Dmitri Jurowski
Evgeny Volynsky
Karen Durgaryan
Maria Moiseenko
Alexey Babushkin
Eldar Nagiev
Anton Torbeev
Roman Kaloshin
Maxim Valkova
Philip Selivanov
Arseny Shuplyakov
César Álvarez
Clément Nonciaux
Vladimir Tkachenko
Timur Zangiev
Valery Kirianov
Francesco Di Mauro
Alexander Soloviev
Arman Urazgaliev
Alevtina Ioffe
Alexei Repnikov
Alexey Bogorad
Alberto Veronesi
Ilya Konovalov
Igor Tomashevsky
Erzhan Dautov
Dmitry Korchak
Valentine Uryupin
Pavel Sorokin
Pavel Klinichev
Alexander Novikov
Ekaterina Sivtsova
Ekaterina Moshkova
Tatiana Vostryakova
Sofia Nekrasova
Evgenia Ivanova
Anna Guryeva
Elena Uskova
Julia Kuzova
Maria Tyutina
Natalia Zhuk
Eva Filatova
Elena Mikhailova
Polina Kovalchuk
Evgenia Masloboyeva
Olga Fayzullina
Tatyana Kuznetsova
Luiza Sabitkhanova
Violetta Berestenkova
Ekaterina Novokreshenova
Svetlana Tarasenko
Natalia Kazarnovskaya
Alina Tyumerekova
Ekaterina Bazalitskaya
Andrey Sorokin
Ivan Smirnov
Maria Rogozina
Artyom Iyutin
Ekaterina Novik
Marina Averina
Elvira Abramenko
Olga Fridman
Anna Fomicheva
Karina Dolba
Daria Pack
Nikolay Eryomenko
Anna Abanina
Olga Tarkhanova
Viktoria Fedorova
Olga Ivanenko
Julia Guryanova
Valentina Astakhova
Lyubov Surkova
Tatiana Dyndina
Xenia Khazova
Vladislav Shapovalov
Elena Ivaschenko
Evgenia Vlasova
Roman Averin
Anton Grishkin
Elmira Kharina
Ivan Saltykov
Ekaterina Artemyeva
Alena Kartseva
Larisa Levitskaya
Vladislava Markova
Vera Lazareva
Olga Kitaikina
Irina Filatova
Valery Tolstykh
Natalia Sokolova
Mikhail Shakirov
Irina Temirbaeva
Natalia Nagibneva
Vladimir Ishunkin
Lyudmila Romanova
Igor Lomatchenko
Darya Maklashova
Ekaterina Uspenskaya
Aleksandra Onuchak
Vasily Kulagin
Yulia Vasilieva
Aleksandr Pozdnyakov
Sergey Kamyshev
Anton Pakharukov
Roman Stepanov
Evgeny Lyzhin
Evgeny Kuznetsov
Olga Buseva
Kristina Guskova
Roman Votyakov
Andrey Korotchenkov
Natalia Goncharova
Vladimir Dranitsa
Mikhail Muravyov
Tatiana Yankovskaya
Sergey Brodsky
Alla Melekhova
Yakov Nagovitsin
Olga Lisovitskaya
Natalia Obogrelova
Pavel Kozhin
Dmitry Ivanenko
Arkady Balakin
Sergey Zaytsev
Liliya Tatarinova
Nikolay Levashov
Arkady Makarov
Alexander Biryukov
Vladimir Buzhigeev
Ilya Lunyushkin
Nikolay Shevchenko
Jury Gukovsky
Anton Titov
Valentina Popova
Konstantin Usov
Ilya Karmanov
Arsen Sarkazak
Natalya Usova
Nikita Yankovsky
Igor Koscheev
Buyan Baikara
Nikolay Borisov
Dmitry Olkhovsky
Dmitry Lykhin
Matvei Filimonchenko
Mikhail Sokolov
Andrey Sivtsov
Alexander Teplyuk
Igor Matlak
Alexander Chernikov
Ivan Baklanov
Ivan Lazarev
Vladimir Pavlik
Vladimir Sharifullin
Anton Masloboev
Arthur Shank
Beibit Mukhamedin
Ivan Kozin
Luisa Gimatdinova
Yury Duykov
Alexander Ivanchenko
Alexander Shestakov
Denis Kostin
Konstantin Pavlov
Roman Oslopov
Egor Kobelev
Sergey Afonasevich
Vladimir Vysotin
Grigory Eroshkin
Timofei Temirbaev
Stanislav Kosvintsev
Anastasia Mikhaltsova
Tatiana Kuchina
Roman Matusevich
Yana Shabdanova
Guest conductors
Valentine Uryupin
Valentin was born on December 11, 1985 in Lozovaya (Kharkov region, Ukraine). He studied at the Central Music School at the Moscow Conservatory, then moved to the conservatory itself. His teachers were professors Evgeny Petrov (clarinet), Gennady Rozhdestvensky (conducting), Alexander Bonduryansky (chamber ensemble). The musician took part in the master classes of well-known clarinetists - Charles Naidik, Jacques di Donato, Nicolas Balder, Roman Guyot, Michel Letier, and studied conducting under professors Vladimir Ponkin and Anatoly Levin.
