Taneyev was born in
Vladimir,
Vladimir Governorate,
Russian Empire, to a cultured and literary family of Russian nobility. A distant cousin,
Alexander Taneyev, was also a composer, whose daughter,
Anna Vyrubova, was highly influential at court. Alexander was drawn closely to the
nationalist school of music exemplified by
The Five, while Sergei would gravitate toward a more cosmopolitan outlook, as did
Tchaikovsky. He began taking piano lessons at the age of five with a private teacher. His family moved to
Moscow in 1865. The following year, the nine-year-old Taneyev entered the
Moscow Conservatory. His first piano teacher at the Conservatory was Edward Langer. After a year's interruption in his studies, Taneyev studied again with Langer. He also joined the theory class of Nikolai Hubert and, most importantly, the composition class of
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Taneyev graduated in 1875, the first student in the history of the Conservatory to win the gold medal both for composition and for performing (piano). He was also the first person to be awarded the Conservatory's Great Gold Medal. That summer he travelled abroad with Rubinstein. and would become known for his interpretations of
Bach,
Mozart and
Beethoven. In March 1876 he toured Russia with violinist
Leopold Auer. Taneyev attended
Moscow University for a short time and was acquainted with outstanding Russian writers, including
Ivan Turgenev and
Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin. During his travels in Western Europe in 1876 and 1877, he met
Émile Zola,
Gustave Flaubert,
César Franck, and
Camille Saint-Saëns, amongst others. When Tchaikovsky resigned from the Moscow Conservatory in 1878, Taneyev was appointed to teach
harmony. He would later also teach piano and composition. He served as Director from 1885 to 1889, and continued teaching until 1905. He had great influence as a teacher of composition. His pupils included
Alexander Scriabin,
Sergei Rachmaninoff, Jacob Weinberg,
Reinhold Glière,
Paul Juon,
Julius Conus,
Nikolai Medtner, and
Thomas de Hartmann. The
polyphonic interweaves in the music of Rachmaninoff and Medtner stem directly from Taneyev's teaching. Scriabin, on the other hand, broke away from Taneyev's influence. Taneyev was also a scholar of notable erudition. In addition to music, he studied—for relaxation—natural and social science, history, mathematics, plus the philosophies of
Plato and
Spinoza. During the summers of 1895 and 1896, Taneyev stayed at
Yasnaya Polyana, the home of
Leo Tolstoy and his wife
Sofia. The latter developed an attachment to the composer that embarrassed her children and made Tolstoy jealous, although Taneyev himself remained unaware of it. In 1905,
revolution and its consequent effect on the Moscow Conservatory led Taneyev to resign from the staff there. He resumed his career as a concert pianist, both as soloist and chamber musician. He was also able to pursue composition more intensely, completing chamber works with a piano part which he could play in concerts as well as some choruses and a substantial number of songs. His last completed work was the
cantata At the Reading of a Psalm, completed at the beginning of 1915. ==Taneyev and Tchaikovsky==