Boris Khaykin

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Boris Emmanuilovich Khaykin1 (Russian: Борис Эммануилович Хайкин; 26 October 1911 [O.S. 13 October]May 10, 1978) was a Russian conductor who was named a People's Artist of the USSR in 1972.

Khaykin was born in Minsk, then part of the Russian Empire (and nowadays the capital of Belarus). He was artistic director of the Little Leningrad Opera Theatre in 1936-43 and the principal conductor at the Kirov Theatre in 1944-53. He moved to the Bolshoi Theatre in 1954. He is especially famous for his two critically acclaimed recordings of Khovanshchina (1946, with Mark Reizen ; 1972, with Irina Arkhipova). He also recorded several operas and ballets by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. He died in Moscow.


Boris Yuriyovich Khaykin2, born in Odessa, Ukraine on March 19th, 1985 and is a "guitar comic" most noted for songs such as "Cant Have it Back" and "Song of Tollerance." His music can be found at http://www.boriscomedy.com as well as http://www.myspace.com/borichkababa .

[edit] Footnotes

  • Note 1: Sometimes also transliterated as "Khaykin" or "Chaikin" or also (rarely) as "Khaikin".

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