JUNO Award-Successful Ensemble Constantinople Focuses On The Work Of Dimitrie Cantemir


Chamber music ensemble Constantinople (Photo courtesy of the artist)
Constantinople (Picture courtesy of the artist)

Constantinople, latest JUNO Award winners, are bringing and weird program of music by little recognized Ottoman composer Dimitrie Cantemir to Toronto. The Montreal-based ensemble will likely be performing on the Aga Khan Museum on April 19.

Cantemir’s music will likely be carried out together with items by his contemporaries, resembling Marin Marais from France, or Italy’s Antonio Bertali.

Who’s Dimitrie Cantemir?

Prince, statesman, and man of letters, Dimitire Cantemir was born in 1673, though there may be some dispute in regards to the precise date, and died in Russia in 1723. Throughout his 49 years, he served as vovoide (an elected warlord) of Moldavia, now a part of Romania, twice.

Whereas his political exploits had their ups and downs, and led to his exile to Russia, he was additionally recognized for his mental skills. He might communicate 11 languages, and wrote a number of scientific books. His Historical past of the Development and Decay of Ottoman Empire served because the mannequin for Edward Gibbon’s later Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.

He’s credited with writing the primary Romanian novel in 1705.

When it got here to music, he wrote about 40 compositions within the Ottoman type, and a few are nonetheless carried out in Turkey. He additionally transcribed and revealed about 350 conventional instrumental items in a set titled “Edvar-i Musiki”. The gathering is a useful glimpse into Ottoman and Center Jap music of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A number of of his works have been recorded.

The Musicians

Constantinople takes its inspiration from its namesake metropolis, typically known as a bridge between East and West. The ensemble was based in 2001 by inventive director, Kiya Tabassian.

Constantinople has recorded 20 albums on numerous labels, together with the latest award-winner, Il Ponte di Leonardo. They’ve created some 60 unique works, and toured to 290 cities in 57 nations. Their purpose is to create music with a way of neighborhood that encourages cross-cultural collaborations and exchanges.

They carry out works that incorporate parts from numerous musical traditions, from medieval Europe to the modern world, and from Mediterranean Europe to Jap traditions and New World Baroque.

Kiya Tabassian is a grasp of the setar, a kind of Persian lute. He emigrated to Canada on the age of 14, and pursued his research of Persian music at the same time as he studied on the Conservatoire de musique de Montréal. He has carved out a novel profession with a global profile.

Different members of Constantinople embody Didem Basar on the kanun (or Turkish zither), who studied and earned her bachelor’s diploma in composition on the Istanbul Turkish Music State Conservatory, the place she first started to review on the age of 11.

Montrealer Patrick Graham is a percussionist, improviser, composer and teacher. He has studied and carried out types from modern Western percussion, the body drumming traditions of the Mediterranean and Center-East, South Indian rhythm and Japanese taiko.

Tanya LaPerrière is a graduated violin grasp of the Royal Conservatory of Brussels, together with McGill College. Along with Constantinople, she is co-solo violin of Arion orchestra. Iranian-Canadian drummer Hamin Honaria specializes within the Persian hand drums Tombak & Daf.

  • Discover extra details about the live performance, and tickets, [HERE].

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