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On the occasion of Bulgaria's Liberation Day

Concert in LA featuring works by Penka Kuneva and other renowned Bulgarian composers

The programme will include classical composers such as Staynov, Goleminov and Vladigerov, as well as contemporary artists such as Kirov and Hristoskov.

Author:
Photo: Personal archive

A concert in Los Angeles with an all-Bulgarian programme dedicated to the National Day of March 3 will take place in the City of Angels in a few days, on March 21. This was announced by the famous film composer Penka Kuneva in an interview with Radio Bulgaria. In addition to two of her works and her orchestrations for string quartet, flute and piano of six songs from the repertoire of Mystery of Bulgarian Voices choir, the concert will include works by Petko Staynov, Marin Goleminov, Pancho Vladigerov, Milen Kirov and Petar Hristoskov. The audience will also have the opportunity to see the trailer for Milko Lazarov's latest film - The Herd. Penka Kuneva composed the music for it, as she did for the director's previous film - Aga (2018).

"The initiative is carried out with the support of the Bulgarian Consulate in Los Angeles. The idea was to organize a concert with only Bulgarian compositions, to introduce the audience and the diplomatic corps to our national classical music. Antonín Dvořák, Bedřich Smetana and Edvard Grieg are world-famous names, but we have equally brilliant composers such as Pancho Vladigerov, Petko Staynov, Lyubomir Pipkov and Marin Goleminov, whose names are not well known beyond our borders," says Penka Kouneva.

Arriving in the US in 1990, the Bulgarian composer overcame the competition to find her place in the industry as a film composer by drawing on her uniqueness and national identity.


"For me, Bulgarian folklore and our folk tales have always been a great source of inspiration. My very first composition, which was chosen for a film, was influenced by the so-called non-western sounds and tonalities. This made it very successful and I realised that my roots and my culture are very strong and I need to emphasise them in order to progress," says the composer, adding:



"I've continued to do that throughout my work. The album I'm most famous for, which came out 10 years ago - it's called The Astronaut Woman - was also very much influenced by my Bulgarian identity and culture. I would say that Milen Kirov and I stand out here because we are treading on our own very strong roots."

After a 26-year career in Los Angeles that has seen her appear in the credits of numerous TV series and blockbusters, Penka Kuneva's name is now part of a NASA theme park:

"Imagine a museum that is very interactive. The exhibits are mainly rockets and spacecraft, but there are also a lot of films to watch, for which I had to write the music".


It hasn't been an easy road for the Bulgarian composer, but she now has her own music studio where she creates music for Hollywood films, including the Pirates of the Caribbean series, Angels and Demons and Sherlock Holmes


A graduate of the National Academy of Music in Sofia, she left for the United States in 1990 after winning a scholarship to study composition at Duke University in Durham, NC. She arrived there with just $130, but never for a moment did she give up her quest. "I have always been interested in creating music for the visual arts - theatre, ballet, film and now video games. I also love working with creative people. It opens up my imagination. I decided to write music for films, it was a dream of mine," she told Radio Bulgaria in an interview a few years ago. And today she adds:

"I work with visionaries and highly creative artists and I find it very stimulating to communicate with such people. An artist also has to be very organised because it's very difficult to build a career, it's like a marathon. You know, I've been in Los Angeles for 26 years now and how many genres I've tried - television, cinema, video games, theme parks... Each of these genres requires new qualities, learning new musical styles, very flexible thinking, working with people from different countries, with different ways of thinking. It has helped that I have always been very intuitive, flexible and willing to learn new skills," says Penka Kouneva at the end of our interview.


Photos and video: personal archive of Penka Kouneva

Posted in English by E. Radkova


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