List Of Serbian Musicians
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List Of Serbian Musicians
This is a list of Serbian musicians. Musicians * Ernest Ačkun, clarinetist. Slovene-born. * Đorđe Balašević * Isidor Bajić * Radmila Bakočević * Petar Bergamo * Stanislav Binički * Dejan Bogdanović * Dušan Bogdanović * Emina Jahović * Maja Bogdanović * Bruno Brun * Biserka Cvejić * Miroslav Čangalović * Oskar Danon * Dejan Despić * Uroš Dojčinović * Denise Djokic * Philippe Djokic * Zoran Erić * Marija Gluvakov * Duško Gojković * Dragutin Gostuški * Stevan Hristić * Ivan Jevtić * Petar Konjović * Petar Krstić * Radomir Mihailović Točak * Alex Lifeson * Ljubica Marić * Stefan Milenković * Miloš Mihajlović * Božidar Milošević * Milan Mladenović * Vasilije Mokranjac * Marko Nešić (born 1872) * Marko Nešić (born 1976) * Olivera Vojna Nešić * Aleksandar Obradović * Tatjana Olujić * Alexander Petrovich (Alex The Yeti Bones) * Miloš Raičković (composer), Miloš Raičković * Josif Runjanin * Marija Šerifović * Verica Šerifović * K ...
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Ernest Ačkun
Ernest Ačkun (Ернест Ачкун) (March 27, 1930 – September 28, 2001) was a Yugoslavia, Yugoslav clarinetist. Early life Ernest Ačkun was born in Hrastnik, Slovenia, which was then part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. He completed his studies at the Belgrade Academy of Music under Bruno Brun, and then studied at the Conservatoire de Paris, Paris Conservatory under Ulysse Delécluse. Performance and teaching activities Ačkun gave concerts as a soloist in nearly all great towns in Yugoslavia, as well as in France, West Germany, Austria, Italy and Bulgaria, playing under the leadership of such Conducting, conductors as Zubin Mehta, Jean Martinon, Charles Bruck, Krešimir Baranović, Oskar Danon, Milan Horvat, Živojin Zdravković. Distinguished Yugoslav composers, such as Stjepan Šulek and Zlatan Vauda, dedicated their compositions to him. He also recorded for radio and television. Ačkun was principal clarinetist of the Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra and Professor of ...
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Philippe Djokic
Philippe Djokic (born 3 September 1950) is a Canadian violinist, conductor, and music educator of French birth. He became a naturalized Canadian citizen in 1990. Biography Born in Nancy, France, Djokic was the son of a Serbian father and French mother. His father had been a prisoner in a concentration camp during World War II and after the war he was put in charge of organizing displaced Serbian soldiers and immigrants by the United States Army. The Djokic clan's roots are from Požega, Serbia. In 1952, the Djokics settled in Trenton, New Jersey. Here, all seven children would study classical music; learning to play a variety of instruments such as the piano, cello and violin. Philippe attended the acclaimed Juilliard School in New York City where he was a pupil of Christine Dethier and Ivan Galamian. He would meet his bride-to-be, Lynn Stodola, there. She is a pianist. Both would eventually move to Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1975 to teach at Dalhousie University. Mr. Djokic i ...
