Samim Bilgen | |
Birth Name: | Ahmet Samim |
Birth Date: | 12 April 1910 |
Birth Place: | Thessaloniki, Salonica Vilayet, Ottoman Empire |
Death Place: | Ankara, Turkey |
Nationality: | Turkish |
Education: | Law |
Alma Mater: | Istanbul University, Harvard Law School |
Occupation: | Lawyer, musician, composer |
Known For: | Ilgaz |
Spouse: | Hidayet Bilgen[1] |
Children: | Üstün Bilgen-Reinart, Gülsün Bilgen-Konuray (daughters), Semih Bilgen (son) |
Parents: | Mehmet Emin Bilgen |
Relatives: | Tarik Rona |
Ahmet Samim Bilgen (April 12, 1910 Thessaloniki, Salonica Vilayet, Ottoman Empire - September 9, 2005 Ankara) was a Turkish lawyer, best known for his musical career as a violinist and composer. His song Ilgaz (lyrics also belong to him) [2] has become a household tune in Turkey, and is popular even in China.[3]
Bilgen studied and practiced law professionally, but has also been an active musician, particularly in his youth.
After finishing Haydarpaşa German Primary School and Kabataş High School, he studied law at Istanbul University and graduated in 1931. In 1961-62, Bilgen studied international law at Harvard Law School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.[4]
Samim Bilgen served as a lawyer at State Forestry Administration[5] and in later years as a legal advisor at the Ministry of Finance.[6]
His musical life started in Istanbul during his high school years. He learned to play the piano from his mother, and trained himself in music theory as well as playing the violin. He attended Seyfeddin Asal's violin class in Istanbul Municipal Conservatory. While he was a law student, he started playing the violin professionally, first with Istanbul City Orchestra directed by the well known Turkish composer Hasan Ferit Alnar. Later, from 1930 to 1935, he played the first violin with Istanbul Conservatory Orchestra directed by Cemal Reşit Rey, also one of the top Turkish composers of the Republican era.
In 1933, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, founder and President of the Turkish Republic, attended a performance of Bilgen's operetta Othello in Ankara, and expressed his admiration for the work. In 1935, two of his songs won prizes in a composition contest (organized by the daily newspaper Cumhuriyet, where Dmitri Shostakovich and Paul Hindemith were among the jury members. Professor Eugene Borrel of the Paris Conservatory heaped praise on Bilgen's collection entitled Turkish Folk Songs.
Throughout his life, he has endeavored to increase the popularity of polyphonic music in Turkey,[7] and since 1973, he served on the consulting board of Sevda Cenap And Music Foundation.
His unpublished tango musics have been created in collaboration with his brother Tarık Rona (1914–1985).