Loading details…
Loading details…
Artist
Bülent Arel (b. Istanbul, 23 April 1919; d. Stony Brook, New York, 24 November 1990) was a Turkish-born composer of contemporary classical music and electronic music. He was born in Istanbul, and studied composition at the Ankara Conservatory and sound engineering in Paris. He later taught at the Ankara Conservatory, established the Helikon Society of Contemporary Arts, and served as the first music director of Radio Ankara from 1951 to 1959. He was also a painter and sculptor, and several of his works are in the permanent collection of the Turkish National Gallery. In 1959, the Rockefeller Foundation invited him to work at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. In 1962, he worked with Edgard Varèse on the electronic sections of Varèse's Déserts. He also designed and installed the electronic music laboratory at Yale University, where he taught from 1961 to 1970, and he established the electronic music program at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, where he taught from 1971 until his retirement in 1989. Besides electronic works, Mr. Arel wrote chamber music, vocal works, and symphonic pieces, including a series of works commissioned by the Mimi Garrard Dance Theater. In the course of his work he invented the 'splicing tape dispenser', as well as other devices for tape handling. He was a pioneer of looping techniques. His notable students include Daria Semegen, Conrad Cummings, Jing Jing Luo, Joël-François Durand, and Frederick Bianchi. User-contribu

Electronic Music (1960-1973)

Pioneers Of Electronic Music

Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center 1961-1973

An Anthology of Noise & Electronic Music, Vol. 7

Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center

An Anthology of Turkish Experimental Music 1961-2014

Electronic Music For Dance

Electronic Music 1960-1973
An Anthology Of Noise And Electronic Music / Seventh And Last A-chronology 1930-2012
Roots of Electronica Vol. 2, European Avant-Garde, Noise and Experimental Music
Elekronik Müzüğin Öncüsü Bülent Arel: Biyografi

Elektronik Muzigin Oncusu