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Long time NTS veteran and Apron and Youth affiliate SHAMOS heads a monthly late night slot. Expect a varied, yet consistently cohesive selection, as he joins the dots between rugged analog house, tripped out hip-hop, the punkier dregs of new wave and other leftfield cuts along the way.
Chloëdees brings a spicy 60 minute selection each month.
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Svilengrad, Bulgaria (1942 - present)
Alexander Tekeliev is a Bulgarian composer and pedagogue.
He composed stage music; oratorios and vocal-symphonic works; symphonies for string orchestra and chamber instrumental works; vocal cycles and songs; a number of choral works including children’s and teenagers’ songs and vocalises, which were included in the permanent repertoire of a number of Bulgarian ensembles; solo songs for children; folksong arrangements for traditional music choirs; film music, etc.
His music is characterised with expressive emotionality, which determines the use of various compositional techniques. Over 110 of his works were recorded in Bulgaria and abroad. His compositions were performed in Austria, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Sweden, Ukraine, Japan, Mexico, etc. He won a number of national awards and distinctions, among which the Prize of Sofia for Music for the ballet The Shadow (1985).
He graduated from the State Academy of Music in 1968 majoring in Composition under Professor Vesselin Stoyanov. He worked as chief editor at the Bulgarian National Radio (1971-76). He specialised in Composition and Orchestration in Budapest with Attila Bosai (1980) and in Paris with Michel Filippo (1982). In 1977 he joined the staff of the State Academy of Music. In 1991 he became full professor of Composition and Symphony Orchestration.
Svilengrad, Bulgaria (1942 - present)
Alexander Tekeliev is a Bulgarian composer and pedagogue.
He composed stage music; oratorios and vocal-symphonic works; symphonies for string orchestra and chamber instrumental works; vocal cycles and songs; a number of choral works including children’s and teenagers’ songs and vocalises, which were included in the permanent repertoire of a number of Bulgarian ensembles; solo songs for children; folksong arrangements for traditional music choirs; film music, etc.
His music is characterised with expressive emotionality, which determines the use of various compositional techniques. Over 110 of his works were recorded in Bulgaria and abroad. His compositions were performed in Austria, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Sweden, Ukraine, Japan, Mexico, etc. He won a number of national awards and distinctions, among which the Prize of Sofia for Music for the ballet The Shadow (1985).
He graduated from the State Academy of Music in 1968 majoring in Composition under Professor Vesselin Stoyanov. He worked as chief editor at the Bulgarian National Radio (1971-76). He specialised in Composition and Orchestration in Budapest with Attila Bosai (1980) and in Paris with Michel Filippo (1982). In 1977 he joined the staff of the State Academy of Music. In 1991 he became full professor of Composition and Symphony Orchestration.
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