- Source: Artur Avanesov
Artur Avanesov (Armenian: Արթուր Ավանեսով, Russian: Артур Аванесов, born December 9, 1980, in Moscow, Russia) is an Armenian composer of chamber, choral, vocal, and piano works that have been performed in Armenia and abroad.
Career
Avanesov studied piano at various music schools in Baku, Kapan and Yerevan as a child, and studied music theory at the Alexander Spendiaryan Specialised Music School in Yerevan from 1994 to 1997. He studied composition with Stepan Rostomyan and piano with Elena Abajyan at the Komitas State Conservatory of Yerevan from 2000 to 2002 and earned his doctorate in musicology in 2005.
As a pianist, he has performed with musicians such as Rohan de Saram, Kim Kashkashian, Anja Lechner, Tony Arnold, and many others. His compositions have been performed in many countries including Europe, CIS countries, United States, Japan, Taiwan, Canada, Brazil, and the Middle East.
Among his honours are co-First Prize in the Benjamin Britten competition in Yerevan (2003, for Namu-Amida-Butsu) and co-First Prize in the Ghazaros Saryan competition for vocal music in Yerevan (2004, for Garun a – Spring).
Avanesov has taught composition at the Komitas State Conservatory of Yerevan since 2005.
His writings have appeared in many journals in Armenia and he has served as co-editor of the magazine Musical Armenia since 2002, where he has published articles on the music of Stockhausen and several contemporary Armenian composers. He is also the co-founder of the AUS Contemporary Music Ensemble (formed in 2001), which performs works of young and established composers from Armenia and abroad.
Major works
= Chamber music
=Four Pieces, string quartet, 1996
Namu-Amida-Butsu, flute, piano, 2001
...dies ist ein lied für dich allein... (cellist also sings text by Stefan George; performer must be male), cello, 2003
webcrossings.ch-am, flute, oboe, bass clarinet, 2004
...leise..., clarinet, piano, 2004
= Choral
=Et resurrexit, 12 mixed voices, 1999
Kyrie eleison, male chorus, 2000
Christe eleison, soprano, male chorus, 2001
Te decet hymnus, mixed chorus, 2001
Requiem æternam, tenor, mixed chorus, 2 flutes ad libitum, 2 oboes ad libitum, piano, timpani, 42 strings, 2002
Kyrie II, male chorus, 2002
Lungi da te cor mio (text by Luzzasco Luzzaschi), mixed chorus, 2004
Miserere, mixed chorus, 2007
= Vocal
=Cinq Haïkaï (texts by Matsuo Bashō, Rinka Ono [Armenian translations]), female voice, piano, 1996
Two Gazelles of Yeghishe Charents, female voice, flute, oboe, French horn, violin, cello, piano, 2 percussion, 1997
...and the moon is like shadow under your feet... (text by Vardan Areveltsi), female voice, piano, 1998 (also version for female voice, 1998)
Les douze couleurs d'Alleluja, alto, 2002
...i have tried to write paradise... (text by Ezra Pound), mezzo-soprano/countertenor, string quartet, 2003
Garun a (text from a folksong from Armenia), mezzo-soprano, piano, 2003
Wieder (text by Rose Ausländer), male voice, piano, 2005
Im Luys – My Light (text from a folk source from Armenia), soprano, violin, 2005
A Handful of Fire (text from a folksong from Armenia), soprano, piano, 2006
...zij lijkt op een vreemde bloem... (text by Krikor Momdjian; pianist also sings and must be male), mezzo-soprano, cello, piano, 2007
= Piano
=Three Preludes, 1996
Ave Sancta, 1997
In memoriam T. Takemitsu, 1998
Et in sæcula sæculorum, 2 pianos, 1999
Un peu de musique pour S., 2000
Illa, 1999–2001
Deux Énigmes, 2002
Malinconia in fis, 2005
No lloro, 2005
Feux follets (cycle), 2007–
= Harpsichord
=Fenstern zu G-dur, 2002
Musique triste, 2002
= Film score
=Words, Words, Words, 2005 (Raffie Davidian)
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Artur Avanesov
- Avanesov
- List of Armenian classical composers
- List of Armenian composers
- Hooshyar Khayam
- FC Qizilqum Zarafshon
- List of statues in Yerevan
- List of foreign politicians of Armenian origin
- FK Nikars
- Lists of Armenians