 3/4 Sleeves can also be divided into sculpture and painting/graphics. The exhibition features works created in the spirit of Zen wisdom.

The exhibition will run until October 19.

The BIS ART gallery hosted the opening of the exhibition "Get-togethers" by artists Shishik and Ophelia t. Home is a place where walls bear witness to human authenticity. Where people take off their masks and allow themselves to be vulnerable, strange, and real. The artists' works are a conversation about how people shape their personal space, and how space shapes people.

The exhibition will run until September 16.

Admission to the galleries is free. Please check the gallery's website for opening hours. For full details and contact information, please visit the gallery's website. on the website.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Bookcrossing library from RTVI at the Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art on August 11, 2025.

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Source: Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Bookcrossing library opens in Green Hangar.

Joint project of CCA Winzavod and RTVI, dedicated to the summer program Winery Leto.

The library contains books from the personal collections of RTVI journalists and presenters, as well as rare and valuable second-hand books—from fiction to books on art.

The principle of participation is simple: Read here. Share here.

Among the books available in the bookcrossing library: Vasily Chistyukhin – "No Way. How to Become a Successful Artist" (Individuum, 2025), Walter Benjamin – "Brecht" (Ad Marginem, 2025), John Berger – "The Red Curtain of Bologna" (Ad Marginem Press, 2025), Vilém Flusser – "On Photography" (Ad Marginem, 2025), Alexander Brener – "Three Melons in the Desert" (Tsiolkovsky Bookstore Publishing House, 2021) and others.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Melodiya begins releasing records.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Melody – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Vinyl production is planned to resume in Russia in 2024, in time for the label's 60th anniversary. Vinyl, which had fallen out of favor with music lovers for some time, has regained its prestige and then become a fashionable medium in the 21st century.

"Most of our compatriots still associate Firma Melodiya with vinyl records. The revival of production under the Melodiya brand is a natural progression of musical traditions in our country, which will allow the plant to become a worthy successor to the Soviet Melodiya plants. For a long time, the main plant in the country was Aprelevka—the legendary Soviet Melodiya plant. And it's very important for us that Badri Devishev, the chief engineer of the Aprelevka plant, was with us during the launch of vinyl production," comments Firma Melodiya CEO Andrey Krichevsky.

Today, the company is launching the release of Melodiya's albums, with plans to expand the line and release records commissioned by artists and music companies.

"The first record from the new production, oddly enough, will be a famous Soviet autogenic training track from the 1980s—a recording developed by doctors at the Energetik sanatorium in Yalta as part of a healthy lifestyle program and anti-alcohol and anti-smoking campaigns. It's quite a funny recording, which people share online as a meme, skeptical that the Soviet Melodiya record company was capable of such a thing. In the 1980s, records with specially selected tracks and narrator instructions became a sought-after alternative medicine method, perceived as a panacea for all ailments. We believe this release will be relevant in the run-up to the New Year holidays," says Karina Abramyan, Melodiya's First Deputy General Director.

We couldn't help but include David Tukhmanov's "On the Wave of My Memory" in the first batch of records, a hit that has remained a hit for 50 years. "On the Wave of My Memory" earned a reputation as the first concept album of Soviet recording, playing in our country the same role that the Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" played in the world. The cycle consists of ten numbers based on texts by Sappho, Goethe, Shelley, Mickiewicz, Baudelaire, Verlaine, Guillén, Akhmatova, and Voloshin.

Another release is the album "Disco Alliance" by the Latvian band Zodiac. Formed at the Latvian Conservatory, they were considered a local instrumental rock band and strayed far from academic conventions. "Cult record," "bestseller," and otherworldly music are just a few of the adjectives used to describe "Disco Alliance."

The next record was the landmark album by the VIA "Dos-Mukasan." Among music lovers captivated by the so-called "Soviet groove," Dos-Mukasan has developed a cult following. Dos-Mukasan is the founder of modern Kazakh pop music, drawing on the roots of folk tradition while simultaneously finding common ground with the Western world. The Kazakh VIA's first album has become a rarity, an object of desire, and a target for diggers and collectors. Its original edition, released in 1976, sells for record prices among vinyl enthusiasts for Soviet records. Fifty years later, Melodiya is reissuing this album.

The records were printed in 2025. The masters were made from the original master tapes. The sound engineer for the restoration and remastering was Maxim Pilipov. The editions contain original annotations by music critic Denis Boyarinov and PhD in psychology, Associate Professor Natalia Kiselnikova.