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Miloš Mihajlović
Miloš Mihajlović (Serbian Cyrillic: Милош Михајловић; born 1 June 1978, in Niš, Serbia) is a Serbian pianist and university professor. Education Miloš Mihajlović is a 1999 graduate of the ( University of Art) Faculty of Music in Belgrade, and in 2005 completed his postgraduate studies there with the highest distinction.Faculty of Music in Belgrade – Biographies of academic staff
, Retrieved on August 18, 2008
His primary teacher was eminent Serbian pianist and piano teacher, Professor Nevena Popović. He has also studied with noted pianists Sergei Dorensky,
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Stefan Milenković
Stefan Milenkovich ( sr, Stefan Milenković, Стефан Миленковић; born January 25, 1977) is a Serbian violinist. Early life Milenković was born to a Serbian father, Zoran Milenković, and a Serbian-born mother of Italian descent, Lidija Kajnaco (Lidia Caenazzo).(orin Serbian Retrieved 2017-08-26. He started playing violin in 1980, at age three, taught by his father and often accompanied by his mother. His first public performance, in 1980, was followed by numerous youthful performances, including the Newport Rhode Island Music Festival and an appearance at a Reagan holiday special when he was ten years old, (or, viUofIllinoisLib as well as a performance for Mikhail Gorbachev in 1988 and an appearance before Pope John Paul II when he was fourteen. He participated in numerous international violin competitions, starting with the Jaroslav Kozian International Violin Competition before he was ten. Then, in rapid succession during 1993 and 1994, at age sixteen and s ...
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Ljubica Marić
Ljubica Marić (Љубица Марић , 18 March 1909 – 17 September 2003) was a composer from Yugoslavia. She was a pupil of Josip Štolcer-Slavenski. She was known for being inspired by Byzantine Orthodox church music. She was professor at the Faculty of Music in Belgrade and a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. Ljubica Marić is considered to be the most original Serbian composer of the twentieth century and musically the most influential one. Life Born in Kragujevac, Serbia to father Pavle and mother Katarina née Đorđević, a descendant of Vojvoda Čolak-Anta Simeonović, one of the leaders of the First Serbian Uprising. Ljubica traveled a huge artistic and intellectual journey in order to facilitate the advancement of Serbian music. She was the first Serbian to get a diploma in composition in 1929. At the State Conservatory in Prague, she attended postgraduate studies under Josef Suk. While she was a student, she received praise in festivals in Am ...
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Alex Lifeson
Aleksandar Živojinović, (born 27 August 1953), known professionally as Alex Lifeson (), is a Canadian musician, best known as the guitarist and backing vocalist of the progressive rock band Rush. In 1968, Lifeson co-founded the band that would later become Rush, with drummer John Rutsey and bassist and lead vocalist Jeff Jones. Jones was replaced by Geddy Lee a month later, and Rutsey was replaced by Neil Peart in 1974. Before the band was disbanded in 2018, Lifeson was the only continuous member who stayed in Rush since its inception, and along with bass guitarist/vocalist Geddy Lee, the only member to appear on all of the band's albums. With Rush, Lifeson played electric and acoustic guitars, as well as other string instruments such as mandola, mandolin, and bouzouki. He also performed backing vocals in live performances as well as the studio albums '' Rush'' (1974), '' Presto'' (1989) and ''Roll the Bones'' (1991) and occasionally played keyboards and bass pedal synthesi ...
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Radomir Mihailović Točak
Radomir may refer to: People * Radomir (given name), a Slavic male given name * Gavril Radomir of Bulgaria (died 1015), Tsar of Bulgaria Places * , a village in Cetinje Municipality, Montenegro * Radomir (mountain) Radomir ( bg, Радомир, ''Radomir'') or Kerkini ( el, Κερκίνη, ''Kerkíni''), is a mountain on the Bulgarian–Greek border. At it is the highest peak in the Belasica range. It is also known by its earlier Greek name ''Kalabáka'' ( ...
, a mountain peak on the Bulgarian/Greek border * Radomir (town), a town in Pernik Province, Bulgaria * Radomir Municipality, a municipality in Pernik Province, Bulgaria * Radomir, a village in Dioști Commune, Dolj County, Romania {{disambig, geo ...
