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Dmitry Yablonsky has gained international prominence both as a cellist and as a conductor. In the former capacity, he is also an enthusiastic chamber player.

Yablonsky was born in Moscow in 1962. His mother was concert pianist <a href="spotify:artist:4HIq0b99ZW4fL2qI2dFOal">Oxana Yablonskaya</a>, and his father, Albert Zayonts, principal oboist of the Moscow Radio and Television Orchestra. Yablonsky took up the cello at five and soon entered the gifted student program at Moscow's Central School of Music. By nine, he had begun performing in Moscow and around the Soviet Union. With some difficulty, and only after the intercession of <a href="spotify:artist:2LmyJyCF5V1eQyvHgJNbTn">Leonard Bernstein</a> and actress Katharine Hepburn, Yablonsky and his mother emigrated to the U.S. in 1977. Yablonsky was accepted at the Juilliard School, studying with Lorne Munroe. In 1979, he performed at the Marlboro Music Festival in Vermont, where, among other famed musicians, he met <a href="spotify:artist:20w7d77cK8uJbgV8SDdaIS">Guarneri Quartet</a> cellist David Soyer, who accepted him for classes at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia. Yablonsky went on to Yale University, where he studied for four years with Aldo Parisot and also took some conducting classes with Otto-Werner Mueller.

Yablonsky began his career as a cellist, appearing at such major venues as the Louvre in Paris, Carnegie Hall in New York, and St. Petersburg Philharmonic Hall. When he was 26, he was performing at a festival in Camerino, Italy, and filled in as conductor on an emergency basis, leading a performance of <a href="spotify:artist:7ie36YytMoKtPiL7tUvmoE">Stravinsky</a>'s Octet even though he had never previously conducted professionally. Since then, although he has continued to perform and record as a cellist, the focus of his career has been on conducting. Yablonsky's recording career began in 1995 on the <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Marco+Polo%22">Marco Polo</a> label, leading the <a href="spotify:artist:2jgxURebid3p0tNcSsg6cu">Latvian National Symphony</a> in an album of works by Jazeps Vitols. He then moved to <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Naxos%22">Naxos</a>, issuing albums with a variety of Russian and Eastern European orchestras.

As a guest conductor, Yablonsky has led European and Russian orchestras, including the Orchestre National d'Ile de France, the Israel Symphony, and the <a href="spotify:artist:0MvSBMGRQJY3mRwIbJsqF1">Royal Philharmonic</a>, and from 2000 to 2004, he was the principal guest conductor of the <a href="spotify:artist:5EzQdU1LSOQszQFjsYt1E0">Moscow Philharmonic</a>. In 2008, he joined violinist <a href="spotify:artist:5AU4WeTDl2uf1jFw2w9FQT">Vadim Repin</a> and pianist <a href="spotify:artist:36qooOkbokPscdOGWHPFk7">Boris Berezovsky</a> for an <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Erato%22">Erato</a> recording of trios by Tchaikovsky and Shostakovich; that album won multiple awards. Yablonsky conducted the Jerusalem Symphony for a time and, as of the early 2020s, holds the position of conductor laureate there. He organized the Gabala Festival in Azerbaijan and the Wandering Stars Festival, which is held in a different city each year. As of the early 2020s, Yablonsky was dividing his time between Ukraine, where he was music director of the Kyiv Virtuosi, and Israel, where he was teaching at the Buchmann-Mehta School of Music at Tel Aviv University. In 2021, he and the Kyiv Virtuosi backed Azer Zada on the album Italian Tenor Arias. By 2023, when he recorded the album Catalan Cello Works with pianist Laia Martín for the <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Naxos%22">Naxos</a> label, his recording catalog had grown to some 60 items, mainly on <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Naxos%22">Naxos</a> and mostly but not exclusively covering Russian and Eastern European repertory. ~ James Manheim, Rovi

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76,375

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Popular Tracks

776 tracks
1
Jazz Suite No. 2: VI. Waltz 2

Jazz Suite No. 2: VI. Waltz 2

Jan 1, 1990

98.6 million

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2
Suite for Variety Orchestra: No. 7, Waltz No. 2 in C Minor and E-Flat Major

Suite for Variety Orchestra: No. 7, Waltz No. 2 in C Minor and E-Flat Major

Mar 24, 2014

98.6 million

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Suite for Variety Orchestra

Suite for Variety Orchestra

Jan 1, 2007

98.6 million

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4
Suite for Jazz Orchestra No. 2: No. 6, Waltz No. 2

Suite for Jazz Orchestra No. 2: No. 6, Waltz No. 2

Jun 17, 2016

98.6 million

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5
Le Lac des cygnes, Acte II Scène 10: Scène (Moderato)

Le Lac des cygnes, Acte II Scène 10: Scène (Moderato)

Oct 18, 2017

12.5 million

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6
Schwanensee, Op. 20: Act II No. 10: Scene

Schwanensee, Op. 20: Act II No. 10: Scene

Nov 18, 2002

12.5 million

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7
Tahiti Trot, Op. 16 (orchestral transcription of Youmans' Tea for Two): Taiti Trot (Tahiti Trot), Op. 16 (arr. of V. Youmans - Tea for Two)

Tahiti Trot, Op. 16 (orchestral transcription of Youmans' Tea for Two): Taiti Trot (Tahiti Trot), Op. 16 (arr. of V. Youmans - Tea for Two)

Apr 15, 2002

11.4 million

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8
Jazz Suite No. 2: II. Lyric Waltz

Jazz Suite No. 2: II. Lyric Waltz

Apr 15, 2002

9.9 million

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9
Jazz Suite No. 1: I. Waltz

Jazz Suite No. 1: I. Waltz

Apr 15, 2002

8.8 million

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10
Sérénade mélancolique, Op. 26, TH 56: Serenade melancolique (Melancholy Serenade), Op. 26

Sérénade mélancolique, Op. 26, TH 56: Serenade melancolique (Melancholy Serenade), Op. 26

Feb 27, 2007

1.9 million

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