Ahmet Adnan Saygun (1907 –1991) was a Turkish composer, musicologist and writer on music.
One of a group of composers known as the Turkish Five who
pioneered western classical music in Turkey, his works show a mastery of
Western musical practice, while also incorporating traditional Turkish folk
songs and culture. When alluding to folk elements he tends to spotlight one
note of the scale and weave a melody around it, based on a Turkish mode.
His extensive output includes five symphonies, five operas,
two piano concertos, concertos for violin, viola and cello, and a wide range of
chamber and choral works.
The Times called him "the grand old man of Turkish music, who was to his country what Jean Sibelius is to Finland, what Manuel de Falla is to Spain, and what Béla Bartók is to Hungary". Saygun was growing up in Turkey when he witnessed radical changes in his country’s politics and culture as the reforms of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk had replaced the Ottoman Empire—which had ruled for nearly 600 years—with a new secular republic based on Western models and traditions. As Atatürk had created a new cultural identity for his people and newly founded nation, Saygun found his role in developing what Atatürk had begun.
Saygun in his youth, wearing a fez |
excellent!
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