Revaz Lagidze Explained

Revaz Ilias dze Lagidze
Birth Date:10 July 1921
Era:20th century

Revaz Ilias dze Lagidze (July 10, 1921 – October 16, 1981; Georgian: რევაზ ლაღიძე) was a 20th-century Georgian composer. Recognized as the People's Artist of the Georgian SSR (1961) and a laureate of the USSR State Prize, he wrote a variety of compositions ranging from opera to symphonic works and film scores.[1] Lagidze's notable compositions include his 1973 opera "Lela" and the "Song about Tbilisi", which remains popular in Georgia and Russia to this day.

Biography

Lagidze was born on July 10, 1921, in the Imereti region of Georgia, which had been occupied by Bolshevik Russia a few months prior.

In 1939, he graduated from the 4th Tbilisi Music School, where he studied violin. Throughout the 1940s, he played violin at the Georgian State Symphony Orchestra and then radio.

In 1948, Lagidze graduated from the Tbilisi Conservatory, where he studied composition under Andria Balanchivadze.

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Lagidze wrote music for more than 30 films. He authored numerous ballads for Georgian pop singers of his time, such as Lily Gegelia.

In 1973, Lagidze completed the opera "Lela", which touched upon Georgian historical themes and earned him the state prize of the Georgian SSR.

Through the end of his life, Lagidze taught music, being the head of the music department at the Tbilisi Pedagogical Institute and an instructor for the state symphony orchestra.

Lagidze died in 1981 and was interred at the Didube Pantheon.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. http://www.nplg.gov.ge/bios/ka/00003597/ რევაზ ლაღიძე