Avet Terterian

Avet Terterian
Born (1929-07-29)July 29, 1929
Armenia[1]
Died December 11, 1994(1994-12-11) (aged 65)
Nationality Armenian
Known for Composer

Alfred Roubenovich "Avet" Terterian (also Terteryan) (Armenian: Ալֆրեդ "Ավետ" Տերտերյան, July 29, 1929 in Baku, Transcaucasian SSR, Soviet Union – December 11, 1994 in Yekaterinburg, Russia) was an Armenian composer, awarded the Konrad Adenauer Prize.[2]

He was a friend and colleague of Giya Kancheli, Konstantin Orbelyan, and Tigran Mansuryan. Dmitri Shostakovich praised Terterian as "very talented" and "with great future" in one of his letters, published by his friend Isaak Glikman, having heard a recording of Terterian's works at Armenia's "House of Composers" summer resort, in Dilijan, Armenia.

In the 80s he moved to the village Ayrivank, which is located on the western shore of Lake Sevan, Gegharkunik region of Armenia, where on top of a hill built a house on his own project.

He composed eight (completed) symphonies, an opera and several chamber works.

Several of his symphonies are recorded, as noted in one of the pages linked. (The date 1973 in the Musicweb review of the Melodiya recording of symphony 3 is probably a typographical error, since the publisher's listing also gives 1975 for the first performance of that work.)

Yekaterinburg's annual music festival is named after him.

List of works

Music for films

A. Terteryan Music was used in many films, giving them a special significance.To name just a few:

As actor

Literature

References

  1. http://www.sikorski.de/348/en/terteryan_avet.html
  2. Петр Поспелов, "Не надо преувеличивать свое значение на этой земле", Коммерсантъ-Daily, 16.12.1994 г.

External links

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