thumb|250px|Zakaria Paliashvili portrait by Zakaria Paliashvili (; in Kutaisi — 6 October 1933 in
Tbilisi) was a composer from the nation of
Georgia. He is regarded as a founder of Georgian
classical music.
As a young boy he sang in a choir and learned to play the
organ in the St. Mary
Catholic Church of Kutaisi. His first tutor was his brother Ivan, who later became a
conductor. Paliashvili moved to Tbilisi in 1887 as a chorister in the St. Mary Assumption Catholic Church of Tbilisi, eventually entering the music school there, studying
French horn and composition. During 1900-1903 he studied composition under
Sergei Taneyev at the
Moscow Conservatory. Upon returning to his native land, Paliashvili began to play a strong role in developing national music in Georgia. He collected Georgian
folk songs, co-founded the Georgian Philharmonic Society, and became head of the Tbilisi Conservatory.
Paliashvili composed works for symphony orchestra (e.g.,
Georgian Suite on Folk Themes), but is probably best known for his vocal music, which includes choruses and songs. His major works in this regard are the operas
Abesalom da Eteri (
Absalom and Eteri) (premiered 1919, although a version of Act III was performed in 1913; based on a folk tale "
Eteriani"),
Daisi (
Twilight) (1923), and
Latavra (1927).100 опер: история создания, сюжет, музыка. Ленинград: Издательство "Музыка," 1968, p.......
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