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Updated 10/26/2020

Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol

  • M

    MA

Institution/Business Type: Artist / Creative (Individual)

Grammy nominated composer and CMES Harvard University fellow (2013-15) Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol made his Carnegie Hall debut in April 2016 premiering his commissioned piece Harabat/The Intoxicated with the American Composers Orchestra. Other recent works have been heard at Tanglewood's Ozawa Hall, Jordan Hall and on A Far Cry string orchestra's recording Dreams and Prayers. He hails from Cyprus and Turkey, and is DownBeat Magazine’s September 2016 Editor’s pick, JAZZIZ’s Top 10 Critics’ Choice 2014 pick, a multi-instrumentalist/vocalist, an ethnomusicologist as well as a full-time faculty member at New England Conservatory. Sanlıkol was a recipient of The Aaron Copland Fund for Music Performance Program Grant in 2016 with his unique jazz orchestra/combo, Whatsnext? and has been praised by critics all over the world for his unique, pluralist, multicultural and energetic musical voice. The Boston Globe noted that Sanlıkol’s “music is colorful, fanciful, full of rhythmic life, and full of feeling. The multiculturalism is not touristy, but rather sophisticated, informed, internalized; Sanlıkol is a citizen of the world”, “…and he (Sanlıkol) is another who could play decisive role in music’s future in the world.” 

A musical polymath, Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol has composed for, performed and toured with international stars and ensembles such as Dave Liebman, Bob Brookmeyer, Billy Cobham, Anat Cohen, Antonio Sanchez, Tiger Okoshi, Gil Goldstein, Esperanza Spalding, The Boston Camerata, The Boston Cello Quartet, A Far Cry string orchestra, American Composers Orchestra, Okay Temiz and Erkan Oğur. Sanlıkol’s unique blend of jazz composition and Turkish music has been praised by the Boston Globe as “a true fusion of jazz and folkloric Turkish language and colors.” Sanlıkol pairs Turkish instruments such as zurna (double reed wind), ney (end-blown flute), kös (large kettledrums) and nekkare (small kettledrums) with the jazz orchestra/combo to perform his Turkish music-influenced compositions, in which Turkish makam (mode) and usul (rhythmic cycles) are intertwined with modern jazz as well as specifically film noir influenced music. 

On the other hand, his “coffeehouse opera”, entitled Othello in the Seraglio: The Tragedy of Sümbül The Black Eunuch, which has been the recipient of the Paul R. Judy Center grant at Eastman School of Music in 2015, bridges the musical cultures of opera house and coffeehouse, Baroque Italy and Ottoman Turkey. This love story is designed to draw the audiences into a meditation on race, slavery, sexuality and the entwined histories of East and West. With music from 16th and 17th century European and Turkish sources, arranged, adapted and woven together with original music by Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol, this unique opera has been performed 20 times within three years since it’s premiere on European period instruments and traditional Turkish instruments by an ensemble of specialists in those fields.

Sanlıkol studied western classical piano with his mother Fethiye Sanlıkol and started giving piano recitals as early as age five. Later on he studied with the acclaimed Turkish composer/pianist Aydın Esen and won a scholarship to Berklee College of Music. While at Berklee Sanlıkol studied jazz composition with accomplished composers such as Herb Pomeroy and Ken Pullig. After studying with composers George Russell, Bob Brookmeyer and Lee Hyla, in the year 2004 Sanlıkol completed his Doctor of Musical Arts Degree in Composition. During his doctoral studies Sanlıkol also focused on Turkish music and ethnomusicology as a result of which he helped find the organization DÜNYA based in Boston, Massachusetts. Sanlıkol is the president of DÜNYA, a musicians’ collective dedicated to contemporary presentations of Turkish traditions, alone and in interaction with other world traditions, through musical performance, publication, and educational activities. Since it’s founding Sanlıkol has produced, performed and delivered talks at over two hundred DÜNYA events. DÜNYA has also released 10 CDs, a single, a concert DVD, a documentary and a feature film with Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol both as director/performer and composer. The unique nature and the success of DÜNYA resulted with Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol going on the air numerous times on NPR and PRI. 

 

Sanlıkol actively delivers papers and talks at academic conferences such as International Conference on Analytical Approaches to World Music and Society for Ethnomusicology. Sanlıkol’s book, entitled The Musician Mehters, about the organization and the music of the Ottoman Janissary Bands has been published during 2011 in English by The ISIS press and in Turkish by Yapı Kredi Yayınları. Currently, he is the director of New England Conservatory’s Intercultural Institute. 

Find Me

Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol
Job Title: Composer, Performer
Phone: 617 993 3350
Address:
343 School Street
Belmont, MA 02478

Social Media:

Additional Content:

About

Overview

Institution/Business Type:

Artist / Creative (Individual)

Legal Status:

Commercial / For profit - Sole proprietorship

Overview

Institution/Business Type:

Artist / Creative (Individual)

Legal Status:

Commercial / For profit - Sole proprietorship

Disciplines

Primary Discipline:

Music - Composition

Additional Disciplines:

  • Music - Orchestral

Activities and Services

Activities and Services:

  • Creation of a Work of Art (Including Commissions)
  • Performance / Concert / Reading
  • Workshops / Demonstrations / Master Class
Seasons Active: spring, summer, fall, winter
Events Per Year: 12

Communities

Populations Engaged:

  • Adults
  • General Public
  • School Groups

Languages Available:

  • Greek
  • Turkish

Geographic Reach:

  • International

Media Gallery

I Have Worked With

Affiliations and Accomplishments

Awards

Awards:

  • Creative City Grantee/Alum Network
  • The Aaron Copland Fund for Music Recording Program Grant
  • The Aaron Copland Fund for Music Performance Program Grant
  • Massachusetts Cultural Council Artist Fellowship Finalist
  • TEDx Talk
  • Live Arts Boston Grant from The Boston Foundation
  • Paul R. Judy Center for Applied Research Grant

Awards

Awards:

  • Creative City Grantee/Alum Network
  • The Aaron Copland Fund for Music Recording Program Grant
  • The Aaron Copland Fund for Music Performance Program Grant
  • Massachusetts Cultural Council Artist Fellowship Finalist
  • TEDx Talk
  • Live Arts Boston Grant from The Boston Foundation
  • Paul R. Judy Center for Applied Research Grant

Education

Education:

  • Harvard University Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Postdoctoral Fellowship in Ottoman classical vocal music written in Byzantine neumes. 2013-15
  • New England Conservatory of Music, Doctor of Musical Arts, Composition and Jazz Studies. 2004
  • New England Conservatory of Music, Master of Music, Jazz Composition. 2000
  • Berklee College of Music, Bachelor of Music, Jazz Composition and Film Scoring. 1997

Special Designations

Special Designations:

  • NEFA Grant Recipient

Artist Info

Touring Artist

NEST Eligible Artist

Technical Requirements:

  • music stand

Fee Range:

$1,000 - $10,000

State of Residence:

Massachusetts

Minimum Number of Performers:

1

Maximum Number of Performers:

21

Touring Artist

NEST Eligible Artist

Technical Requirements:

  • music stand

Fee Range:

$1,000 - $10,000

State of Residence:

Massachusetts

Minimum Number of Performers:

1

Maximum Number of Performers:

21