Symphonic music in Iran

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Template:Iranian music Symphonic music in Iran encompasses Iranian musical pieces composed in the symphonic style. In addition to instrumental compositions, some of Iran's symphonic pieces are based on the country's folk songs, and some are based on poetry of both classical and contemporary Iranian poets.[1]

History

File:Iran national orchestra.jpg
Iran's Society for National Music was founded by Khaleqi in 1949.

Ali-Naqi Vaziri, one of the most prominent and influential musicians of the late Qajar and early Pahlavi periods, established a private music school in 1924, where he also created a school orchestra composed of his students, formed by a combination of the Iranian instrument of tar and some western instruments. Vaziri then founded an association named Music Club (Script error: No such module "lang".), formed by a number of progressive-minded writers and scholars, where the school orchestra performed concerts that were conducted by himself.[2] The Tehran Symphony Orchestra (Script error: No such module "lang".) was founded by Gholamhossein Minbashian in 1933.[3] It was reformed by Parviz Mahmoud in 1946, and is currently the oldest and largest symphony orchestra in Iran.[4] Later, Ruhollah Khaleqi, a student of Vaziri, established the Society for National Music (Script error: No such module "lang".) in 1949.[1] He wrote his musical compositions within the parameters of classical Iranian modes, some of which involved Western triadic harmony.[1] Many of Iran's folk songs have the potential of being adapted into major or minor tonalities, and therefore, a number of Iranian folk songs were arranged for orchestral accompaniment.[1]

Symphonische Dichtungen aus Persien ("Symphonic Poems from Persia"), a collection of Persian symphonic works, was performed by the German Nuremberg Symphony Orchestra and conducted by Iranian conductor Ali Rahbari in 1980.[5]

Loris Tjeknavorian, a celebrated Iranian Armenian composer and conductor, composed Rostam and Sohrab, an opera with Persian libretto that is based on the tragedy of Rostam and Sohrab from prominent medieval Persian poet Ferdowsi's epic poem Šāhnāme, in over two decades. It was first performed by the Tehran Symphony Orchestra at Tehran's Roudaki Hall in December 2003.[6]

List of composers

The following are a number of Iranian composers of symphonic music.

See also

References

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Template:Music of Iran