- Vakhtang Jordania
Vakhtang Jordania (born
Tbilisi , Georgia on9 December 1942 - diedBroadway, Virginia 4 October 2005 ) was a Georgian conductor.Jordania was born in
Tbilisi theRepublic of Georgia on Dec. 9, 1942, where he studied piano from the age of five. After graduating from the Tbilisi Conservatory, he studied symphonic and operatic conducting at theLeningrad Conservatory , graduating with honors. A top prize at the 1971Herbert von Karajan Competition catapulted him to the highest circle of Soviet artistry. From his assistantship with the legendaryYevgeny Mravinsky until his defection to the United States in 1983, Mr. Jordania held positions as music director of the Leningrad Radio Orchestra, the Saratov Philharmonic, and theKharkov Philharmonic . TheTchaikovsky Competition was under his baton twice. Conducting for more than one hundred concerts a year, he regularly toured the USSR, collaborating with musicians such as David andIgor Oistrakh ,Leonid Kogan ,Dmitri Shostakovich ,Kiril Kondrashin , andEmil Gilels .In 1983, he and violinist
Viktoria Mullova went for a tour ofFinland , having first enlisted as her pianist. They took a taxi over the border toSweden and defected to the West. Immediately after his defection, he made hisCarnegie Hall debut, which was hailed by the New York Times as "a confident and spirited performance ... the full house leaped to its feet." Success followed inEngland ,France ,Germany ,Austria ,Holland ,Belgium ,Spain ,Japan ,Korea ,Ireland ,New Zealand ,Australia andSouth America . In the United States, his appearances inNew York ,Los Angeles ,Salt Lake City , Portland,Minneapolis , Rochester,Denver andFort Worth brought more critical acclaim. Since his defection, he has held music director and/or principal guest conductor positions with theChattanooga Symphony and Opera , theSpokane Symphony , theKBS Symphony Orchestra in Seoul, and currently with theRussian Federal Orchestra of Moscow,Daegu City Symphony of South Korea, the St. Petersburg Festival Orchestra of Russia andKharkov Philharmonic of Ukraine, with whom he is appointed for life. Jordania's homeland, theRepublic of Georgia , recently bestowed on him the highest award given to outstanding Georgians, the Ordin of Honor. Also, Ukraine awarded him their highest Medal of Honor for Musical Excellence.Maestro Jordania has regularly conducted at many prestigious opera houses in Russia, the United States, Ukraine, and Korea, including the
Bolshoi andKirov Theaters. In the United States he conducted the North American premiere ofDvorák 's "Rusalka".He has recorded for
Melodiya , Koch International Classics, Soundset Summit, Helicon, Trained Ear,Cantabile , andAngelok Classics , and been nominated forGrammy Awards . He also recorded many soundtracks, including the award-winning film "Dersu Uzala ", directed byAkira Kurosawa . Three of his compact discs have been nominated forGrammy Awards (Rachmaninoff Symphony No.2 with Russian Federal Orchestra, Angelok Classics; in five categories for Hovhaness Symphonies Nos. 46 and 39 with KBS Symphony Orchestra, KOCH International Classics; and music of James Cohn with Latvian National Symphony, XLNT Music). For more about his recordings, visit the Angelok1 website at http://www.jamesarts.com/Angelok1.htm.In 1999 and 2000, the
IBLA International Competition hosted theJordania Prize , which was named after Vakhtang Jordania, and designed to further the knowledge of young artists who compete in worldwide competitions. Maestro Jordania was honored in 2001 with the creation of theVakhtang Jordania International Conducting Competition in Ukraine. Since then it has been an annually held event, which attracts contestants from over 25 different countries. In 2006 the winners were James Feddeck (USA), John Traill (UK) andSasha Mäkilä (Finland).Vakhtang is survived by his wife of 18 years, Kimberley Stebbins Jordania of Broadway; a son from his first marriage, Giorgi Jordania, an opera conductor in Tbilisi; a daughter from his second marriage, Nina Jordania of St. Petersburg; two children from his third marriage, Maria Jordania and Dimitri Jordania, both of Broadway; two brothers; and five grandchildren.
External links
* Washington Post [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/05/AR2005100502255.html obituary and photograph]
* Vakhtang Jordania International Conducting Competition [http://www.jamesarts.com/index.html]
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