Murad Kazhlayev
Murad Kajlayev | |
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Born | Baku, TSFSR, USSR | 15 January 1931
Origin | Soviet Union, Russia |
Occupation(s) | Composer, conductor |
Murad Magomedovich Kajlayev (Template:Lang-ru) is a well-known Soviet and Dagestani composer and conductor,[1] People's Artist of the USSR (1981), laureate of international premiums and contests, Artistic Director and chief conductor of the Great Academic Concert Orchestra named after Silantyev, professor and academician at Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.[2]
Biography
Murad Kajlayev was born on 15 January 1931 in Baku to a Lak family. He graduated from Baku State Conservatoire from Boris Zeidman's composition class. He was expelled from there for his ardour for practicing non-academic musical genres but soon he was reclaimed. He worked as a teacher at musical school named after Pyotr Tchaikovsky, in Makhachkala, as chief conductor of the Dagestan Radio Symphonic Orchestra (1957-1958), artistic director of the Dagestan Philharmonic Hall (1963-1964) and secretary of administration of the Union of Composers of the RSFSR (from 1968).[1] From 1990 to 2000, was in charge of Variety-Symphonic Orchestra named after Y.V.Silantyev.
Murad Kajlayev is the author of the first ballet of Dagestan called Goryanka ("Girl of the Mountains"), the ballet Shamil, musicals Millions of the Newlywed, Time of Red Apples, music to films and theatrical performances, and also songs. He worked extensively with poet Rasul Gamzatov. In 2010, he established the Dagestan Musical School for Gifted Children. In 2011, he founded a unique museum dedicated to musical culture of Dagestan affiliated with the school.
Awards and prizes
•People's Artist of the USSR (1981); •Honoured Art Worker of the RSFSR (1960); •State Premium of the RSFSR named after M.I.Glinka (1970) – for the ballet Goryanka; •State Premium of DASSR (1967); •Order of Merit for the Fatherland of the 4th degree (1995); •Order for the Merit for Dagestan Republic.
Family
He is married to Valida Islamzadeh, has a son named Murad and two granddaughters.
References
- 1931 births
- Living people
- Soviet composers
- Russian classical composers
- Russian male classical composers
- 20th-century classical composers
- Soviet film score composers
- Male film score composers
- Russian conductors (music)
- Russian music educators
- People's Artists of the USSR
- Ballet composers
- Baku Academy of Music alumni
- People from Baku
- Russian classical musicians
- Recipients of the Dostlug Order