Name David Satian | Role Composer | |
David satian with orkest de volharding and louis andriessen after the concert april 18 2007
David Satian (also Satyan) (Armenian: Դավիթ Սաթյան; born August 17, 1979 in Yerevan) is Armenian contemporary composer, producer and jazz pianist.
Contents
- David satian with orkest de volharding and louis andriessen after the concert april 18 2007
- David satian duplex 1st part for clarinet violin cello and piano 2009
- Biography
- Awards
- Professional Education
- Research and Scholarly Activity
- Recent Works
- Satian Musical Dynasty
- References
David satian duplex 1st part for clarinet violin cello and piano 2009
Biography
He was born on 17 August 1979 in Yerevan capital of Armenia, into a family of renowned family of musicians, mostly composers. In this musical dynasty he represents the 3rd generation and with his work he was able to contribute further to a century long existing musicals traditions of his family. His father Aram Satian is a known classical composer and popular music songwriter. Grandfather is Aram Satunts (1913–1990) who was a Peoples Artist of Armenia, member of the Union of Soviet Composers and awarded with the Silver Medal of Alexandrov.Another notable composer in his family is Ashot Satian (1906–1956), the chairman of the Composers Union of Armenia from 1947 to 1952, Laureate of the State Stalin Prize in 1952 (also see: USSR State Prize / in Russian: Государственная Сталинская премия) who is known for his songs and also for composing the first Armenian String Quartet in 1936. As a film composer he received numerous awards for contribution to a Soviet Film Industry, including in 1951 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (Czechoslovakia).
Awards
Professional Education
Research and Scholarly Activity
The research is dedicated to the problems concerning the relationships between the folk, jazz and classical genres. The main intension is to create a synthesis of contemporary classical music and advanced avant-garde jazz in which the preoccupations, idioms, and performing styles of both traditions would feed into each other, resulting in compositions, which would belong equally to the jazz and the classical music world. While there have been many attempts at such a fusion over the last hundred years (most notably by George Gershwin, Milton Babbitt, Gunther Schuller, Louis Andriessen, and Mark-Anthony Turnage), it is only now that the development of both traditions has reached a point in which the state of their language share a wealth of common concerns and expressive features, rendering such a synthesis possible. This research will result in a portfolio of musical compositions and a technical commentary making explicit the aesthetic considerations and technical devices embodied in the compositions and their relationship to previous attempts at cross-fertilization of these genres.