Firm Melodiya, 08.12.2025

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

TASS: Melodiya has resumed record production.

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Source: Melody – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Melodiya is starting to press records at its own plant in Novosibirsk due to high demand. The first batch of records, featuring works by David Tukhmanov, the band Zodiac, and the VIA Dos-Mukasan, is already available for sale, Melodiya's press service told TASS.

"Firma Melodiya" is still associated with vinyl records by most of our compatriots. The revival of production under the Melodiya brand is a natural development of musical traditions in our country, which will allow the plant to become a worthy successor to the Soviet Melodiya plants," said the company's CEO, Andrey Krichevsky.

The first record from the new production facility was the "Dos-Mukasan" album by VIA. The records were printed in 2025, using master tapes made from the original master tapes. Maxim Pilipov served as the sound engineer for the restoration and remastering. The plant plans to expand its product line and produce records commissioned by artists and music companies.

As Krichevsky previously reported to TASS, the initial investment amounted to approximately 150 million rubles. This is a full-cycle facility based on the Allegro II production line manufactured in Hong Kong. The main suppliers of the equipment are Sweden, Switzerland, Italy, and China. The company plans to release tracks from its catalog as well as custom-made ones, allowing any customer—artist, songwriter, label, agency, or copyright holder—to release their album. Production volume will be approximately 100,000 records per year.

TASS, December 8, 2025

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

12/05/2025 Large-scale screen tests for the film "Survive the Ice" are coming to an end. A unique process for modern filmmaking is coming to an end at Mosfilm: multi-stage ensemble screen tests for the drama "Survive the Ice" directed by Alexander Zachinyaev.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Mosfilm Film Concern – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Mosfilm is nearing the end of a process unique to modern filmmaking: multi-stage ensemble screen tests for the studio's new project, the drama "Survive the Ice," directed by Alexander Zachinyaev. Over two months, more than seventy actors auditioned for the role on a set built in a television studio that simulates the interior of a polar station. The core cast has already been assembled.

In a commentary for Mosfilm.ru, director Alexander Zachinyaev described the casting process for the polar explorers, for whom testing begins even before filming.

Director Alexander Zachinyaev auditioning for the film "Survive the Ice"

Unlike the common practice of "office" or "self-tests," the filming of "Survive the Ice" is based on a script that is as close to the actual shooting as possible. The actors are provided with a set, working in full makeup and costumes, with their co-stars, under the guidance of the cameraman and director.

"It's great that an actor has a partner, not just someone behind the camera who's invisible—in our case, these are ensemble auditions. There's a director, a cameraman, lighting, and location. All the actors who come are very enthusiastic about this approach, and that's very important," notes Alexander Zachinyaev.

Mosfilm's approach to screen tests, according to the director, is unique in the Russian film industry, requiring significant organizational and financial investment. However, it allows the studio to not only assess the actors' physical suitability for their characters but also to sense the chemistry between the future members of the filmmaking "expedition," their temperament, and their ability to cope with the proposed circumstances.

The audition process has already presented the filmmakers with several surprises. There have been instances where an actor initially considered for one role revealed a completely unexpected side during the audition and ended up being considered for another, more significant role.

"There are surprises, like when an actor you might not have considered at first comes along, but they do something so amazing that you think, 'Wow!' And then there are those perfect hits, when you know from the start that this is the right actor who will do everything perfectly," the director shares.

Director Alexander Zachinyaev

The core cast of the ten key polar explorers has been virtually confirmed. The final selection for the remaining two roles is planned for the near future. After that, fine-tuning will begin with the costume and makeup designers to create the final look for each character. The leading roles will be performed by Vitaly Kishchenko (Honored Artist of the Russian Federation – "White Tiger," "Anna Karenina: Vronsky's Story," "Brotherhood," "Gloomy River," "Vladivostok," and others), Alexey Vertkov (Honored Artist of the Russian Federation – "Chamber No. 6," "White Tiger," "Khitrovka: The Sign of Four," and others), and Alexander Gorbatov (Anna Karenina: Vronsky's Story," "The Heart of Parma," "GDR," "The Aviator," and others).

Vitaly Kishchenko in the film "White Tiger" (2012)

Alexey Vertkov in the film "Khitrovka. The Sign of Four" (2023)

Alexander Gorbatov in the film "Anna Karenina: Vronsky's Story" (2017)

In parallel with casting, active preparations for filming are underway: large-scale sets are being developed for location shooting in the Murmansk region, unique equipment, such as the legendary Antarctic all-terrain vehicle "Kharkovchanka," is being created, and the interiors of the polar station will be recreated on Mosfilm soundstages. Filming is scheduled for February-March 2026.

