See Also: Scriabin, Aleksandr (Nikolayevich)(encyclopedia)
Radishchev, Aleksandr (Nikolayevich)(encyclopedia)
Ostrovsky, Aleksandr (Nikolayevich)(encyclopedia)
grimace(medicine)
grimace(dictionary)
grimace 1, verb(dictionary)
grimace 2, noun(dictionary)
Nikolayevich (as used in expressions)(encyclopedia)
Benois, Alexandre (Nikolayevich)(encyclopedia)
Baryshnikov, Mikhail (Nikolayevich)(encyclopedia)

grimace 2, noun (oh) and Scriabin, Aleksandr (Nikolayevich) (sh)


grimace 2, noun (oh)



2 n [C] written
[Date: 1600-1700; Language: French; Origin: , from earlier French grimache]
an expression you make by twisting your face because you do not like something or because you are feeling pain
::His face twisted in a grimace of pain.
::a grimace of disgust

Scriabin, Aleksandr (Nikolayevich) (sh)




born Jan. 6, 1872, Moscow, Russia
died April 27, 1915, Moscow

Russian composer and pianist.

He studied piano and composition at the Moscow Conservatory and then launched a successful concert career. His early Music was mostly for piano (including etudes, preludes, and sonatas) but also included two symphonies and a piano concerto. After 1900 he was much preoccupied with mystical philosophy and began using unusual harmonies, producing a third symphony and the Divine Poem (1904). He became involved in theosophy, which provided the basis for the orchestral Poem of Ecstasy (1908) and Prometheus (1910); the latter called for the projection of colours onto a screen during the performance. No longer thinking in terms of Music alone, he made sketches for a huge operatic ritual, Mysterium, which was never composed.


Aleksandr Scriabin.

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