Edin Karamazov

born in 1965 in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Edin Karamazov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Edin Karamazov (Zenica, 1965) is a Bosnian musician, lutenist and guitarist, resident in Zagreb.

Biography

Karamazov studied lute with Hopkinson Smith at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis. He has worked with such ensembles as Hesperion XX, L'Arpeggiata, Hilliard Ensemble, Mala Punica, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and singers Andreas Scholl, Maria Cristina Kiehr, Arianna Savall, and Sting.[1]

Discography

Karamazov accompanied Andreas Scholl on his album Wayfaring Stranger (Decca 2001). Collaborations with Sting in the field of 16th century music resulted in the album and film Songs from the Labyrinth, devoted to the lute-songs of John Dowland (DG, 2007).[2][3]

Karamazov's first solo project "The Lute is a Song" (Decca, 2008) includes guest appearances of Sting, Renée Fleming and Macedonian singer and songwriter Kaliopi.[4]

Karamazov's second solo archlute recording Britten - Bach (Alpha, 2011) features Benjamin Britten's "Nocturne" and Johann Sebastian Bach's violin Partita in d-minor.

He has also recorded with the Croatian women's vocal group hr:Klapa Cesarice (Menart, 2012).

References

External links

This page was last modified 31.08.2017 01:13:12

This article uses material from the article Edin Karamazov from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.