Konstantin Petrossian (original) (raw)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Konstantin Petrossian (Armenian: Կոնստանտին Պետրոսյան; Russian: Константин Петросян; born 12 August 1946 in Yerevan, Armenia) is a composer, pianist and conductor.

Petrossian graduated from the Romanos Melikian Music College and then earned a master's degree in composition and musicology Komitas State Conservatory in Yerevan, where he graduated with a master's degree in composition and musicology. He taught harmony, theory, and chorale arrangement at Romanos Melikian Music College. For many years he was also conductor of the Armenian TV/Radio Orchestra, and Director of the Armenian Music Center.

Petrossian is an Armenian composer of symphonic, choral, chamber, instrumental, and vocal music, sound tracks, and theater music. His works are performed, recorded and have been published worldwide. He is a member of the Composers Union of Armenia and is co-chair of its foreign relations department. He was on the Sacred Music Council of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern).

He is director of the Music Center Department for the Composers Union of Armenia, and the vice president of the Armenian Peace Fund. Since 1995 he has been the cultural and music director of Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Armenian Church in Providence, Rhode Island. In April 2006 he presented a special Concert of Armenian Sacred Music at the United Nations in New York City. He is also the president and artistic director of the Armenian Music Festival of Rhode Island, which was organized in 1997.

In 1997 he premiered his opera "Anoush" in concert with Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra. He became the music director and Conductor of the Erevan Choral Society of Boston in 2009.

He is the conductor of the Armenian Chorale of Rhode Island,[1] and the Armenian Chorale of greater Worcester, Massachusetts. He is also the President and artistic director of the Armenian Music Festival of Rhode Island.

In 2013 he was awarded the Movses Khorenatsi Medal by the government of Armenia. In June 2014, he received the Armenian Church's Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Medal for distinguished service to the church and to Armenian culture.

Orchestral

Choral

Chamber and solo instruments

Sonatas

Suitas

Vocal cycles

Compositions for Big Band

Vocal Compositions

Music For Movies and Theatrical Presentations

  1. ^ Armenian artists to mark 80th anniversary of genocide