As a reminder, the film "Survival in the Ice" is set in the early 1980s. The film's central characters are the staff of a polar station in Antarctica who find themselves in an extreme situation during one of their wintering trips.

The film's director of photography is Alexander Kuznetsov (White Tiger, Anna Karenina. Vronsky's Story, Gloomy River), the production designer is Yulia Makushina (Decision on Liquidation, GDR, For Us and You), the costume designer is Vladimir Nikiforov (Khitrovka. The Sign of Four, Streltsov, Tobol), the sound engineer is Vitaly Roshchupkin (Khitrovka. The Sign of Four, Vladivostok, Decision on Liquidation), and the makeup artists are Evgeniya Malinovskaya and Mikhail Vigdorov.

The film is being produced by Gopkins Film Production, commissioned by Mosfilm. Producers are Denis Lopatkin and Alexander Perevezentsev, and executive producer is Anatoly Shelyakin.

The film's general producer is Karen Shakhnazarov, a film director and head of the Mosfilm Film Concern, and its deputy general director, Andrey Gushchin, is the producer. The film is being made without any state budget funds or sponsorship.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Musical Life: Sketches for Dawn

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Source: Melody – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Reflections on Leonid Desyatnikov

In 2015—ten years ago—I recorded a conversation with Leonid Desyatnikov at the Green Living Room. At the time, the Bolshoi Theater was holding a large-scale festival to commemorate his sixtieth birthday. The theater orchestra performed the symphony "The Rite of Winter" (1949) at the Tchaikovsky Concert Hall. In that conversation, Leonid Desyatnikov said he reads various texts about himself in the booklet, and each writer seems to be solving their own problems, while the subject itself somehow disappears, making it difficult to pinpoint who he is.

As I begin writing this text, I imagine Leonid Desyatnikov conjures up images of the Baltic coast, soft sunlight, veranda windows, sandy beaches, tall pine trees, the dark waters of the Gulf, and the almost silent movement of the waves. Leonid Desyatnikov is a composer I greatly admire. I think it's unlikely that in the 21st century there will be another composer more important to the Bolshoi Theatre's recent history. In the last century, the Moscow Art Theatre became the theater of Chekhov, Ibsen, Maeterlinck, and Andreyev, and introduced the world to Gorky… The Bolshoi also had its own composers: Demutsky, Fenelon, Podgaits… But they came later. Desyatnikov's "Children of Rosenthal," with a libretto by Vladimir Sorokin, was undoubtedly a breakthrough. Clones of five composers in the new Russia. The production was directed by the legendary Eimuntas Nekrošius. However, I hope to see other directorial interpretations as well. Many fragments of this music will forever remain etched in my memory. And our silent protest against the barrage of attacks, demonstrations, and threats, uniting everyone involved in this premiere. And then—the pinnacle of overcoming the Pale of Settlement: the Bolshoi Theatre performing this opera by Desyatnikov at the Mariinsky Theatre. And our tour in Riga, long walks with the composers along the wide beaches of Jurmala…

The ballet "Lost Illusions" based on Balzac, following Ulanova and the dreams of Alexander Arkadyevich Belinsky, who inspired Ratmansky with this idea… Our triumph on the stage of the Théâtre Garnier in Paris… David Hallberg in the lead role. And at the same time, Desyatnikov's concert at the Opéra Bastille, where producer Raisa Fomina brought François Ozon…

The ballet based on the vocal cycle "Russian Seasons" with costumes by Galya Solovieva is simplicity and depth, something eternal and archetypal, and for me, a complete unity of music and choreographic language…

A project within the framework of the "Old Women Falling Out" workshops. Jokes from the senior ballerinas: why aren't we in the casts? Wonderful songs based on the OBERIU poetry… A trip to see the film "Moscow"… The very first delight, still on the stage of the Mariinsky Theatre, was "Towards the Swan" staged by Alexei Miroshnichenko… A wonderful evening of LAD ballets – how I wanted to show it to the audience, and how sad I am that legal meticulousness prevented us from doing so!.. As one poet wrote, "the boat of love was wrecked on everyday life." I love "Sketches for 'Sunset'." And the opera "Vitamin of Growth" based on the poetry of Oleg Grigoriev. And most of all I love the cycle "Love and Life of a Poet." Especially inperformed by Bogdan VolkovAnd the poems of Daniil Kharms from 1936:

The days fly by like swallows, And we fly like sticks. The clock ticks on the shelf, And I sit in a skullcap. The days fly by like shot glasses, And we fly like swallows. Light bulbs sparkle in the sky, And we fly like stars.

