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  1. Marina Scriabina (30 January 1911 - 28 April 1998) was a Russian artist, author, composer and musicologist, who was the daughter of composer Alexander Scriabin and Tatiana Schlözer. [unreliable source?] Scriabina was born in Moscow. She had two older siblings, Ariadna and Julian, and four older half-siblings from her father’s ...

  2. Marina Scriabine, née à Moscou le 30 janvier 1911 et décédée à Cormeilles-en-Parisis le 28 avril 1998, est une musicologue et une compositrice française. Elle est la fille d'Alexandre Scriabine.

  3. Marina Scriabine. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1987. Reviewed by Richard Taruskin I The simplest way of dealing with the Mysterium is to dismiss it alto-gether as a curious and whimsical apparition and devote oneself to the study of Scriabin's art, to enjoy his musical compositions and ascribe

  4. Aleksandr Nikolaevich Scriabin was born on Christmas Day (Old Style) 1871 [1] in Moscow into a family in which the males were predominantly military men. His mother, Lyubov’ Scriabina, née Shchetinina, however, was a gifted and successful pianist who played concerts including her own compositions.

  5. Scriabine, Marina, Russian-French music scholar and composer, daughter of Alexander (Nikolaievich) Scriabin; b. Moscow, Jan. 30, 1911. After her father’s death, she lived with her mother in Kiev and Moscow; when her mother died, she went to Belgium to live with her maternal grandmother; in 1927 she settled in Paris.

  6. Marina Scriabine French ... Media in category "Marina Scriabina" The following 25 files are in this category, out of 25 total. Ariadna Skriabina and Marina Skriabina.jpg 800 × 556; 58 KB. Julian Scriabin, Marina Skriabina, Ariadna Skriabina.jpg 800 × 537; 39 KB. Marina Scriabina 10.jpg 580 × 800; 47 KB.

  7. Science can uncover neural mechanisms by looking at the work of artists. The ingenuity of a titan of classical music, the Russian composer Alexander Scriabin (1872–1915), in combining all the sensory modalities into a polyphony of aesthetical experience, and his creation of a chord based on fourths rather than the conventional thirds are ...