Composer
Ilhan Mimaroglu was born in Istanbul, Turkey. His father died when
Mimaroglu was not yet a year old and he was raised by his mother. His primary education was at the Lycée de Galatasaray, and later
Mimaroglu studied law at the University of Ankara. From 1945
Mimaroglu gained a reputation in Turkish radio as a broadcaster and critic in tune with the latest trends developing in postwar European art music. From the early '50s
Mimaroglu took an interest in electronic music, and coincidentally the Rockefeller Foundation took an interest in him, inviting
Mimaroglu to the United States in 1955 to study at Columbia University. In 1959
Mimaroglu permanently settled in the United States, specifically in midtown Manhattan.
In 1959,
Mimaroglu joined the staff of the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, working with its co-founder,
Vladimir Ussachevsky. He also assisted composer
Edgard Varèse in the assemblage of the latter's revision of electronic segments attending to
Varèse's orchestral piece Déserts. Ultimately,
Mimaroglu would stay with the Center for nearly 30 years. Concurrently,
Mimaroglu worked as a producer for Atlantic Records, mostly with
Nesuhi Ertegun. In 1972
Mimaroglu was awarded a Guggenheim Foundation Grant, and not long after founded Finnadar Records as a subsidiary of Atlantic, one of very few imprints within the major-label corporate structure devoted wholly to contemporary music. Pianist
Idil Biret made her debut on Finnadar, and
Mimaroglu also released acclaimed albums of music by
John Cage,
George Flynn,
Karlheinz Stockhausen, Negative Band, and
Varèse, among others. Sadly, Finnadar did not survive into the digital era.
Mimaroglu's own electronic music feasibly represents a step forward from
Varèse; it is highly individual, sometimes dense, and invested in violent contrasts, but always unpredictable and engaging. Unfortunately, it also appears that
Mimaroglu likewise inherited his mentor's predilection for distrusting his own output, and he discarded everything that was never performed or published within a year of its composition date. Originally issued mostly on Turnabout and Finnadar LPs,
Mimaroglu's music was unavailable in CD form until the dawn of the 21st century, but first appeared in the collections Agitation and Outstanding Warrants.
Mimaroglu was also a photographer of renown and a published author of several books. He died of pneumonia in Manhattan in July of 2012 at 86 years of age.