Yeghia Dndesian

Yeghia Dndesian (born Istanbul, Ottoman Turkey 1834 - died Constantinople, Ottoman Turkey 1881) was an Armenian musician and musical reformer.[1]

Work

Yeghia Dndesian was among the cultivators of the Sharagan musical style and notation used throughout Armenian churches and religious services.[1] He was instrumental in resurfacing much of the lost information of ancient Armenian music. In April 1873, a committee consisting of priests, clergymen, and scribes arrived in Constantinople to gather, revise, or recompose Sharagan melodies in order to preserve them for notation.[2] Dndesian was chosen as a member of the committee along with Nigoghos Tashjian, and Aristakes Hovannesian (1812-1878).[1] After putting much work, Dndesian eventually published a five volume book in 1871 entitled Sharagan Tzainakryal or Sharagan Notations.[1]

gollark: Alternatively, create a list, and automatically give people on it cheatified nocturnes or some other useless dragon!
gollark: Just make a new set of cheatdragons called the "thowods" or something.
gollark: Can we call any AP flooding the [dragon]pocalypse from now on?
gollark: Ah, yes, the nocturnepocalypse.
gollark: True, true.

References

  1. Ray Ma, Jonathan (2004). Music, Ritual, and Diasporic Identity of the Armenian Apostolic Church (PDF). Maryland: University of Maryland: School of Music.
  2. Ormanian, Maghiak (1955). G. Marcar Gregory (ed.). The Church of Armenia: Her History, Doctrine, Discipline, Liturgy, Literature, and Existing Condition. London: A.R. Mowbray and Co. Limited. pp. 71–75.
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