Valentin Uryupin won 20 international clarinetist competitions (in Munich, Bayreuth, Kortrijk, Prague, Pretoria, Carlino, Kieri, Nikelino, Sofia, Beijing, Bari, Turku, Astana, St. Petersburg, Moscow), including the oldest and most prestigious competition in Geneva. The musician tours around the world - the CIS countries, Europe, China, Japan, Brunei, Singapore, and South Africa. Valentin takes part in prestigious international festivals. He gave concerts in almost fifty Russian cities, in the best regional and metropolitan halls.
He performed as a conductor and as a soloist with the leading Russian orchestras, including the State Academic Symphony Orchestra of Russia named after E.F. Svetlanov, the State "New Russia" Symphony Orchestra, the National Philharmonic Orchestra of Russia, the Moscow Academic Chamber Orchestra “Musica Viva”, the “MusicAeterna” Orchestra of the Perm Academic Opera and Ballet Theater, the State Academic Chamber Orchestra of Russia, various ensembles of St. Petersburg and other cities of Russia. He also collaborated with the orchestras of the CIS countries and foreign ensembles from Prague, Geneva, Brussels, Munich, Turin, Madrid, Dublin, Kuhmo, Wroclaw, Beijing, Singapore, Durban.
Among the artistic partners of the musician there are conductors Gennady Rozhdestvensky, Felix Korobov, Anatoly Levin, Theodore Curentzis, Howard Griffiths, Darell Ang, Lothar Seyfart, Jon Sturgards, violist and conductor Yuri Bashmet, cellist and conductor Alexander Rudin, violinists Anna-Sophie Mutter, Victor Tretyakov, Jean-Luc Ponty, Alena Baeva, Sergei Krylov, Valentin Zhuk, cellist Alexander Buzlov, pianists Alexander Bonduryansky, Natalia Trull, Julianna Avdeeva, percussionist Mark Pekarsky, singer Joyce di Donato, Simone Kermes and other famous musicians. Valentin Uryupin assisted the maestro Valery Gergiev.
In 2007 the musician founded the chamber orchestra Arpeggione, which constantly performs in the best halls of Moscow and beyond. In 2008-2011 – he became the main guest conductor of the Kharkov Youth Academic Symphony Orchestra. Since 2011 he has been a regular guest conductor of the Symphony Orchestra of the Belarus State TV and Radio Company in Minsk and conductor of the Perm Academic Opera and Ballet Theater named after P. Tchaikovsky. The repertoire of the musician include ballets “The Nutcracker”, “The Corsair”, “The Sylphide”, “The Jester”, “Romeo and Juliet”, the operas “Carmen”, “Iolanta”, “Pagliacci”, “Duenya”, “Cosi Fan Tutte” and other performances. In 2013, Valentin Uryupin made his debut as a conductor in the operetta "The Bat" by J. Strauss.
In December 2013, the State "New Russia" Symphony Orchestra under Valentin Uryupin recorded a symphonic piece of music for the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi. Since 2015 – he is the artistic director and the chief conductor of the Rostov Academic Symphony Orchestra.
He is a nominee of the Conductor Competition in Kostroma (2011), the Second All-Russian Music Competition (Moscow, 2015, II Prize), the Fifth Gustav Mahler International Conductor Competition (Bamberg, 2016, III Prize), the 8th George Solti International Conductor Competition (Frankfurt, 2017, 1st Prize).