Dobrinka Tabakova
Dobrinka Tabakova (Bulgarian: Добринка Табакова; born 1980, Plovdiv, Bulgaria) is a Bulgarian-British composer. Early life and educationDobrinka Tabakova was born in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, to medical physicists Vassilka and Slavik Tabakov. She won the Jean-Frederic Perrenoud Prize of the 4th International Competition of Music in Vienna when she was 14 years old.[1] She studied at Alleyn's School London and the Royal Academy of Music in London and graduated from Guildhall School of Music and Drama (GSMD) in London. Afterwards she was awarded a Ph.D. in composition from King's College, London. She studied composition under Simon Bainbridge, Diana Burrell, Robert Keeley and Andrew Schultz and has attended master classes with John Adams, Louis Andriessen, Alexander Goehr, Olav Anton Thommessen and Iannis Xenakis.[2] Compositional careerDobrinka Tabakova's "Praise" was sung at St. Paul's Cathedral to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II. She won the GSMD Lutosławski Composition Prize in 1999 and the Adam Prize of King's College London for the song cycle Sonnets to Sundry Notes in Music in 2007.[3] In 2011 Dobrinka Tabakova was awarded first prize and medal of the Sorel Organization's choral competition in New York.[4] Tabakova has received commissions from the Royal Philharmonic Society, BBC Radio 3, Cheltenham Music Festival, Britten Sinfonia, Three Choirs Festival, Wigmore Hall and the PRS for Music Foundation's first UK New Music Biennial in 2014. Tabakova's compositions have been performed at music festivals throughout Britain, in Bulgaria, Hong Kong, Russia and throughout Europe and the United States. She was Composer in Residence at the Utrecht International Chamber Music Festival; at the Kremerata Baltica Festival in Sigulda, Latvia; and at the Lockenhaus Chamber Music Festival, Austria, among others. Tabakova has worked with orchestras including Academy of Saint Martin in the Fields, Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra, Kammerorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, Amsterdam Sinfonietta, Orchestra of the Swan and BBC National Orchestra of Wales. Her works have especially been performed by the violist Maxim Rysanov,[5][self-published source?][6] as well as violinists Gidon Kremer and Janine Jansen. Dobrinka Tabakova's works have been recorded for Hyperion Records and the Avie record label and in 2013 ECM Records released an album devoted to her music, entitled String Paths. The album reached No.2 in the UK specialist classical chart and attracted numerous positive reviews.[7][8] On 6 December 2013 String Paths was nominated for the 56th Annual Grammy Awards in the category "Best Classical Compendium"[3] and was announced as one of the four albums supporting the Grammy nomination of ECM's founder and president Manfred Eicher for "Producer of the Year, Classical". Tabakova won an Ivor Novello Award at The Ivors Classical Awards 2023. Swarm Fanfares, composed for youth orchestra, won the award for Best Community and Participation Composition.[9] [10] Tabakova's music is published by Schott Music.[11] Selected worksOrchestral
Chamber and solo instrumental
Choral
References
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