The Sound Convincer_ in Conversation with Dimitar Pentchev
May 8, 2022 ·
1h 21m 45s
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Description
In this episode, we will have a conversation with Dimitar Pentchev, composer | pianist | writer | producer | multimedia artist. Dimitar Pentchev is a Canadian-based musician and producer. He...
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In this episode, we will have a conversation with Dimitar Pentchev, composer | pianist | writer | producer | multimedia artist.
Dimitar Pentchev is a Canadian-based musician and producer. He has been a professional composer for theatre and film since 1996. He has worked as a composer and music director with theatre companies in his native Bulgaria, in the USA, and as a theatre composer in the UK at the Bristol Shakespeare Festival. He wrote original music and played Snug in the Bristol Touring Shakespeare’s production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, which was performed in front of almost 4,000 people for a fortnight in July 2005.
Dimitar’s interests in music though are not confined only to the theatre. He gave his first piano recital at the age of 12 and since then has performed over 30 different recital programs in Bulgaria, Ukraine, Greece, Czech Republic, USA, and the UK. He is still active as a pianist, collaborator, and chamber musician.
In 2006 Dimitar was commissioned to write a full score for the 1929 legendary film “Pandora’s Box”, starring Louise Brooks, dir. G.W. Pabst, which was performed then live at the “Silent Sisters” festival in Dallas, Texas. There have been many attempts to score this film classical film but after hearing Mr. Pentchev’s score, Barry Paris, biographer of Louise Brooks called it “the definitive score” for the movie. Since then Dimitar has scored another feature silent film – “Lucky Star” (1929), starring Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell, for a private collection in the USA and the most recent film project has been the documentary “Olive Thomas: Everybody’s Sweetheart” (2003), which was realized by Timeline Films, USA and financed by Hugh Hefner.
Between 1999 and 2002 Dimitar studied and worked in the USA. During that period he has been invited to write original music for three consecutive editions of “Shakespeare Festival of Dallas”, the second oldest festival in the US. These projects involved working as a part of a professional team with high-school students from different areas of Dallas, some of the kids really coming from deprived areas of the city. That in no way though compromised the exceptionally high standard of the performances that the company (“Junior Players”) has been reaching year after year. Mr. Pentchev, together with director Matt Tomlanovich, through hard work and patience, were managing to put on excellent shows, equally high valued by audiences and critics.
During the same period, Dimitar was working as a music teacher in a private school nearby Dallas, and in this capacity, he soon started to “specialize” in teaching children with behavioral problems, children with special needs, etc. Currently, Mr. Pentchev is working on a number of projects, ranging from original music for a parody horror movie, through an ethnomusicological project aimed at preserving Bulgarian folk music, to preparing music for a Christmas family show, together with Forest Forge Theatre Company in England.
He is also actively composing classical and Electroacoustic music.
Throughout his career as a composer, Dimitar Pentchev has won some prestigious awards – twice nominated for the most prestigious Theatre award in Bulgaria – A’Askeer – he won the award on his second nomination in 1999. In the same year Radio “Tempo”, Bulgaria gave him a Special Prize – for best original music for a Bulgarian play (“Epic Times”). In September 2001 in vigorous competition with fellow composers, he won First Prize at the 4th Russell Horn Young Composers Competition. The critics praised the successful fusion between American Jazz and Bulgarian folk elements in his winning piece “Conversations for Violin and Piano”.
http://soundconvincer.com/
https://www.impressions-of-light.net/about-me/
For lessons:
https://quassica.com/faculty/
show less
Dimitar Pentchev is a Canadian-based musician and producer. He has been a professional composer for theatre and film since 1996. He has worked as a composer and music director with theatre companies in his native Bulgaria, in the USA, and as a theatre composer in the UK at the Bristol Shakespeare Festival. He wrote original music and played Snug in the Bristol Touring Shakespeare’s production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, which was performed in front of almost 4,000 people for a fortnight in July 2005.
Dimitar’s interests in music though are not confined only to the theatre. He gave his first piano recital at the age of 12 and since then has performed over 30 different recital programs in Bulgaria, Ukraine, Greece, Czech Republic, USA, and the UK. He is still active as a pianist, collaborator, and chamber musician.
In 2006 Dimitar was commissioned to write a full score for the 1929 legendary film “Pandora’s Box”, starring Louise Brooks, dir. G.W. Pabst, which was performed then live at the “Silent Sisters” festival in Dallas, Texas. There have been many attempts to score this film classical film but after hearing Mr. Pentchev’s score, Barry Paris, biographer of Louise Brooks called it “the definitive score” for the movie. Since then Dimitar has scored another feature silent film – “Lucky Star” (1929), starring Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell, for a private collection in the USA and the most recent film project has been the documentary “Olive Thomas: Everybody’s Sweetheart” (2003), which was realized by Timeline Films, USA and financed by Hugh Hefner.
Between 1999 and 2002 Dimitar studied and worked in the USA. During that period he has been invited to write original music for three consecutive editions of “Shakespeare Festival of Dallas”, the second oldest festival in the US. These projects involved working as a part of a professional team with high-school students from different areas of Dallas, some of the kids really coming from deprived areas of the city. That in no way though compromised the exceptionally high standard of the performances that the company (“Junior Players”) has been reaching year after year. Mr. Pentchev, together with director Matt Tomlanovich, through hard work and patience, were managing to put on excellent shows, equally high valued by audiences and critics.
During the same period, Dimitar was working as a music teacher in a private school nearby Dallas, and in this capacity, he soon started to “specialize” in teaching children with behavioral problems, children with special needs, etc. Currently, Mr. Pentchev is working on a number of projects, ranging from original music for a parody horror movie, through an ethnomusicological project aimed at preserving Bulgarian folk music, to preparing music for a Christmas family show, together with Forest Forge Theatre Company in England.
He is also actively composing classical and Electroacoustic music.
Throughout his career as a composer, Dimitar Pentchev has won some prestigious awards – twice nominated for the most prestigious Theatre award in Bulgaria – A’Askeer – he won the award on his second nomination in 1999. In the same year Radio “Tempo”, Bulgaria gave him a Special Prize – for best original music for a Bulgarian play (“Epic Times”). In September 2001 in vigorous competition with fellow composers, he won First Prize at the 4th Russell Horn Young Composers Competition. The critics praised the successful fusion between American Jazz and Bulgarian folk elements in his winning piece “Conversations for Violin and Piano”.
http://soundconvincer.com/
https://www.impressions-of-light.net/about-me/
For lessons:
https://quassica.com/faculty/
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