My NTS
Live now
1
London
22:00 - 23:00

Nocturnal moods from the haze of the billiards hall with Diogo & friends…

2
Los Angeles
22:00 - 23:00

Camella Lobo, aka Tropic of Cancer, takes to the air once a month for Cry Later. Tune in for a dedication hour of songs selected by listeners in honor of their lovers and loved ones. Send a personal message and song selection to cryinglater@gmail.com

André Hossein

André Hossein

André Hossein has been played on NTS in shows including High Noon w/ Dina J , featured first on 12 May 2017. Songs played include Théme Du Vampire, Theme De Manuel Et Maria and Flash Back.

French composer of Persian origins (b. 1905 in Samarkand; d. 1983 in Paris). His father was a rich merchant, and his mother initiated him in-to music. He was studying in Moscow when the 1917 Revolution occurred. He then left for Germany and continued his studies there, where his father wanted him to do medicine. Simultaneously, however, he studied music at the Stuttgart Conservatory, and later in Tübingen and Berlin, where he studied piano with Arthur Schnabel and composition with W. Klatt. He settled in France in 1927 and entered the Paris Conservatory, where he studied composition and orchestration with Paul Vidal (Mahámud, pp. 386-90; Akbarza@deh, p. 64). As a composer, Hossein was much inspired by traditional Persian music, and most of his works demonstrate this intellectual preoccupation. He knew the ta@r very well and could be considered one of the great ta@r players of his time. He began playing this instrument, ancestor to most string instruments, as a child, and later composed several works for it. He was a fairly prolific composer and was generally acclaimed by the critics. He also composed some twenty film scores, mostly for films directed by his son, Robert Hossein, the French actor and director. His orchestrated works include Symphonie des sables (1946), Symphonie Persepolis (1947), Symphonie Arya (1976), and three concertos for the piano (no. 1 "Capriccio," 1946; no. 2, 1946; and no. 3 "quasi una fantasia"). His works for the ballet were: Vers la lumieàre (1935), Miniatures Iraniennes (1975), Sheherezade (1975), Danse d'Esmeralda (1980), and Vacances sur Glace (1982), which must have been his last published work. Hossein also composed a number of piano pieces, many of them named after Persian themes, and several songs (Baker and N. Slonimsky; Akbarza@deh, p. 64). As a composer trying to find expression in Western music for ideas derived from Persian impressions, Hossein must be considered as one of the pioneers whose music was by and large well received. Others, both before and after Hossein, have tried to make use of Persian melodies in classical music, but none received as large an audience as he did. He never attained the depth or breadth of contemporaries such as Bartok and Shostakovich (to name only two) in exploring the possibilities of folkloric music and themes; but, so far as Persian music is concerned, there has been no real successor to Hossein in the West.

read more

André Hossein

André Hossein has been played on NTS in shows including High Noon w/ Dina J , featured first on 12 May 2017. Songs played include Théme Du Vampire, Theme De Manuel Et Maria and Flash Back.

French composer of Persian origins (b. 1905 in Samarkand; d. 1983 in Paris). His father was a rich merchant, and his mother initiated him in-to music. He was studying in Moscow when the 1917 Revolution occurred. He then left for Germany and continued his studies there, where his father wanted him to do medicine. Simultaneously, however, he studied music at the Stuttgart Conservatory, and later in Tübingen and Berlin, where he studied piano with Arthur Schnabel and composition with W. Klatt. He settled in France in 1927 and entered the Paris Conservatory, where he studied composition and orchestration with Paul Vidal (Mahámud, pp. 386-90; Akbarza@deh, p. 64). As a composer, Hossein was much inspired by traditional Persian music, and most of his works demonstrate this intellectual preoccupation. He knew the ta@r very well and could be considered one of the great ta@r players of his time. He began playing this instrument, ancestor to most string instruments, as a child, and later composed several works for it. He was a fairly prolific composer and was generally acclaimed by the critics. He also composed some twenty film scores, mostly for films directed by his son, Robert Hossein, the French actor and director. His orchestrated works include Symphonie des sables (1946), Symphonie Persepolis (1947), Symphonie Arya (1976), and three concertos for the piano (no. 1 "Capriccio," 1946; no. 2, 1946; and no. 3 "quasi una fantasia"). His works for the ballet were: Vers la lumieàre (1935), Miniatures Iraniennes (1975), Sheherezade (1975), Danse d'Esmeralda (1980), and Vacances sur Glace (1982), which must have been his last published work. Hossein also composed a number of piano pieces, many of them named after Persian themes, and several songs (Baker and N. Slonimsky; Akbarza@deh, p. 64). As a composer trying to find expression in Western music for ideas derived from Persian impressions, Hossein must be considered as one of the pioneers whose music was by and large well received. Others, both before and after Hossein, have tried to make use of Persian melodies in classical music, but none received as large an audience as he did. He never attained the depth or breadth of contemporaries such as Bartok and Shostakovich (to name only two) in exploring the possibilities of folkloric music and themes; but, so far as Persian music is concerned, there has been no real successor to Hossein in the West.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Théme Du Vampire
André Hossein
Disques Festival0
Theme De Manuel Et Maria
André Hossein
Philips1969
Flash Back
André Hossein
Ducretet Thomson1963