Background In 1766, the future site of the conservatory was bought by
Princess Ekaterina Romanovna Dashkova (1743-1810), later president of the
Russian Academy of Sciences and the
Russian Academy. The building was completed in the 1790s. Its author was
Vasily Bazhenov, the design of the building was corrected by the hostess herself. Toward the end of her life, she spent winters here. In 1810, the building was inherited by her nephew, Count
Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov, a future war hero, participant in the
Battle of Borodino, then governor of
Novorossiya and
Bessarabia, governor of the
Caucasus. He was renting out the house. The house burned in 1812, rebuilt by 1824.
Establishment of a conservatory The idea of establishing a conservatory in Moscow was first suggested in 1819 by Friedrich Scholz,
Kapellmeister of the
Bolshoi Theater, but the idea was not supported. Eleven years later, in 1830, he managed to get permission to open at his home "free teaching of
figured bass and
composition". In 1860,
Nikolai Rubinstein, together with Vasily Kologrivov, organized in Moscow musical classes of the Moscow branch of the
Imperial Russian Musical Society. Rubinstein's co-founder was Prince
Nikolai Petrovitch Troubetzkoy, chairman of the Moscow branch of the Russian Musical Society (1863-1876). Initially, the music classes were held in Rubinstein's apartment (who lived on Sadovaya Street, in Volotsky's house). First of all, classes in choral singing (
Konstantin Albrecht) and elementary music theory (
Eduard Langer, then Nikolai Rubinstein and
Nikolay Kashkin) were organized. Since the fall of 1863, most of the classes moved to the new address of Rubinstein's residence (Myasnoy alley, house of Burkin). Solo singing (Bertha Walzek and Adolf Osberg) and playing various instruments began to be taught: violin (Karl Klamroth and Vasily Bezekirsky), piano (Nikolai Rubinstein, Eduard Langer and Nikolay Kashkin),
cello (Karl Ezef),
flute (
Ferdinand Büchner),
trumpet (Fyodor Richter). In 1864 the number of pupils exceeded two hundred, and the Russian Musical Society rented Voeikova's house on
Mokhovaya Street, where Rubinstein's apartment was located. In 1866, teachers
Ludwig Minkus (violin),
Józef Wieniawski and
Anton Door (piano), and
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (elementary music theory) joined. In 1862, a conservatory was established in
Saint Petersburg, and there was a need for a higher musical institution in Moscow. The report of the Russian Musical Society for 1863/1864 already mentioned a concert organized "for the benefit of the conservatory to be opened in Moscow" Conservatory in Moscow was co-founded in 1866 as the
Moscow Imperial Conservatory by Nikolai Rubinstein and Prince Nikolai Troubetzkoy. The grand opening was held on 1 September. It is the second oldest conservatory in Russia after the
Saint Petersburg Conservatory. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was appointed professor of theory and harmony at its opening. Since 1940, the centenary of his birth, the conservatory has borne his name.
Conservatory The highest permission for the opening of the Moscow Conservatory, at the request of the August Patroness of the Society, Grand Duchess
Elena Pavlovna, followed on 24 December 1865. Pianist N.G. Rubinstein was approved as its director on 6 February 1866. Konstantin Albrecht was appointed inspector of the conservatory. By the day of the opening of the Conservatory a house was rented at the corner of Vozdvizhenka and the Arbatskie Gates passage, in the house of Baroness Cherkasova. The house has not survived; in 1941, during an air raid on Moscow, the building was destroyed by a bomb. In 1871 the Moscow Conservatory rented Dashkova's house, and in 1878 bought it for 185 thousand rubles. The Conservatory was financed by the income of the Russian Musical Society from concert activities, as well as city and government subsidies, donations from private individuals and tuition fees. The course of study at the conservatory took six years until 1879, then was increased to nine years. It covered both music classes (instrumental, vocal, orchestral, choral, opera, and theory) and general education. Until 1917, tuition was paid. In the early years of the Conservatory, the level of requirements for admission to the Conservatory was by necessity very low. Only those who had studied earlier in the Music Society classes had some theoretical training. All others were required to begin music theory with an elementary course, in which everyone was enrolled regardless of proficiency in any instrument, mainly piano. In the first school year of 1866/1867, the professorial (senior) classes had 38 pupils on the piano; the junior classes (adjunct classes) had 43. In May 1867, general examinations were held, on the basis of which the students were assigned to courses. In the early years of its activity the Conservatory was taught by professors: piano -
Nikolai Rubinstein,
Józef Wieniawski, C. F. Wilshau (
adjunct),
Anton Door, C. E. Weber (adjunct),
Alexandre Dubuque, A. K. Zander (adjunct),
Karl Klindworth (from 1868),
Nikolay Kashkin, E. L. Langer (adjunct), L. F. Langer (from 1869),
Nikolai Zverev (junior piano classes from 1870); solo singing - A. D. Alexandrova-Kochetova, B. O. Walzek,
Vladimir Kashperov, A. R. Osberg, J. Galvani (from 1869);
violin -
Ferdinand Laub,
Ludwig Minkus,
Jan Hřímalý (from 1869 - adjunct, from 1874 - professor), G. Shradik (adjunct); cello - B. Kosman,
Wilhelm Fitzenhagen (from 1870);
double bass - G. F. Spekin; flute - F. F. Büchner;
oboe - E. F. Meder;
clarinet - W. Guth;
French horn - M. Barthold, trumpet - F. B. Richter,
bassoon - K. F. Ezer; history and theory of church singing in Russia - D. V. Razumovsky; music-theoretical subjects -
Konstantin Albrecht, N. A. Hubert,
Nikolay Kashkin, E. L. Langer,
Herman Laroche, A. S. Razmadze; elementary music theory and harmony -
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (since 1870 - instrumentation and free composition). In 1932-1933, the three-storey building was built on the project of I. Y. Bondarenko. In 1983, the building of the
Synodal School of Church Singing (former Kolychevy House, in the style of classicism, built in the late 18th century by an unknown architect of the school M. F. Kazakov; since 1925 it housed the law faculty of Moscow State University) was added to the conservatory, which was granted the status of the third academic building of the conservatory. During the Soviet period, the Sunday Working Conservatory (1927-1933) and the Music Work Faculty (1929-1935) were organized to prepare the children of workers and peasants for admission to the Moscow Conservatory. For the admission of representatives of the Union republics extra-competitive (target) places were allocated annually. In 1931-1932, solving the «task of proletarianisation»,
Narkompros decided to rename the Moscow Conservatory into «
Feliks Kon Higher Music School». In these years, attempts were made to simplify the curricula, «to bring them into agreement with the Marxist method». In late 1932, the former name and academic profile of the institution were restored. In 1935, the Military Conductor's Faculty was established on the basis of the Military Kapellmeister's Department of the Conservatory. As of 22 June 1941, there were 30 students in the military faculty. In the 2000s, this faculty was transferred from the subordination of the Moscow Conservatory to the subordination of the
Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia, and then to the
Military University of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation. On 7 May 1940, by the decree of the
Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the
USSR, the Moscow Conservatory was named after P. I. Tchaikovsky and scholarships named after P. I. Tchaikovsky were established for especially gifted students of the Faculty of Composition. In 1954 a monument to Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was unveiled in front of the Great Hall of the Conservatory. On 18 March 1958 the First
International Tchaikovsky Competition was opened at the Conservatory. Until 2019, in the years of this competition, the Conservatory's curricula were cut by one month for the comfortable preparation of participants and jury members: usually the main wave of the summer session took place from May 20 to the end of June, but in the years of the competition - from the end of April to June 5. ==Choral faculty==