Fazıl Say

Fazıl Say (Turkish: [faːˈzɯl saj]; born January 14, 1970) is a Turkish pianist and composer who was born in Ankara.

Life and career

Fazıl Say wrote his first piece – a piano sonata – as early as 1984, at the age of fourteen, when he was a student at the Conservatory of his home town Ankara. It was followed, in this early phase of his development, by several chamber works without an opus number, including Schwarze Hymnen for violin and piano and a guitar concerto. He subsequently designated as his opus 1 one of the works that he had played in the concert that won him the Young Concert Artists Auditions in New York: the Four Dances of Nasreddin Hodja. This work already displays in essence the significant features of his personal style: a rhapsodic, fantasia-like basic structure; a variable rhythm, often dance-like, though formed through syncopation; a continuous, vital driving pulse; and a wealth of melodic ideas that may often be traced back to themes from the folk music of Turkey and its neighbours. In these respects, Fazıl Say stands to some extent in the tradition of composers like Béla Bartók, George Enescu, and György Ligeti, who also drew on the rich musical folklore of their countries. He attracted international attention with the piano piece Black Earth (1997), in which he employs techniques familiar to us from John Cage and his works for prepared piano.

Fazıl

Fazıl (also, Fazil and Fazyl) is a village and municipality in the Shaki Rayon of Azerbaijan. It has a population of 380.

References

  • Fazıl (as Fazil) at GEOnet Names Server

  • Fazil

    FAZIL may refer to:

    Given name

  • Fazil (director) (born 1953), Indian filmmaker, producer and screenwriter
  • Köprülü Fazıl Ahmed Pasha (1635–1676), Ottoman grand vizier
  • Necip Fazıl Kısakürek (1904–1983), Turkish poet and activist
  • Fazıl Hüsnü Dağlarca (1914–2008), prolific Turkish poet
  • Fazil Iskander (born 1929), Abkhaz writer
  • Fazıl Küçük (1906–1984), Turkish Cypriot Vice President of the Republic of Cyprus
  • Fazıl Önder (1926–1958), Turkish Cypriot journalist
  • Fazıl Say (born 1970), Turkish pianist and composer
  • Surname

  • Art Fazil, Singaporean musician
  • Irfan Fazil (born 1981), Pakistani cricketer
  • Other uses

  • Fazıl, village and municipality in the Shaki Rayon of Azerbaijan
  • Fazil, a 1928 silent film with Charles Farrell directed by Howard Hawks
  • See also

  • Mohammad Fazl, Afghan extrajudicial prisoner of the United States
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×