We interviewed Desyatnikov in 2015, and it was clear: the ballets and librettos had authors… Speaking about Soviet power and his own perception of it, Leonid Arkadyevich expressed the apt idea that aesthetic differences were enough to understand everything about the Soviets… Even without ethical doubts, everything was clear. Now these views seem even more relevant to me.

I think: what is it that attracts me so much to Leonid Desyatnikov? His sincerity, his lack of posturing. That quiet, ironic, personal voice. His personal voice… The desire to be yourself and preserve your inner freedom. To try to distance yourself from official doctrine.

I remember once arriving in Jerusalem at a difficult moment of spiritual crisis. The sun was setting over the eternal city, and it involuntarily erased all temporality, setting a new scale for our lives. It seems to me that Leonid Desyatnikov always exists like this—without the fuss of the moment. I don't know if he grows wiser with age, or sadder… He can't stand pathos in any form. He's lucky to be a composer, dependent only on the staff, inspiration, and divine inspiration.

Happy birthday.

Katerina Novikova, "Musical Life," October 16, 2025

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Red Book: Without a Tsar in the Head

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Source: Melody – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

1989, Perestroika. Soviet society is experiencing a powerful awakening of interest in national history—especially pre-revolutionary history and cultural memory. As if responding to this zeitgeist, Boris Tikhomirov, Vladimir Osinsky, and Pavel Grushko create a bluff opera."Without a king in my head" Based on Saltykov-Shchedrin's novel "The History of a Town" – a satire on Russian society that never loses its edge.

Tikhomirov and Osinsky were pioneers of electronic music in the USSR. Tikhomirov, not only a composer but also a musicologist and ethnomusicologist, worked as an editor at Melodiya in the 1980s. It was thanks to his efforts that the albums that became cult classics were released. Rhythmic gymnastics and series "Sports and Music" With electronic music Tikhomirov himself and his colleagues – Andrey Rodionov and Vladimir Osinsky. It's no surprise that "Without a Tsar in My Head" is also an opera for synthesizers and… a sound-imitating artist. Most of the vocals were performed by Alexey Ptitsyn, a precursor to Maxim Galkin, who gained fame for his parodies of "Time Machine" and "Orange".

The authors' chosen genre of "bluff opera" alludes to Italian opera buffa—and this is clearly no coincidence. "Without a Tsar in My Head" also hints at an ironic reimagining of 18th-century Russian comic operas, such as "Coachmen on the Set-Up." At the same time, certain "arias"—for example, "The Appearance of the Tsar" or "The Appearance of the River"—sound like 1980s electropop, and with their simple lyrics about love and romance, they could easily have become hits performed by Forum (Ptitsyn, in my opinion, even parodies Saltykov) or ElectroclubIncidentally, the final aria, "The Appearance of the River," is performed by a true star of the 80s, Olga Zarubina. Ironically, the meaning of "The Appearance of the River" is the antithesis of her then-massive hit "Music Plays on the Boat," written by Vyacheslav Dobrynin.

In short, "Without a Tsar in My Head" is a thoroughly postmodernist, witty, and enigmatic work. One of the most obscure recordings in Melodiya's catalog. Indeed, this is evident, if only from the cover.

Melodiya recently digitized the album and posted it on on your website The full text of the opera, composed by poet and translator Pavel Grushko—author of the libretto for "The Star and Death of Joaquin Murieta" by Alexei Rybnikov and "The Master and Margarita" by Alexander Gradsky—is worth a careful reading.

Denis Boyarinov, "Red Book", October 11, 2025

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Melodiya became a partner of the International Symposium of the Recording Industry of Academic Music

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Source: Melody – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

The 3rd International Symposium of the Classical Music Recording Industry will be held in Moscow from November 19–21, 2025. The event is organized by the Russian Musical Union and supported by the Presidential Foundation for Cultural Initiatives.

More than 20 Russian companies, studios, and educational institutions associated with the recording industry became partners of the symposium.

One of the key partners of the event was the Melodiya company, the oldest representative of the sound industry in our country.

