阿丽娜曾在2005年以独奏兼指挥的身份与克里默波罗弦乐团(Kremerata Baltica)献演奥地利萨尔茨堡莫扎特周艺术节。之后,她还在巴黎Salle Pleyel音乐会、2008年莫扎特周艺术节、萨尔兹堡音乐节、瑞士韦尔毕耶音乐节以及MDR夏日音乐节上多次与克里默及其乐团合作。此外,阿丽娜还经常以独奏兼指挥的身份与歌手布里顿•新佛尼亚(Britten Sinfonia)联袂合作,
Alina Ibragimova (born 28 September 1985) is a Russian-born violinist residing in the UK. She is the youngest-ever winner of the Royal Philharmonic Society's Emily Anderson Prize.
Ibragimova was born in Polevskoy, Russia in a Tatar family. Her family was musical, and she began playing the violin at the age of four. At five she started at the Gnessin State Musical College in Moscow, studying under Valentina Korolkova, and by the age of six had started her career by playing with various orchestras, including the Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra. She was aged Ten in 1996 when her father, Rinat Ibragimov, took up the post of principal double bass with the London Symphony Orchestra, and the family moved to live in England. In the following year Ibragimova began her studies at the Yehudi Menuhin School (where her mother is professor of violin) under Natasha Boyarskaya.
In December 1998 Ibragimova performed with Nicola Benedetti at the opening ceremony of the 50th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights at UNESCO in Paris; they played Bach's double violin concerto under the baton of Yehudi Menuhin. Menuhin died three months later, and Ibragimova performed the slow movement of the same concerto at his funeral in Westminster Abbey.
After finishing her studies at the Yehudi Menuhin School, Ibragimova went on to the Guildhall School of Music and Drama for a year, and then to the Royal College of Music, studying under Gordan Nikolitch. Together with other students from the Royal College, she formed the period-instrument string quartet Chiaroscuro, specialising in music from the classical period
(wiki / http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/Ibragimova-Alina.htm 等网上资料)