"Avdo Smailović" award given by AMUS (2018/19)[12]
Cooperation and performances
He is also active in composition and performance of his music, and has developed new movements in music education programmes, with the assistance of his team of musicians such as Omer Blentić,[13] Dragan Opančić,[14] Ivan Šarić,[15]Hanan Hadžajlić,[16] Davor Maraus,[17] Gilles Grimaître,[18] Katharina Bleier,[19] Elena Gabbrielli[20] and others.
Composer and pianist Jürg Wyttenbach, conducted Residbegovic's composition "The impact of analog synthesizer" for ensemble in Sarajevo, in 2015.[21]
His works were performed with conductors such as: Obrad Nedeljković,[22] Dario Vučić,[23] Josip Nalis,[24] Jaime Wolfson,[25] Emir Mejremić[26] and Samra Gulamović.[27]
Residbegovic's "Three orchestral miniatures" are part of the regular repertoire of Azis Sadikovic.[28]
His works were also performed by orchestras/ensembles such as Sarajevo Philharmonic Orchestra, Belgrade String Orchestra "Dušan Skovran",[29] Ensemble Proton Bern,[30] Pons Artis Ensemble,[31] Austrian Art Ensemble,[32] Sonemus,[33][34] Trio Magis,[35] Platypus[36] in Italy, Croatia,[37] Slovenia, Serbia, Germany, Japan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Switzerland,[38] Austria, and USA (including Carnegie Hall).[39][40][41]
Rešidbegović formed a new wave of 21st-century classical music, known as Reductional music complexity, a term dating from 2003, based on a new order of parameters and their categorization by the composer. Another description of his style is "rhythmical music" which came from his categorizations of rhythm, or corpse of the music. Inspired by musicians such as John Cage, Mauricio Kagel, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Hans-Joachim Hespos and his professors Rainer Bischof and Detlev Müller-Siemens, he started to write music without tone pitches and established many compositional techniques of "reductional complexity". Musical parameters such as rhythm, dynamics, his own expression marks and description, extended techniques of many instruments are the base of his music, usually written with graphic notation.[50]
Piano extended techniques
Rešidbegović developed a number of instrumental techniques, such as his piano extended techniques[51] and treatment of piano strings and resonator of the instrument such as the use of synthesizers in contemporary classical music.[52]
Approximate Reductionist Graphical Notation ARGN
Rešidbegović determined his notation for electronic and acoustic instruments in his dissertation, "Subtractive synthesis in composition" as "Approximate Reductionist Graphical Notation".[53][54][55][56][50]
Selective compositions
Experimental, music painting, aleatoric, music theater
"Chelovek" for bass, Computer generated sound by Google Translate.[58][59] Composition "Recitativo Chelovek" is the first music composition which includes Google Translate as a musical instrument.
"3X" for two piano players and deconstructed drum-set.
"Subtractive study for sound synthesizers and ensemble" for amplified flute, amplified alto saxophone, amplified violin, amplified cello, electric guitar, synthesizers (DSI Prophet 12, DSI Pro 2, Moog Sub 37 and Make Noise CV Bus Shared System with Tempi, Erbe-Verb and MMG) and amplified piano.[60]
"X O part II" for amplified flute, amplified cello, analog modular sound synthesizers (Make Noise CV Bus Shared System with Tempi, Erbe-Verb and MMG, Moog Sub 37 and Analog Rytm - rhythm computer).[61]
^SuperMusic75 (31 October 2011). "Dino Residbegovic "HAMO"". Archived from the original on 30 July 2016. Retrieved 20 October 2014 – via YouTube.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^"Gilles Grimaître". www.gillesgrimaitre.com. Archived from the original on 2016-11-20. Retrieved 2016-11-20.
^"repertoire". Katharina Bleier - extended piano. Archived from the original on 2018-01-03. Retrieved 2018-01-02.
^Forschungen, Institut für kunst- und musikhistorische (20 July 2018). "Austrian Art Ensemble". www.musiklexikon.ac.at. Archived from the original on 23 November 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
Samson, Jim. Music in the Balkans, Boston, BRILL, 2013. p. 564. ISBN978-90-04-25038-3
Čavlović, Ivan. Historija muzike u Bosni i Hercegovini, Sarajevo, Muzička akademija, 2011. ISBN978-9958-689-05-5
Rešidbegović, Dino Subtractive Study for Sound Synthesizers and Ensemble, Saarbrücken, LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing, 2017 ISBN978-620-2-06253-4
Hadžajlić, Hanan. Od Zvuka (Intervju s kompozitorom: Dino Rešidbegović), Sarajevo, Hanan Hadžajlić / Kreuzlingen, Musica Neo, 2016. ID: SM-000263341
Hadžajlić, Hanan. Komparacija interpretacijskih analiza kompozicije 'X O pt. II' Dine Rešidbegovića, za flautu/bas flautu i procesore, ozvučeno violončelo, ozvučeni klavir, analogne sintetizatore zvuka i ritam mašinu, Sarajevo, INSAM / Kreuzlingen, Musica Neo, 2017. ID: SM-000291837