David Ezra Okonşar

David Ezra (form. Mehmet) Okonsar

David Ezra Okonşar (Turkish pronunciation: [oˈkonʃɑɾ]; born 20 October 1961, Istanbul) is a Turkish-Belgian (double nationality) pianist, composer, conductor, writer and educator. He was previously known as "Mehmet Okonşar".

Biography

David Ezra Okonşar was born in Istanbul (Turkey) with the first name "Mehmet" and lived in Paris during his first schooling. He started studying piano at the Hacettepe University Ankara State Conservatory, with Nimet Karatekin and Necil Kazim Akses. Thanks to the rich resources the Ankara Conservatory then possessed and the Médiatheque of the Centre Culturel Français d'Ankara, he grew up studying the music of Pierre Boulez, Edgard Varėse, Olivier Messiaen and Pierre Schaeffer, composers who would have a strong influence on him.

After about a year and half studying at the Ankara Conservatory, the family moved to Belgium where he entered the class of Jean-Claude Vanden Eynden at the Brussels Royal Conservatory of Music. Vanden Eynden, who was to entirely re-shape the keyboard technique of Okonşar, is a dedicated follower of the style of Eduardo del Pueyo.

The keyboard technique of del Pueyo and Vanden Eynden is based on the work of Marie Jaëll, a pupil of Franz Liszt.

A change of Government in Turkey and the political turbulence of 1977 forced the Okonşar family to return to Ankara. Back at the Ankara Conservatory he was put in the class of Gülay Uğurata for piano and of Nevit Kodallı for musical composition. Okonşar did not attend either class with much assiduity.

During this period he was connected on both a friendly and a professional basis with the pianist and conductor Selman Ada. From this friendship he learned the basics of the keyboard principles of Pierre Sancan of whom Selman Ada has been a student.

His first important recital took place in 1979. The program included Préludes by Messiaen and the Pictures of an Exhibition by Mussorgsky.

Just before the military coup of 1980 the Okonşar family returned to Belgium. He resumed studying with Jean-Claude Vanden Eynden. In 1980 Okonşar was awarded the Premier Prix avec Distinction.[1] His program included the Dante Sonata by Liszt. His studies continued after the sudden death of his father with a special scholarship and he was awarded the [2] Diplôme Supérieur de Piano Avec la plus Grande Distinction, Premier Nommé in 1986 by performing the Piano Concerto Op. 42 by Arnold Schoenberg.

At the end of his piano studies, Okonşar had the privilege of working with one of the greatest composers of Belgium: Madame Jacqueline Fontyn. He also studied with a pupil of Messiaen, Claude Ballif. In 1989 he obtained his degrees in Composition-Orchestration from the Royal Conservatory of Music of Brussels.

Alexis Weissenberg, after listening to a recording[3] by Okonşar invited him (on a scholarship) to study in Switzerland.

He endorsed the Belgian citizenship in 1992 but at the same time the president of Turkey Suleyman Demirel awarded him the title "State Artist of the Turkish Republic". Therefore, Okonsar settled in Turkey with his wife, the painter Lale Okonşar.

Okonşar works now from Turkey on a busy schedule concertizing, composing, writing and teaching. He owns and manages a CD label exclusive to his own recordings, LMO-Records, and a publishing company "inventor-musicæ".[4]

In August 2014, he took the first name(s): David Ezra.

Career

Jewish Music
A Concise Study
by Mehmet Okonşar

His international career began with the first prize at the International Young Virtuoses Competition of Antwerp in 1982. His orchestral début was the Third Concerto by Rachmaninoff performed at the deSingel (Internationale kunstencentrum deSingel)[5] in Antwerp. His other prizes are:

The "Académie des Arts Contemporains" of Enghien, Belgium rewarded him in 1991, for his acoustic and electronic compositions the Gold and Bronze medals respectively.

Okonşar performed with the following orchestras: Utah Symphony, deFilharmonie (Royal Flemish Philharmonic),[6] Poznan Philharmonic[7] and Lublin Philharmonic.[8] Some of the conductors he played with: Joseph Silverstein, Charles Dutoit, Sylvain Cambreling, Ingo Metzmacher, Christof Escher.

In recital he appeared at London's Royal Opera House, the Salle Gaveau in Paris, in New York, San Francisco, Tokyo, Kyoto, Bruxelles, Anvers, Amsterdam (Concertgebouw), Rotterdam, Rome, Athens, Calgary, Salt Lake City, Ljubljana.

His noted concerts included the premiere in Turkey of the Concerto for piano by Schoenberg and his performances of the Concerto for piano by Lutoslawski in Poland.

