Kornelije Kovač
This biographical article is written like a résumé. (February 2012) |
Kornelije Kovač Корнелије Ковач | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Kornelije Kovač |
Also known as | Kornél Kovács |
Born | Niš, German-occupied Serbia | 1 January 1942
Died | 13 September 2022 Belgrade, Serbia | (aged 80)
Genres | Progressive rock, symphonic rock, jazz-rock, classical |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter, composer, producer |
Instrument(s) | Keyboards, organ, piano |
Years active | 1961–2022 |
Labels | PGP-RTB, Casa Ricordi, Philips Records, Jugoton, Komuna, PGP-RTS, ITMM |
Kornelije "Bata" Kovač (Serbian Cyrillic: Корнелије "Бата" Ковач, pronounced [kɔ̌rne̞ːlije̞ bǎːta kɔ̂v̞atʃ]; Hungarian: Kovács Kornél; 1 January 1942 – 13 September 2022) was a Serbian composer.
Early life
Born in Niš during World War II in the Nazi-occupied Serbia to a Hungarian father and a Serbian mother, Kovač grew up in a prominent artistic family - his grandfather was a conductor, his father a music professor and a violinist, his mother a singer in the opera choir.[citation needed]
Kovač received his early music education at the College of Music in Subotica, after which he attempted to enroll in the Belgrade Music Academy. He did not pass the entrance exam so he entered the Sarajevo Music Academy of University of Sarajevo where he graduated from the Theory And Piano Department.[citation needed]
Career
A composer, pianist, keyboard player, producer and arranger, Kovač's career as a professional musician started in 1961, when he formed his first band, BKB, which became a prominent jazz trio at the time. In 1963 they entered The Yu Jazz Festival, that took place in Bled (Slovenia).
After conducting the various orchestras in Bosnia, he finally joined Sarajevo's most popular pop band Indeksi. With them he had a two-month-long tour in Russia. In 1968, he moved to the Yugoslav capital, Belgrade, where he founded Korni Grupa. As a composer and a musician, he won many music contests that took place in former Yugoslavia. With Korni Grupa he entered following music festivals in Europe:
- 1969 - Singing Europe (Netherlands), voted the most original entry
- 1970 - Rock Festival Katowice (Poland)
- 1972 - Montreux (Switzerland)
- 1974 - Eurovision Song Festival (Brighton, United Kingdom)
In 1978, Kovač moved to England where he collaborated in various projects, such as: the 1978 Reading Rock Festival as the keyboardist of the Jenny Darren Band. Among the prominent British musicians with whom Kovač worked while in the UK, included:
- Bernie Marsden, guitar player of "White Snake"
- Hans Zimmer, composer
- Paul Jones, ex-singer of Manfred Mann
- Andy Pask, bass player of Landscape
Later projects
Kovač wrote music for theatre, movies and television. His songs were released on LP-s in Yugoslavia, Spain, France, the United States, the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Norway etc. Many of them were Golden or Platinum Records. From 1979, he participated in projects in Spain, as a producer, composer or arranger.
Personal life and death
Until her death in 2005, he was married to Spomenka Stojanović, with whom he had three daughters: Aleksandra, Kristina (both of whom are also involved with music) and Anja.
On 19 January 2011, Serbian broadcaster RTS announced that Kovač and his two daughters, Aleksandra and Kristina, would each compose a song and present a singer, who would seek to represent Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2011.[1]
Kovač died in Belgrade on 13 September 2022, at the age of 80.[2]
References
- ^ Jiandani, Sanjay (19 January 2011). "Serbia: Kovac family to compose entry". EscToday.com. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
- ^ Preminuo kompozitor Kornelije Kovač (in Serbian)
External links
- Kornelije Kovač at IMDb
- Kornelije Kovač discography at Discogs
- Interview[permanent dead link], Blic
- Prva pesma slučajni plagijat, Blic
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- 1942 births
- 2022 deaths
- 20th-century Serbian people
- Golden Arena winners
- Male television composers
- Musicians from Niš
- Serbian composers
- Serbian people of Hungarian descent
- Serbian record producers
- Serbian rock keyboardists
- Serbian television composers