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・ Manouchehr Boroumand
・ Manouchehr Eghbal
・ Manouchehr Ganji
・ Manouchehr Hashemi
・ Manouchehr Khan Gorji
・ Manouchehr Mohammadi
・ Manouchehr Mottaki
・ Manouchehr Nazari
・ Manouchehr Vossough
・ Manouchehri House
・ Manoucheka Pierre Louis
・ Manoucher Yektai
・ Manoug
・ Manoug Exerjian
・ Manoug Manougian
Manoug Parikian
・ Manougian
・ Manouk
・ Manouk Avedissian
・ Manouk Gijsman
・ Manoukian
・ Manouri
・ Manouria
・ Manourou Gakou
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・ Manovikas Nagar
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Manoug Parikian : ウィキペディア英語版
Manoug Parikian
Manoug Parikian (15 September 192024 December 1987) was a British concert violinist and violin professor of Armenian descent.
Parikian was born in Mersin, Turkey. He studied in London, made his solo début in 1947 and led several orchestras - the Liverpool Philharmonic (1947–48),〔Mitchell (2004), p. 487〕 London's Philharmonia Orchestra (1949–57), the Yorkshire Sinfonia from 1976 to 1978 - and was musical director of the Manchester Camerata from 1980 to 1984. He also led the English Opera Group Orchestra between 1949 and 1951, and participated in various Aldeburgh Festival concerts as a chamber musician as well as in opera productions.〔
He was an admired teacher at the Royal Academy of Music.〔 He also championed contemporary composers, many of whom wrote works for him: examples include Thea Musgrave's ''Colloquy'' (1960), Gordon Crosse's Violin Concerto No. 2,〔Walsh, Stephen. "Gordon Crosse's Violin Concerto No. 2" in ''Tempo'' New Series, No. 92 (Spring, 1970): pp. 34-36〕 Alexander Goehr's Violin Concerto (1961–62) and Hugh Wood's Violin Concerto. Benjamin Britten also composed for Parikian a cadenza to Mozart's Adagio for Violin and Orchestra K261 in 1951.
Parikian died in Oxford in 1987, aged 67.
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