Mark Taimanov: the grandmaster who was also a concert pianist
- País
- 🇷🇺 USSR / Russia
- Título
- Grandmaster (GM)
- Nacimiento
- 7 February 1926, Kharkiv (USSR, today Ukraine)
- Fallecimiento
- 28 November 2016
- Estado
- fallecido
- ELO máximo
- 2620 · 1971 (first FIDE rating)
Some lives don’t fit into a single calling. Mark Taimanov’s is one of them: elite chess grandmaster and, at the same time, professional concert pianist. World title candidate, author of a Sicilian variation bearing his name, and protagonist of one of the most famous defeats in history, Taimanov was a one-of-a-kind figure.
Who was Taimanov
He was born on 7 February 1926 in Kharkiv (then USSR, today Ukraine). From childhood he cultivated two passions in parallel — chess and music — and, astonishingly, reached the top in both. Together with his wife, pianist Lyubov Bruk, he formed a celebrated piano duo that performed throughout the Soviet Union and left acclaimed recordings.
On the board, he was one of the best Soviet players, winning the tough USSR Championship in 1956 and regularly competing for the world title.
The theoretical contribution
Taimanov was a deep connoisseur of openings. The Taimanov Variation of the Sicilian Defense — a flexible system rich in possibilities — bears his name and remains popular in elite chess. That a line from the most played opening in the world is associated with him gives an idea of his theoretical footprint.
The 0-6 against Fischer
The most remembered episode of his career is, paradoxically, a defeat. In the quarterfinals of the 1971 Candidates Tournament, Taimanov faced a Bobby Fischer on the most impressive streak in history. The result was brutal: Fischer 6 – Taimanov 0, without conceding even a draw.
The blow wasn’t only sporting. The Soviet authorities, who experienced the loss as a national disgrace, punished Taimanov by stripping his privileges and banning him from traveling and publishing for a time. Fortunately, he still had music: the piano sustained him through those difficult years.
Taimanov remained linked to chess for the rest of his long life. He died on 28 November 2016 in Saint Petersburg, at age 90.
His chess DNA
In our chess DNA system, Taimanov represents the harmonious, versatile player profile: balance between attack and solidity, good technique and a refined, almost musical understanding of the game. If your GM twin is Taimanov, your strength lies in balanced chess with good positional taste; your play, like his piano, seeks harmony among all the pieces.
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Preguntas frecuentes
Is it true that Taimanov was a professional pianist?
Yes, and a top-tier one. Mark Taimanov had an extraordinary double career: he was simultaneously an elite chess grandmaster and a professional concert pianist. Together with his wife, pianist Lyubov Bruk, he formed a celebrated piano duo that performed throughout the USSR and recorded acclaimed records. Few people in history have reached professional level in two such demanding and different disciplines. Taimanov used to say that chess and music nourished each other in his life.
What happened in the 1971 Taimanov-Fischer match?
In the quarterfinals of the 1971 Candidates Tournament, Taimanov faced Bobby Fischer, who was on the most impressive streak in chess history. The result was crushing: Fischer won 6-0, without conceding even a draw. It was a historic beating (Fischer would repeat the 6-0 against Larsen in the next round). Beyond the sporting blow, Taimanov suffered reprisals from the Soviet authorities, who punished him by stripping his privileges and banning him from traveling and publishing for a time, as if the loss had been a national disgrace.
What is the Taimanov Variation?
The Taimanov Variation is a system within the Sicilian Defense (characterized by flexible development with e6 and Nc6, without early commitment of the pawn structure) that Taimanov analyzed and employed in depth, and which bears his name. It's a solid line rich in possibilities that remains popular in elite chess. That a variation of the most played opening in the world bears his name gives an idea of Taimanov's theoretical contribution to chess, beyond his tournament results.