Global Information Lookup Global Information

Kuldar Sink information


Kuldar Sink (14 September 1942 in Tallinn – 29 January 1995 in Kõrve, Võru County) was an Estonian composer and flautist.[1] While his earlier compositions were often neoclassical in style and influenced by Claude Debussy and Olivier Messiaen, the mature part of his career was devoted to musical modernism and avant-garde music. Some of the techniques he employed in his compositions included serialism, tone clusters, unified field, and aleatoric music. In the latter part of his career he began incorporating traditions from the folk music of Central Asia into his compositions, and he ended his career with a period focused on choral works inspired by Gregorian chant and Estonian folk music.

Sink trained at the Tallinn Music School where he earned diplomas in music theory (1960), flute performance (1961), and music composition (1961). At that school he was mentored by Veljo Tormis. He pursued graduate studies in music composition at the Leningrad Conservatory in the early to mid-1960s. His most highly regarded composition is the song cycle Sünni ja surma laulud (The Songs of Birth and Death), which incorporates tonal and rhythmic elements of the Arabic classical music maqām. Composed between 1985 and 1987, the cycle consists of five poems by Federico García Lorca. He died in Kõrve in 1995.

One of Sink's last compositions included a Biblical-themed opera. He was killed in a 1995 accident.[1]

Kuldar was married to the artist Lilia Sink. Their daughter is the bioroboticist Maarja Kruusmaa. Kuldar's brother is politician Tunne Kelam.

  1. ^ a b "Sink, Kuldar | Estonian Music Information Centre". www.emic.ee. Retrieved 28 June 2021.

and 10 Related for: Kuldar Sink information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8593 seconds.)

Kuldar Sink

Last Update:

Kuldar Sink (14 September 1942 in Tallinn – 29 January 1995 in Kõrve, Võru County) was an Estonian composer and flautist. While his earlier compositions...

Word Count : 282

Kuldar

Last Update:

Kuldar is an Estonian-language male given name. People named Kuldar include: Kuldar Sikk (born 1979), Estonian rally co-driver Kuldar Sink (1942–1995)...

Word Count : 73

Saint Petersburg Conservatory

Last Update:

Dmitri Shostakovich – composer, pianist Nadezhda Simonyan - composer Kuldar Sink — composer, flautist Vladimir Sofronitsky – pianist Grigory Sokolov –...

Word Count : 899

Tunne Kelam

Last Update:

daughter from a previous marriage. Tunne Kelam's brother was composer Kuldar Sink. Tunne Kelam has also written two books. "Prague Declaration - Declaration...

Word Count : 757

Veljo Tormis

Last Update:

exclusively as a freelance composer. One of his pupils was composer Kuldar Sink. From his student days until his retirement from composition in 2000...

Word Count : 762

Priit Volmer

Last Update:

National Opera. Awards: 2005: Theatre Prize of Harjumaa 2008: Marje and Kuldar Sink Prize for Young Singer 2008 and 2017: Colleague Prize of Estonian National...

Word Count : 201

Deaths in January 1995

Last Update:

Zimbabwean nationalist. Joseph Aubin Doiron, 72, Canadian politician. Kuldar Sink, 52, Estonian composer and flautist. Song Sung-il, 25, South Korean wrestler...

Word Count : 6385

Antti Siirala

Last Update:

music has resulted in first performances of works by Walter Gieseler, Kuldar Sink, Uljas Pulkkis and the premiere of the new piano concerto by Kalevi Aho...

Word Count : 1036

Maarja Kruusmaa

Last Update:

one daughter. Her mother is the painter Lilia Sink and her father was the flutist and composer Kuldar Sink. 2012 Order of the White Star, IV Class (2012)...

Word Count : 573

PLMF Music Trust

Last Update:

following awards are presented during the Festival: the PLMF Marje and Kuldar Sink’s award “Young Singer“ and “Young Musician” – 2005 – Oliver Kuusik (tenor)...

Word Count : 825

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net