Nikoghayos Tigranian
Nikoghayos Tigranian (Armenian: Նիկողայոս Թադևոսի Տիգրանյան, 31 August 1856, Gyumri – 17 February 1951, Yerevan) was an Armenian composer, ethnomusicologist and pianist. He was granted the titles of People's Artist of Armenia (1933) and Hero of Labour (1936). In 1921, Nikoghos Tigranyan implemented the Braille System for the first time in Armenia at the Gyumri school he founded.
Nikoghayos Tigranian | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Nikoghayos Fadeyi Tigranian |
Born | Alexandropol | August 31, 1856
Died | Yerevan | February 17, 1951
Genres | Classical music |
Occupation(s) | Composer, Pianist |
Blind from the age of 9, he studied at the Vienna Institute for the Blind (1873–80) and Saint Petersburg Conservatory (with Rimsky-Korsakov). He collected Armenian folk music, particularly mughams, which he used in arrangements (many for piano) and original works. Tigranian was the first composer to translate such music into orchestral terms.[1]
The Gyumri Art School is named after him.
Books
- Ruzanna Mazmanyan. Nikoghayos Tigranyan: Ocherk Zhizni i Tvorchestva [Essay on Life and Creativity]. Yerevan: Sovetakan Grokh, 1978.
- Nikoghayos Tigranyan. Hodvatsner, husher, namakner, 1981
NIKOLAY FADDEEVICH TIGRANOV Oriental Music, Leningrad 1927. Lonigradskiy Gublit e 36130, 31/2 nel. A. - Circulation 1000 The State Academic Printing House. VO, line 9. Book in Russian.
References
- Ellen Koskoff, ed. (2013). The Concise Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Volume 2. Routledge. p. 848. ISBN 9781136096020.