Shovkat Mammadova
Shovkat Mammadova | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Tiflis, Russian Empire | 18 April 1897
Died | 8 June 1981 Baku, Azerbaijan SSR, Soviet Union | (aged 84)
Genres | Opera |
Years active | 1912–1940s |
Spouse | Yakov Lyubarsky |
Shovkat Hasan qizi Mammadova (Azerbaijani: Şövkət Məmmədova; 18 April 1897 – 8 June 1981) was an Azerbaijani opera singer (lyric coloratura soprano) and music instructor. People's Artist of the USSR (1938).
Early life and musical career
[edit]Mammadova was born in Tiflis to the low-class Azeri family of Hasan Mammadov and Khurshid (née Sultanova). She had a younger brother named Mugbil. Her father, a shoemaker who hailed from the village of Goshakilsa (presently in the Bolnisi Municipality, Georgia),[1] noticed her musical gift when Shovkat was six years old.
In 1910, he managed to find a sponsor, who agreed to promote her talent at a banquet organized by the vice-regent of the Caucasus, Count Illarion Vorontsov-Dashkov. In 1911, she left for Milan, Italy to pursue a musical degree at the Milan Conservatory with the financial help of an Azeri multimillionaire, Zeynalabdin Taghiyev and his wife Sona.[2] However, in 1912, their sponsorship was discontinued for undisclosed reasons, and Mammadova had to return home. That same year she enrolled in a program at a music school in Tiflis. At the age of 15, she made her first stage appearance at the Taghiyev Theatre in Baku, performing a piece from Uzeyir Hajibeyov's Husband and Wife. In 1915, she got admitted to a post-secondary program at the Kiev Conservatory, where she met Reinhold Glière, a Russian composer.
Glière showed keen interest in Azeri folk music and Mammadova's acquaintanceship resulted in his visit to the Karabakh region, where he got to meet with a number of professional mugham performers. Later in 1934, he would compose his famous Shakh-Senem based on his impressions and experiences from this trip, and dedicate it to Mammadova. By that time, she would already be widely known as a talented opera singer. Beginning in 1921, Mammadova toured Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Paris, Milan, Tabriz, and Tbilisi performing arias from La traviata, The Barber of Seville, Rigoletto, Les Huguenots, etc. She also managed to complete her studies in Milan in 1927–1930 and head back to Azerbaijan to go on with her career at the State Opera and Ballet Theatre in Baku.
Career as a music instructor
[edit]In 1923, Shovkat Mammadova founded the Musical Notes Publishing House as well as the Baku Theatrical College (nowadays known as the Azerbaijan State University of Culture and Arts). In 1939–1945, she was the director of the Azerbaijan State Opera and Ballet Theatre. She was later appointed the Chair of the Vocal Department at the Azerbaijan State Conservatory, where she professionally trained young vocalists until her death in 1981.[1]
Family
[edit]In 1915, while studying at the Kiev Conservatory, Mammadova married Yakov Lyubarsky, an engineer whom she had met in Milan three years earlier.[1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Azərbaycanın ilk qadın opera müğənnisi.... Sharg. 24 May 2011. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
- ^ Shovkat Mammadova, Audacious Challenge by Fuad Akhundov. Azerbaijan International. Winter 1997 (retrieved 26 August 2006)
- 1897 births
- 1981 deaths
- 20th-century Azerbaijani women opera singers
- Musicians from Tbilisi
- Academic staff of the Azerbaijan State University of Culture and Arts
- Academic staff of the Baku Academy of Music
- Kyiv Conservatory alumni
- Milan Conservatory alumni
- Members of the Supreme Soviet of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic
- Honored Artists of the Azerbaijan SSR
- People's Artistes of the Azerbaijan SSR
- People's Artists of the USSR
- Recipients of the Order of the Badge of Honour
- Recipients of the Order of Lenin
- Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour
- Georgian Azerbaijanis
- Azerbaijani music educators
- Azerbaijani women music educators
- Azerbaijani operatic sopranos
- Soviet Azerbaijani people
- Soviet music educators
- Soviet operatic sopranos
- Burials at Alley of Honor