Muslim Magomayev (grandfather)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Muslim Mahammad oglu Magomayev (Azeri: Müslüm Maqomayev) (18 September 1885, Starye Atagi – 28 July 1937, Nalchik) was an Azerbaijani and Soviet composer and conductor. He is the grandfather and a namesake of Azerbaijani opera singer Muslim Magomayev.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
He was born Abdulmuslim Magomayev into a family of a Chechen blacksmith on the same day another prominent Azerbaijani composer Uzeyir Hajibeyov was born.[1] Magomayev's home village Starye Atagi is located 10 kilometres north of Grozny, present-day Chechen Republic, Russia. He had studied at a primary school in Grozny before being admitted to the Gori Pedagogical Seminary (in present-day Georgia) in 1900. There Magomayev developped passion for music and conducting. That was also where he first met Uzeyir Hajibeyov, then his fellow student. However Magomayev found musical career financially unpromising and decided to focus on teaching. In 1905, he acquired his teaching certificate at the Tiflis Teachers' College and was appointed a teacher to the village of Bekovichi (now Kizlyar, Republic of North Ossetia-Alania). In 1906, he was volunteerly reappointed to Lankaran (present-day Azerbaijan). In 1911, he received a license that allowed him to teach in high schools and moved to a Baku suburb, Sabunchu. While teaching at a school he took up music and conducting once again.[1]
[edit] Career
In 1916, Magomayev wrote his first opera entitled Shah Ismayil based on the homonymous Azeri folk epic. Unlike other early Azeri operas, Shah Ismayil was less focused on the ethnic musical component and embodied European opera styles.[1] Magomayev's most major work was Nargiz. Written in 1935, this successful propaganda opera depicts Azerbaijani communists in their fight against the short-live Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. Overall, Magomayev was the author of 15 musical compositions, mostly rhapsodies. In 1927, together with Hajibeyov, he published The Collection of Azerbaijani Folk Songs; a book where over 300 pieces of folk music had been documented in notes.[1]
[edit] Personal life
In 1905, Magomayev married Baydigul Jamal Teregulova (whose younger sister Maleyka later married Uzeyir Hajibeyov making the two composers relatives) and fathered two sons.[2] In 1937, he died of tuberculosis while visiting Nalchik (Republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, Russia) and was burried in Baku. The Magomayev Azerbaijan State Philharmonic Society is named after Muslim Magomayev.