Malek Jandali

Composer

Birthday December 25, 1972

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Waldbröl, West Germany

Age 51 years old

Nationality West

#45112 Most Popular

1921

His music was described as "a major new addition to the 21st century symphonic literature" by Fanfare magazine.

with "heart-rending melodies, lush orchestration, Clever transitions and creative textures", according to American Record Guide.

Jandali's music ranges from chamber works to large symphonic compositions integrating Middle-Eastern and Western influences.

He is the biological paternal cousin of Steve Jobs and Mona Simpson.

Malek Jandali was born to Dr Mamoun Jandali and Lina Droubi, citizens of Homs in Syria.

He has a cousin, Mona Simpson, a novelist and English teacher at UCLA.

Other cousins include Mona's brother, Steve Jobs, founder of Apple.

He began his musical career as a classical pianist after his studies at the Higher Institute of Music in Damascus with Vladimir Zaritsky and Victor Bunin of the Tchaikovsky Moscow Conservatory.

1972

Malek Jandali (مالك جندلي, Mālik Jandalī) (born 1972) is a Syrian-American composer and pianist, whose music integrates Middle-Eastern modes and Arabic Maqams into Western structures of classical music.

He is the founder of the nonprofit organization Pianos for Peace, which aims to build peace through music and education.

Jandali immigrated to the United States and studied music in North Carolina.

Since then, he has performed with orchestras across the world and composed a number of modern classical works.

1988

Jandali won first place in the Syrian National Young Artists Competition in 1988, and in 1995 received a scholarship to attend North Carolina School of the Arts under Eric Larsen.

He graduated from Queens University, where he studied under Paul Nitsch and received the Outstanding Musical Performer Award of the school.

While in the Charlotte area, he was an organist and choir director for St. James Catholic Church in Concord, North Carolina.

He studied composition and orchestration with Eddie Horst, Harry Bulow, Lawrence Dillon and Richard Prior.

2004

In 2004 he received his master's degree from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and in 2015 the Carnegie Corporation of New York named him a "Pride of America" honoree for his notable contributions to society.

Jandali currently lives in New York City.

Jandali has performed in London, Cairo, Damascus, Istanbul, Paris, Atlanta, at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., the Stude Hall of the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University in Houston, the Konzerthaus in Vienna, the Kaufman Center and Carnegie Hall in New York City, National Auditorium in Madrid, Cadogan Hall, The Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto, and the Madinat Theater in Dubai.

He has performed with orchestras including the Cairo Symphony Orchestra, the Russian Philharmonic Orchestra, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Ludwig Symphony Orchestra, Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra, The Stockholm Solister and the Syrian National Symphony Orchestra at Damascus Opera House.

2009

He released his first album of compositions for piano and orchestra, Echoes from Ugarit, in June 2009.

The album was briefly in the international music charts of the United Arab Emirates.

The title track is based on a hymn to Nikkal, one of the Hurrian songs inscribed on cuneiform clay tablets discovered in Ugarit, Syria, and thought to date from 1400 BC and thus to be the oldest notated music in the world.

2012

In early 2012 Jandali released his album Emessa (Homs), which he dedicated to "the Syrian people and their noble quest for freedom - especially the people of Homs".

The album includes his Freedom Qashoush Symphony, named after Ibrahim Qashoush, who wrote a song popular with Syrian protesters and who was killed and had his vocal cords torn out.

2013

In 2013 he launched his ongoing world tour "The Voice of the Free Syrian Children" from the Berman Center in Detroit to raise awareness and much needed humanitarian aid for the suffering Syrian children.

The tour reached Europe and the Middle East with benefit concerts along with lectures and academic workshops.

Jandali has composed works ranging from solo instrumental pieces to chamber music and works for large ensemble or orchestras.

He has a special interest in Arab music and combines the maqamat or modes with western harmony in his piano and orchestral compositions.

Malek's compositions not only integrate Middle-Eastern modes into Western classical forms and harmony, they echo UNESCO's call to preserve and protect the rich cultural heritage of Syria and the Silk Road at a time when it is in danger of being eradicated.

He incorporates ancient melodies from Aleppo, Damascus and other stops on the Silk Road in his compositions.

He has visited refugee camps in Turkey, Syria, Croatia and Malta to raise awareness and humanitarian aid for refugees, and was inspired to launch his ongoing world tour "The Voice of the Free Syrian Children" in 2013.

That same year he was awarded the GUSI International Peace Prize for his humanitarian and peace activism.

2014

Jandali's Syrian Symphony was released in late 2014 and premiered at Carnegie Hall in January 2015.

The album includes three major works, "Syrian Symphony" presented in four movements recorded with the Russian Philharmonic Orchestra, "Variations for Piano and Orchestra", based on the ancient Syrian theme 'Lamma Bada Yatathana', and "Phoenix in Exile", recorded with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London.

2015

In 2015 his latest album SoHo was released, which tells the story of his journey from Syria to SoHo in New York City and contains compositions that are inspired by and named after the works of Sufi poets Rumi and Ibn Arabi as well as poets Rita Dove, Gabriela Mistral among others.

The album features his chamber works for piano, oud and cello, performed by the Malek Jandali Trio.

Jandali is the founder of nonprofit organization 'Pianos for Peace', which aspires to use the power of music to enrich communities through an annual outdoor festival and several year-round community outreach programs serving under-resourced local schools and organizations in Atlanta.

He is also the founder of the Malek Jandali International Youth Piano Competition, which encourages talented young pianists from around the globe to embrace the music of their homelands and submit applications for the chance to perform at Carnegie Hall in New York City.

Jandali frequently contributes to charity events collaborating with international organization's UNICEF, MSF, Save The Children among others, to raise humanitarian aid for children in need around the world.