Kazangap Tlepbergenuli ( Kazakh. Kazanap Tіlepbergenұly , 1854-1921) - Kazakh kyushi and composer.
| Kazangap Tlepbergenuly kaz. Қазанғап Тілепбергенұлы | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | |
| Date of death | |
| Place of death | |
| A country | |
| Professions | |
| Instruments | dombra |
| Genres | kyu |
Content
Biography
Kazangap Tlepbergenuly was born and raised in the small town of Akbauyr on the Kulandinsky isthmus of the Aral Sea (modern Shalkarsky district of Aktobe region). He was from the Kıryksadak clan of the Shanyshkyly tribe of the Elder Zhuz [1] .
Since childhood, Kazangap was known for his addiction to music, and his father noticed this and made a dombra for his son. The first kyu "The Bay of Horse" was created by him in 1875. Subsequently, Kazangap performed in many parts of the Kazakh land and met with many folk composers and performers.
Cui Kazangapa is dedicated to human dignity, lyrical experiences, the animal world. In some of them (“Trenches”, “Remained in the People”, “Aitys”, “My Era”, “Red Caravan”, “Teacher”, “Red Yurt”) the events of 1916-1917 are displayed.
Kazangap died in 1921 and was buried near Aishuak aul in Akbauyr.
The musical works of Kazangap are included in the repertoire of the State Orchestra of Kazakh Folk Instruments and are used by modern Kazakh composers and musicians. According to his student Kadirali Yerzhanov, Kazangap is the author of 124 cuys [2] .
Memory
Streets in the cities of Aktobe and Shalkar are named after Kazangap. His name was given to: Kyzylorda College of Music and the Children's Art School in Aktobe, which was opened in honor of the 150th anniversary of the composer's birthday [3] .
Notes
- ↑ “Shanyshgyly - kөne taipa”, Kerimbay Boranbaev, Өner baspasy. 2004
- ↑ Beknar Yesirkepov. Ғазанғаптың күй мұрасы (Kazakh.) // "қазақия": newspaper. - 11/18/2014. (inaccessible link)
- ↑ Kazangap Children's Art School of Aktobe city is included in the encyclopedia "Gifted children - the future of Kazakhstan" , The best people of Kazakhstan. Date of treatment November 24, 2014.
Links
- Tlepbergenules Kazangap (1854–1921) . “Tarih.”