Anastasia Vedyakova

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Anastasia Vedyakova
Born1991
NationalityRussian - Ukrainian
Other namesAnastasia Vediakova, Anastasia Vediakova, An Vedi
EducationMoscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory
Occupation(s)composer, violinist, conductor, singer-songwriter
Websitehttps://www.anvedi.org/

Anastasia Vedyakova (born 1991) is a violinist, composer and conductor. She is the Soloist of the Philharmonic, member of BMI, the National Union of Composers, the Boston New Music Initiative, the Recordig Academy, International Society for Jazz Arrangers and Composers, the International Association for Music and Medicine. She is the only Russian holder of the Elgar Medal.[1] She's the winner and nominee for more than 35 international music awards as a violinist, composer, conductor and singer-songwriter, also the Grammys balloted artist.

Life[edit]

Vedyakova was born in 1991 and she began to play the violin when she was four. By 1998 she was welcomed into the Central Music School at the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory, where she studied with Prof. E. Grach and Prof. A.Koblyakov. She graduated with honours from the conservatory in 2014.[2] Then she studied at the Contemporary Classical Music Department till 2017 when she has become a Soloist at the Philharmonic. September 2022, Anastasia received a diploma with honors as a conductor and joined the International Conductors Guild (the US) as the Member. She has won 18 awards as a conductor, including the King's Peak International Music Competition (2023). She's also the Laureate at the London Classical Music Competition as a classical vocalist (contralto).

She was a fellow of the Rostropovich Foundation.[3]

Vedyakova was nominated as "Musician of the Year" for the Josie Music Awards in 2021 and nominated for "Vocal Event of the Year" in 2023. Anastasia Vedyakova was the only composer from Russia as a participant of KLK New Music,[4] the winner of "The 6th International Composers' Competition for the 6th International Wind/Percussion Competition".[5]

She takes part in international music and music therapy conferences, and publishes articles as a musicologist.[6]

The American Friction Quartet was the first ensemble to record her "Mirage".[7]

In February 2022, Vedyakova and organist Anastasia Bykova performed the world premiere of a work by Grammy-nominated composer Nadeem Majdalany, which he composed especially for the duet; there were also six Russian premieres of works by such composers as Danaë Xanthe Vlasse, Thomas Nazziola, John Finbury, Sherban Nichifor and Antoine Auberson.[8]

In March 2022, she won Rome Music Video Awards for her Sonata "A War Zone". April 2022, Anastasia won 3 Gold and 1 Silver One Earth Awards for her music.

On August 12, 2022, she released her eighth album ConTempoRary Violin, featuring music by J. S. Bach and five living composers from five countries.

August 2022, Anastasia and the great-great-grandson of the famous composer Reinhold Gliere won Euro Music Video Awards for their work "The Music of Our Victory".

August 2022, Anastasia won ISSA International Rising Star Awards and the Red Carpet Award Show in Holland Best Female Musician of the Year.

On September 10, 2022, the album It Arrives by Iranian composer Mehdi Rajabian was released. Anastasia performed the lead violin on this album.

In 2023, she won the Viktor Kalabis Prize at the Ruzikova Composition Competition[1].

She is the featured artist on such impactful releases as the album "Kings and Queens" by Justo Asikoye (member of Jabali Afrika) and Mehdi Rajabian, "Love and Peace" by Prem Murti (co-author of Grammy winning album "Divine Tides" along with Ricky Kej), "Kaatrin Mozhi (Revisited)" by Devan Ekambaram and Rita Thyagarajan.

She has an official registered artist's alias.

Performances[edit]

She is the first performer of the music by Jan Tamzejian, Tayren Ben-Abraham, Jay Reise, Colette Mourey, András Derecskei, Nadeem Majdalany, Wajdi About Diab.

2019, she had a solo recital together with Simon Smith during the Saint-Petersburg International Cultural Forum.[9]

Vedyakova has given performances at the Moscow Conservatory halls,[10] Zaryadye Hall,[11] and the Evangelical Lutheran Cathedral.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Elgar Society Awards • The Elgar Society". The Elgar Society. Archived from the original on 2020-04-07. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  2. ^ "Anastasia Vedyakova - olehkrysa-competition". olehkrysa-competition.com. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  3. ^ "Фонд М. Л. Ростроповича". rostropovitch.ru. Archived from the original on 2020-01-31. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  4. ^ "2013 – KLK New Music". Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  5. ^ "The 6th International Composers' Competition for the 6th International Wind/Percussion Competition". www.mosconsv.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  6. ^ Ведякова, А. К.; Нисимон, К. (2019). "Перекрёстный мастер-класс как инновационная форма экспресс-обучения музыкальному искусству". Самарский государственный институт культуры (in Russian): 82–84.
  7. ^ "Mirage, by Anatasiia Vediakova". Golden Hornet. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  8. ^ "Фонд Палитра Вселенной - 2022".
  9. ^ "Festival Program". culturalforum.ru. 2019-11-14. Retrieved 2022-03-09.
  10. ^ "Concerts". The Moscow Times. 2014-09-24. Retrieved 2022-03-09.
  11. ^ ""Sparks of Classica". Oleg Akkuratov, piano". zaryadyehall.com. 2019-05-06. Retrieved 2022-03-09.