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Alexander Mikhaylovich Sibiryakov (Russian: Алекса́ндр Миха́йлович Сибиряко́в) (8 October [O.S. 26 September] 1849 in
Irkutsk – 2
November 1933) was a...
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endured direct competition from
three other great b****es: the
powerful Lev
Sibiriakov [ru; uk; pl; ca] (1869–1942), the more
lyrical Vladimir Kastorsky (1871–1948)...
-
grand tradition of
Slavonic b****es
exemplified by
Fyodor Stravinsky, Lev
Sibiriakov,
Vladimir Kastorsky,
Feodor Chaliapin,
Alexander Kipnis and Mark Reizen...
- Александр Сибиряков. In the
Latin alphabet her name was
rendered Alexander Sibiriakov until at
least 1935. This had been
changed to
Alexander Sibiryakov by...
- and P. Kulish.
Among his
great successors were
Feodor Chaliapin and Lev
Sibiriakov.
Fyodor Stravinsky died in 1902 and was
buried in the Artist's Cemetery...
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biografiskt lexikon.
Retrieved April 1, 2019. "Aleksander
Michajlovitj Sibiriakov".
Nordisk familjebok.
Retrieved April 1, 2019.
Wilhelm Odelberg. "A A...
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Symphonic Orchestra of
Eupatoria (1912–1913), in the
orchestra of the
Sibiriakov Opera Theater in
Kostroma (1913–1914) and S.
Zimin in
Moscow (1914–1915)...
- Kyiv (2L) 3 – 3 aet pen. 2–4 (11) (PL)
Obolon Kyiv
Polishchuk 49', 54'
Babych 57' (pen.)
Report Kutsenko 39' (pen.)
Sibiriakov 64'
Moroziuk 84' (pen.)...
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Arimondi and, from a
younger generation of singers, the
Russians Lev
Sibiriakov and
Feodor Chaliapin and the Pole
Adamo Didur. He more than held his own...
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Tadeusz Leliva,
Joachim Tartakov,
Nicholai Shevelev,
Waclav Brzezinski, Lev
Sibiriakov,
Vladimir Kastorsky,
Feodor Chaliapin Félia Litvinne,
Georgette Bréjean-Silver...