Mavi Boncuk |
War and Peace: Crimea 1853-56
Performed by the London Academy of Ottoman Court Music, directed by Emre Araci[1] and produced by Ates Orga (Kalan Records).
European Music at the Ottoman Court
Performed by the London Academy of Ottoman Court Music, directed by Emre Araci and produced by Ates Orga (Kalan Records).
[1] Emre Aracı, (born 22 December 1968, Ankara) Turkish music historian, conductor, composer who has been living in the United Kingdom since 1987. He has made original contributions to the scholarship of Turkish music through his pioneering research focusing primarily on the European musical practice in the Ottoman court. Aracı studied music at the University of Edinburgh, graduating in 1994 with a BMus (Hons.) degree which was followed by a PhD in 1999. Supported by Lady Lucinda Mackay and the Inchcape Foundation, the subject of his thesis was the life and works of Turkey's eminent 20th-century composer Ahmed Adnan Saygun (1907–1991).
War and Peace: Crimea 1853-56
Performed by the London Academy of Ottoman Court Music, directed by Emre Araci[1] and produced by Ates Orga (Kalan Records).
European Music at the Ottoman Court
Performed by the London Academy of Ottoman Court Music, directed by Emre Araci and produced by Ates Orga (Kalan Records).
[1] Emre Aracı, (born 22 December 1968, Ankara) Turkish music historian, conductor, composer who has been living in the United Kingdom since 1987. He has made original contributions to the scholarship of Turkish music through his pioneering research focusing primarily on the European musical practice in the Ottoman court. Aracı studied music at the University of Edinburgh, graduating in 1994 with a BMus (Hons.) degree which was followed by a PhD in 1999. Supported by Lady Lucinda Mackay and the Inchcape Foundation, the subject of his thesis was the life and works of Turkey's eminent 20th-century composer Ahmed Adnan Saygun (1907–1991).