He has been a guest judge at the National Piano Competition of Japan[9] under the auspices of the P.T.N.A. (“Piano Teachers National Association”). His researches on music and technology were presented in a lecture at the Yamaha headquarters in Hamamatsu, Japan. Okonşar wrote and presented a documentary series on the National Television Broadcast of Turkey, the T.R.T.

Okonşar is a published writer in several music related periodicals in Turkey. His articles published in Andante[10] the most important Turkish periodical on classical music, were featuring imaginary interviews with "Mephisto"[11] on the subject of the global decadence of the quality of classical music, in Turkey and in the world, a subject often worked on by Okonşar. His other published subjects are mainly about musical composition, analysis, music history.[12] Okonşar publishes also in English and French.

Repertoire

His repertoire encompasses a range from the early 17th. century ("The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book") including among others Orlando Gibbons and Giles Farnaby and extends to late 20th. century with the works by Karlheinz Stockhausen and Witold Lutoslawski. Notable works in this repertoire are: J.S. Bach "The Art of Fugue" performed on organ (or piano) and harpsichord; the Goldberg Variations, the integrale of Well-tempered Keyboard.

Okonşar has performed recitals featuring the complete piano works by Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg and Anton Webern. Despite he refuses all sort of "musical specialization", his repertoire is heavily on the "modern" side with Igor Stravinsky "Three Movements of Petrouchka" the "Sequenza" for the piano by Luciano Berio and the Klavierstücke by Karlheinz Stockhausen.

Discography

Solo piano published by the artist's own, independent label "LMO-Records":

On other labels:

With other artists:

Adept of Free Music philosophy, (stated at his official website)[13] Okonsar publishes all his recordings and writings as well as his compositions on the Internet under the GNU GPL or Creative Commons licenses.

Composer

David Ezra Okonşar started composing at the age of 11. His role-models were Arnold Schoenberg et Pierre Boulez.

The compositions by Okonşar were from the beginning exploring unusual ensembles in an avant-garde line. During the eighties atonal (free) Jazz specially by Cecil Taylor and the intricate voicings by Bill Evans had strong impact on the total serialism Okonşar always used. Other extra-serialist influences are Krzysztof Penderecki, Iannis Xenakis and György Ligeti.

The electronic works created in the fifties and early sixties by Ligeti, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Xenakis, Henri Pousseur and others created a new and previously unheard approach to orchestration. The sound possibilities of the classical orchestra started to be conceptualized by the composers in terms of "sound envelopes", "sound filters and formants. Okonşar followed a similar path in his orchestrations, in the nineties.

The music by Okonşar is extremely structuralist and calls for an analytical approach. This structuralism is presented in the finished score in a very detailed, complex and refined musical écriture.

Compositions

N1. for Piano Première by the composer in Ankara
N2. for Strings Chamber Orchestra, Marimba and Piano. Première conducted by Hakan Sensoy in Istanbul
N3. for Viola and Piano. Première by Çetin Aydar (viola) and the composer in Ankara
N1. "Kinkaku-ji" 金閣寺, The Temple of the Golden Pavillon, Première by the compositer in Tokyo (dedicated to the memory of Mrs. Yasuko Fukuda)
N2. "Tetsugaku no Michi", Philosopher's Walk 哲学の道
N3. "Ginkaku-ji" 銀閣寺, The Temple of the Silver Pavillon

References

Notes

  1. The first level of the "High Education in Music" diploma the Brussels Royal Conservatory awarded at the time
  2. The second level diploma of the Brussels Conservatory, equivalent to the Masters in Art degree, given as a result of a competition-like public performance.
  3. http://okonsar.fcpages.com/LiveSaltLakeCity.html
  4. Mehmet Okonsar. "redirection". inventor-musicae.com.
  5. http://www.desingel.be/en/default.aspx
  6. "deFilharmonie". defilharmonie.be.
  7. "Filharmonia Pozna艅ska". filharmoniapoznanska.pl.
  8. Kamil Resztak(php) & Grzegorz Fortuna(grafika). "Filharmonia im. H. Wieniawskiego w Lublinie, filharmonia lubelska, filharmonia w Lublinie, orkiestra symfoniczna, koncerty, muzyka kameralna, zespo³y :: Strona g³ówna". filharmonialubelska.pl.
  9. "Piano - PTNA Piano Home Page in English - ピティナ・ピアノホームページ". piano.or.jp.
  10. SLC Internet Solutions. "Andante Türkiye'nin Klasik Müzik Portalı". andante.com.tr.
  11. http://okonsar.fcpages.com/writer.html#andante
  12. http://okonsar.fcpages.com/writer.html#Bestecilerin
  13. "The official site of Mehmet Okonsar, pianist-composer-conductor-musicologist". okonsar.com.
  14. "Hatikvah (Okonsar, Mehmet K.)". imslp.org.
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Free music online

The Goldberg Variations by Johann Sebastian Bach

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