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Petar Krstić
Petar Krstić (February 18, 1877 – January 21, 1957) was a Serbian composer and conductor known throughout Yugoslavia. Born in Belgrade, Krstić studied under the Austrian composer Robert Fuchs and the Bohemian-Austrian musicologist Guido Adler in Vienna. He worked as a conductor and pedagogue in Belgrade as well as musical leader of Belgrade radio. His most famous operas include ''Zulumcar'' (1927) and ''Ženidba Jankovic Stojana'' (1948). He is best known for his overtures, chamber music, and choir works. See also * Kosta Manojlović * Miloje Milojević * Stevan Hristić * Stevan Mokranjac * Isidor Bajić * Davorin Jenko * Jovan Đorđević * Josif Marinković * Nenad Barački * Tihomir Ostojić * Stefan Stratimirović Stefan Stratimirović ( sr, Стефан Стратимировић; 27 December 1757 – 22 September 1836) was a Serbian bishop who served as the Metropolitan of Karlovci, head of the Serbian Orthodox Church in the Austrian Empire, between 1790 ... * St ...
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Petar Konjović
Petar Konjović ( sr-cyr, Петар Коњовић, , 5 May 1883 – 1 October 1970) was a Serbian composer and academic. Education and career While a pedagogy student in Čurug, Konjović self-taught himself the art of compositure and conducting. He finished his education at the Prague Conservatorium in 1906. In 1907, he travelled to Belgrade, following an invitation from Stevan Mokranjac to teach composition at the Belgrade Music Academy. In 1920, he toured Europe as a pianist. He was an active adherent of the idea of Yugoslavia. He was manager of numerous cultural institutions: head of the Serbian National Theater in Novi Sad, director of the Zagreb Opera, and head of the Croatian National Theater in Osijek. He was also a Rector of the Music Academy in Belgrade, and a founder of the SANU Musicology Institute. His contemporaries were Petar Krstić, Isidor Bajić, Miloje Milojević, Stevan Hristić, Stanislav Binički, Bozidar Joksimović, Kosta Manojlović, Vladimir Đ ...
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Ivan Jevtić
Ivan Jevtić (born April 29, 1947 in Belgrade, Serbia, then Yugoslavia) is a Serbian/French composer and member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. He is a former student of Stanojlo Rajičić, Alfred Uhl and Olivier Messiaen.An author evening of Ivan Jevtić in Belgrade
''
Glas javnosti ''Glas javnosti'' (Глас јавности, meaning "Voice of the Public") was a daily newspaper published in Belgrade. After publishing a newspaper from April 1998 until January 2010, the people behind the project have since then run an online ...
'', November 14, 2007


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Stevan Hristić
Stevan Hristić ( sr-cyr, Стеван Христић; 19 June 1885 – 21 August 1958) was Serbian composer, conductor, pedagogue, and music writer. A prominent representative of the late romanticist style in Serbian music of the first half of the 20th century. Biography Hristić started his music education at the Serbian Music School in Belgrade (established by St. Mokranjac) and continued his studies in Leipzig (1904–08) where he received instruction in composition from S. Krehl and R. Hofmann, and in conducting from A. Nikisch. Following a brief period of teaching at the Serbian Music School, he spent time in Rome, Moscow, and Paris (1910–12). Upon his return to Belgrade before the start of the World War I, Hristić began his conducting career at the National Theatre and resumed pedagogical activities at the Serbian Music School as well as at the Seminary. Between the two World Wars he contributed to the development of Belgrade musical life as: a founder and the firs ...
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Dragutin Gostuški
Dragutin Gostuški (January 3, 1923 – September 21, 1998) was a famous Serbian composer, musicologist, and art historian. He taught for many years at the Faculty of Music in Belgrade. Early life and career As a very young man, Dragutin showed an outstanding talent for art: besides composing, he also painted and sculpted. After graduating from two faculties (Faculty of Philosophy, Group for History of Art and sky diving, 1951; and Musical Academy, Department for Composition and Conducting, Class of professor M. Živkovic) in 1952 he joined the Institute of Musicology at SANU on suggestion of Petar Konjović. Still a young research assistant, he started his long-term and prolific work in the field of music theory and musicology. However, although his successful musical works (the ballet Remi in 1960 and the Concerto Accelerato, 1961) were greatly appreciated and brought him rewards in the country and abroad, at the beginning of the 1960s Gostuški stopped composing. Dragutin G ...
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