Moscow Conservatory tradition, New York musical life

Nina Svetlanova

Internationally recognized concert pianist and major piano teacher, shaped by Heinrich Neuhaus, Grigory Kogan, and a lifetime of performance, pedagogy, and musical exchange.

Lincoln Center debut Praised by The New York Times for an “effusively passionate” approach
Biography

A musical journey from Moscow to New York

Nina Svetlanova smiling
Nina Svetlanova

Nina Svetlanova received her highest training at the Moscow Conservatory under Professor Heinrich Neuhaus, developing a distinctive musical voice in both performance and teaching.

Her path began at the Gnessin Music School, continued through the Bolshoi Theatre and Moskonzert, and expanded internationally through concerts, master classes, lectures, competitions, and university teaching.

In Memoriam

1932-2024

Nina Svetlanova passed away at the age of 92, with her son by her side. Her life in music connected Kyiv, Moscow, New York, and generations of students around the world.

Read the Russian-language obituary
Family

A personal note from her family

When Nina first created this website, she chose to tell the story of her musical life: her teachers, her students, her colleagues, and the traditions that shaped her. Twenty-five years later, her children would like to add another part of that story.

To us, she was not only Nina Svetlanova the pianist and teacher, but our mother: brilliant, demanding, funny, generous, and unforgettable. Her music filled our home, but so did her strength, her warmth, and her fierce devotion to the people she loved.

This addition is offered with love, as a continuation of the story she began.

Nina’s first son, Yura Lekhmus, passed away in 1994. Her second son, Igor Lekhmus, and his wife, Roberta Lekhmus, continue to carry this family memory forward. Nina’s grandchildren are Michael Lekhmus, Brian Lekhmus, and Jessa Lekhmus, and her family now includes seven great-grandchildren.

“If he is indeed wise he does not bid you enter the house of his wisdom, but rather leads you to the threshold of your own mind.”
Kahlil Gibran
Teaching

A teacher’s studio built around sound, phrase, and imagination

Her students have come from around the world, with alumni including competition winners and professionals in distinguished musical positions.

01

Musical Thought First

Interpretation begins with the inner movement of a melody before technique is allowed to dominate.

02

Vocal Lineage

Years with Zara Dolukhanova shaped a method rooted in singing, phrasing, and emotional logic.

03

International Studio

Teaching, master classes, and summer courses connected students across Europe, Asia, and the Americas.

Influences

Three remarkable musicians

The original site centers a personal monologue on the artists who influenced Svetlanova’s musical life. This version gives those chapters a clearer modern entry point.

Milestones

A life in music

  1. Gnessin Music School

    Early study in a warm, deeply musical family atmosphere.

  2. Moscow Conservatory

    Seven years of study with Professor Heinrich Neuhaus.

  3. Bolshoi Theatre

    Opera coaching and immersion in rehearsal, ballet, and opera life.

  4. United States

    Teaching at Mannes and Manhattan School of Music, with an expanding international studio.

Archive

Preserve the original material, make it easier to enter

These links can point to the existing pages during a first launch, then be gradually redesigned as deeper archive pages.

Next Step

Ready for Stablepoint upload

This static version can replace the current homepage first, while the original pages remain available. It is a low-risk modernization path: better first impression now, deeper migration later.