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Aram Gharabekian

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Name
  
Aram Gharabekian


Aram Gharabekian Conductor Aram Gharabekian Dies at 58 Armenian Weekly

Died
  
January 10, 2014, Los Angeles, California, United States

Education
  
New England Conservatory of Music, University of Mainz

Aram gharabekian celebration of life


Aram Gharabekian (Armenian: Արամ Ղարաբեկյան, 4 July 1955 – 10 January 2014) was an Iranian-born Armenian conductor, former Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of the National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia. In 1983 he founded and until 1996 directed and conducted the Boston SinfoNova Orchestra.

Contents

Aram Gharabekian In Memoriam Remembering Aram Asbarezcom

Mario stefano pietrodarchi aram gharabekian oblivion a piazzolla nco armenia


Biography

Aram Gharabekian Remembering the Maestro Aram Gharabekian set the bar at

Aram Gharabekian was born into an Armenian family in Tehran, Iran, on 4 July 1955. He moved to the United States at the age of 17. He graduated from the New England Conservatory in Boston, then continued his postgraduate studies at Mainz University in Germany. He studied conducting with Franco Ferrara in Italy, and in 1979 became one of a few conducting pupils of Sergiu Celibidache in Germany. Gharabekian also studied composition and conducting under Jacob Druckman and Leonard Bernstein at Tanglewood Music Center in Massachusetts.

Aram Gharabekian Aram Gharabekian Music of Armenia

Gharabekian was formerly the Principal Guest Conductor of the NRCU Symphony Orchestra in Kiev. He led them in recording their first Compact Disc, featuring Sergei Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet, which was released in 1996 on Russian Disc's "Audiophile Series". Following a critically acclaimed guest appearance with the Ukrainian National Symphony Orchestra in 1991, Maestro Gharabekian was invited by the Ukrainian Minister of Culture to assume the position of Artistic Advisor and Conductor.

Aram Gharabekian httpsiytimgcomvi0CtoYiXedIAmaxresdefaultjpg

Active as a guest conductor, Gharabekian had been the Principal Guest Conductor of the Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra, and appeared with the Sinfonietta München. He also led the Ukrainian National Symphony, the Ukrainian State Opera and Ballet, the West Ukrainian Philharmonic, Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra, Shreveport Symphony Orchestra, Fresno Philharmonic, Zhejiang Symphony Orchestra and Hangzhou Symphony Orchestra and Chorus. On New Year's Eve in 1999 Gharabekian led an orchestra and chorus in Hangzhou, China of 300 musicians from 6 countries in a televised millennium celebration concert featuring Beethoven's 9th Symphony.

Aram Gharabekian Alan Hovhaness News Presentation of Hovhaness Doctorate

Gharabekian died in Los Angeles on 10 January 2014 at the age of 58.

Awards

  • 1989 Lucien Wulsin Performance Award
  • 1988 American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) Award for Adventuresome Programming
  • Harvard Musical Association's "Best Performance Award"
  • References

    Aram Gharabekian Wikipedia