İlhan Usmanbaş
İlhan Usmanbaş | |
---|---|
Born | Istanbul, Ottoman Empire | 23 October 1921
Died | 30 January 2025 | (aged 103)
Alma mater | Ankara State Conservatory |
Occupation | Composer |
İlhan Usmanbaş (23 October 1921 – 30 January 2025)[1] was a Turkish contemporary classical composer.
Born in Istanbul, Usmanbaş grew up in Ayvalık. When he was twelve years old, his elder brother gave him a cello, and İlhan began to teach himself to play. After moving back to Istanbul, he studied the cello seriously. His maths teacher, a lover of music, advised Usmanbaş to give up the career that he had planned for himself: "We have enough engineers in Turkey. You should be a composer instead."[2]
After graduating from Galatasaray High School, Usmanbaş went on to study under members of the Turkish Five – Cemal Reşit Rey, Ahmet Adnan Saygun, Hasan Ferit Alnar, Ulvi Cemal Erkin, and Necil Kazım Akses – and David Zirkin, at Ankara State Conservatory.
In 1952, he went to the United States on a UNESCO scholarship, where he came under the influence of American pioneers of new and experimental music. In 1955, he received the Paul Fromm Award.[3] In 1971, he became a State Artist in Turkey. In 1993, he received a gold medal from the Sevda–Cenap And Foundation. In 2000, Boğaziçi University awarded him an honorary doctorate, and in 2004, he was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 32nd Istanbul International Music Festival. He was professor of music at Istanbul Bilgi University.[4]
Usmanbaş was an experimental composer, one of the second generation of Turkish composers, coming after the Five (and opposed to their ideas). He worked with a freedom of form and a concentration on intensity rather than melody, with techniques that include neo-classicism, aleatoric music, twelve tone, serialism, and minimalism.[3]
He composed nearly 120 works, and won more foreign awards and citations than any other Turkish composer, including commissions from the Koussevitzky Foundation in the United States, and prizes from the Wieniawski Competition in Poland, the International Composers Tribune in Paris, and the International Competition for Ballet Music in Switzerland.
Usmanbaş was married to opera singer Atıfet Usmanbaş.[4]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Besteci İlhan Usmanbaş vefat etti (in Turkish)
- ^ Harriet Smith, "Turkish Delight", in BBC Music Magazine, vol. 12, no. 11, July 2004, pp. 28–31
- ^ a b Evin Ilyasoglu, "Turkish Music" (retrieved 3 January 2007)
- ^ a b Profile, International Istanbul Music Festival, Ýstanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts
External links
[edit]- Profile, Naxos Records
- İlhan Usmanbaş discography at Discogs
- İlhan Usmanbaş at IMDb