Murdorj Luvsanjamba
An image from A Messenger of the People, one of the productions that also features Murdorj Luvsanjamba.
Murdorj Luvsanjamba

Murdorj Luvsanjamba

September 13, 1919 — Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia

Murdorj Luvsanjamba (Mongolian: Лувсанжамбын Мөрдорж; 1919–1996) was a Mongolian composer. He was one of the leading composers of Mongolia in the 1950s and 1960s. His symphonic work My Homeland, also known as Manai Ekh Oron (Our Motherland),[1] composed in 1955, was the first such work written in Mongolia.[2] He was also a co-composer of the national anthem of Mongolia. He was cited as belonging to “the nineteenth century European school of composers" who along with the other Mongolian composers Sembiin Gonchigsumlaa and Eregzengiin Choidog drew inspiration from composers such as Tchaikovsky and Mahler.[3]

The Golden Ger

The Golden Ger

1961

Mighty Prince

Mighty Prince

1945

Exodus

Exodus

1968

Focusing on the Turquoise Mountain

Focusing on the Turquoise Mountain

1978

A Messenger of the People

A Messenger of the People

1959

What Obsticles Are Becoming for Us?

What Obsticles Are Becoming for Us?

1956

Ah, These Girls!

Ah, These Girls!

1963

First Lesson

First Lesson

1940