Akagündüz Kutbay


Aka Gündüz Kutbay, a leading Turkish ney player of the 1960s and 1970s, was known for his traditional sound, deep tones, and interest in jazz, Tibetan, Indian, and other world musics.
Kutbay was a staff musician for many years at Radio Istanbul, where he considered himself a follower of Ulvi Erguner and Ulvi's father, the noted Süleyman Erguner. Kutbay taught ney at the prestigious Turkish Music National Conservatory in Istanbul from about 1973 to 1979. He served as Head Ney Player at the Mevlana Festival in Konya in the early 1970s and led the first North American tour of the Mevlevi Dervishes in 1972 together with Ulvi Erguner.
In Turkey, Aras record label published LPs of his and in the US, Atlantic Records produced "Music of the Whirling Dervishes" LP featuring Kutbay and Kâni Karaca. Playasound/Auvidis released a CD in 1991 of solo improvisations by Kutbay; the longest of these lasts an extraordinary twenty-three minutes. He appears onscreen briefly playing ney at the beginning of Peter Brook's 1979 film, "Meetings with Remarkable Men".

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