Komitas Quartet

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The Komitas Quartet is a string quartet musical ensemble founded in Moscow in November 1924, and is the oldest-established string quartet in the world still performing. It is now in the third and fourth generation of membership.

Original line-up[edit]

The founding members were four Armenian students at the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory:[1]
1st violin: Avet Gabrielyan
2nd violin: Levon Ogandjanyan
Viola: Mikael Terian (Микаэл Тэриан)
Cello: Sergey Aslamazian

This group gave its first public performance in February 1925.

Origins[edit]

The Komitas Quartet at the celebration of the 90th anniversary in the Ministry of Health of the Philharmonic of St. Petersburg

This group, the best-known Armenian music group, carries the name of Komitas (Soghomon Soghomonyan, 1869–1935).[2][3] The quartet has performed with Sviatoslav Richter, Nina Dorliak, Emil Gilels, Dmitri Shostakovich, Mstislav Rostropovich, Victor Merzhanov, Konstantin Igumnov, Walter Zeufert, Mario Brunello, Anahit Nersesyan and other prominent musicians.

Current line-up[edit]

  • 1st violin: Eduard Tadevosyan[4]
  • 2nd violin: Syuzi Yeritsyan
  • Viola: Aleksandr Kosemyan[4]
  • Cello: Angela Sargsyan

Premieres[edit]

Date Venue Composer Composition Joined by
1958 [5] Moscow Sofia Gubaidulina Piano Quintet Sofia Gubaidulina, piano

Recordings[edit]

The quartet made a number of collection recordings in the USSR and released numerous albums in Russia, the United Kingdom, France and the United States. The latest CDs were released in recent three years. In 2007 "Armenian Contemporary Composers" studio album was released on the VEM label. In 2002, the CD was released "On the Fortieth Day" on Traditional Crossroads label in New York, with "Two Devotions" by the composer Vache Sharafyan. The next edition of the "Armenian Folk Miniatures" album was released in November 2010 by subvention of the Ministry of Culture of Armenia.

Management[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "History of Komitas Quartet". Virtual Museum of Komitas Vardapet. 21 January 1950. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  2. ^ "AUS hosts the Komitas Quartet". American University of Sharjah. 11 October 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  3. ^ "Quartet takes the cake". HeraldScotland. 10 November 1989. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  4. ^ a b "President Sarkissian signs decree on awarding members of Komitas Quartet". armenpress.am. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  5. ^ Soviet Composers (accessed through archive.fo)

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]