Among the symposium's key topics is the restoration of archival sound recordings. Without restoration, we risk forever losing unique interpretations, forgotten repertoires, and the pristine sound of works born in the fire of inspiration. Restoring archival recordings of classical music is not just a technical task, but a sacred duty to time, culture, and humanity. In every rustle of old tape, in every crackle of a vinyl record, lies the breath of the past, the voices of great men whose hands touched the keys, whose baton brought scores to life, whose thoughts and feelings are forever imprinted in the vibrations of sound.

Melodiya, originally established as a state-owned company for the production, storage, and distribution of sound recordings, continues to be the custodian of our country's musical history. The company's archive contains over 230,000 recordings.

At the symposium, Melodiya will be represented by Maxim Pilipov, Deputy Director of the Hardware and Studio Complex and sound engineer and restorer, who will participate in a public talk entitled "Restoration: A Technical or Creative Process?"

The public talk will take place on November 19 at the Cyberdom space, located at 12 2-ya Zvenigorodskaya St., Bldg. 18, Moscow. Representatives of the Moscow Conservatory will also participate in the discussion: Evgeny Platonov, producer and deputy head of the Multifunctional Educational and Production Center for Sound Recording and Sound Engineering at the Tchaikovsky Moscow Conservatory, and Elena Doynikova, restorer at the Multifunctional Educational and Production Center for Sound Recording and Sound Engineering at the Tchaikovsky Moscow Conservatory.

A detailed program of symposium events is available on the project's official website: https://symposiom-sound-pure.com/.

Participation is free. Entry is by registering on the website.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Musical Life: The Union of Composers of Russia presents "Sound Review-5"

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Source: Melody – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

The fifth episode of the "Sound Review" project, released by Melodiya, opens a new chapter in the anthology of Russian music from the 20th and 21st centuries. For the first time in the series' history, the recording features a symphony orchestra—the Academy of Russian Music Symphony Capella, conducted by Ivan Nikiforchin.

Karina Abramyan, General DirectorUnion of Composers of Russia:

"The Sound Review, created by the Union of Composers of Russia in 2020, brings together works from various eras and movements—from the Russian avant-garde of the 1910s and 1920s to contemporary classical music. This is the fifth edition of the series—a mini-anniversary—and features the first appearance of a symphony orchestra."

Part OneThe new symphonic release is dedicated to composers Moisei Weinberg, Nikolai Peiko, and Boris Tchaikovsky—three friends and colleagues whose destinies were closely intertwined not only in their creative work but also in the trials of time. In 1953, Weinberg was arrested, and it was Peiko and Tchaikovsky who stood by his side, supporting his family and seeking their colleague's release. This episode became a point of unity and human resilience for them—an inner strength that is also evident in their music.

The album features Weinberg's Suite for Symphony Orchestra (1939–1945), Boris Tchaikovsky's Sinfonietta for String Orchestra (1953), "Elegiac Poem in Memory of Nikolai Myaskovsky" (1980), and the world premiere recording of Nikolai Peiko's vocal cycle for tenor and string orchestra based on Vladimir Nabokov's poetry, "The Light of the Cornflower Wreath" (1987). In addition to the Academy of Russian Music under the baton of Ivan Nikiforchin, the album also features Stanislav Mostovoy, soloist of the Bolshoi Theater and the Moscow Novaya Opera.

Part twoThe release is "Architecture of Sound" by Yuri Abdokov, a professor at the Moscow Conservatory, a PhD in art history, and a scholar of 20th-century Russian music. The album features four poems for string orchestra: "Autumn Prayers," "Birds in the Rain," "On the Edge of Melting and Ice," and "Beautiful Are the Faces of the Sleeping" (in the latter, the violin part is performed by Ayako Tanabe, winner of international competitions and soloist of the Île Thélème ensemble). Abdokov's music continues the tradition of Boris Tchaikovsky and Nikolai Peiko—a line where intellectual rigor is combined with clarity of form and spiritual warmth.

Ivan Nikiforchin, artistic director and chief conductor of the Academy of Russian Music:

"The music of Weinberg, Peiko, and Boris Tchaikovsky is part of our cultural memory, and Yuri Abdokov's orchestral poems are a direct continuation of this tradition, a living bridge to the present day. His scores are filled with the light and inner strength so desperately needed by contemporary culture."

The recording of the "Sound Review-5" albums took place at the Tonstudio production complex of the Mosfilm film concern. Sound engineer: Mikhail Spassky. The project was implemented with the support of the Russian Ministry of Culture and the Melodiya recording company. The albums are accompanied by digital booklets and are available on leading music platforms: Yandex.Music, Zvuk, VK Music, Apple Music, and Spotify.

Musical Life, November 11, 2025

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