Chronis Aidonidis is a Greek singer born on December 23, 1928 in Karoti, a village now belonging to Didymoteicho, in Greece.
Background
He learned his first songs in his hometown and was introduced into the word of traditional music by his mother and the musicians who used to play at the local fairs. He was taught Byzantine music first by his father and later by the professor Michalis Kefalokoptis.
Education
In 1950, he came to live in Athens with his parents, where he completed his studies in Byzantine music at the Hellenic Conservatory with the famous teacher Theodoros Hadjitheodorou.
Career
In March of the same year, he was hired at the Sismanogleion Hospital, where he worked as an accountant Till now, Chronis Aidonidis has released many records with the most beautiful songs of northern, eastern and western Thrace. He has participated in hundreds of musical events in Greece and abroad (America, Australia, the former Soviet Union, Europe).
An important step of his artistic journey was his especially successful collaboration with the wella-known Greek singer George Dalaras for the release of the Civil Defense Nightingales from the Orient in March, 1990.
The success would continue with one more release of the University of Crete, in 1993: the double Civil Defense Songs and tunes from Thrace. Another important moment of his career is his collaboration with his student Nektaria Karantzi for the release of the double Civil Defense, When the Roads Meet, where he recorded Byzantine Ecclesiastical Hymns for the first time and the Civil Defense He was Grieved, where he recorded with his student Karantzi 40 Byzantine hymns of the Holy Week and a folk lament.
In 2001, he collaborated with Nikos Kypourgos for the release of a Civil Defense entitled Secrets from the Garden. In 2005, he participated in the Easter television show of Hellenic Television entitled "He was grieved", where he sang Byzantine hymns of the Holy Week and in 2006 he participated in the 6th Festival of Sacred Music in Patmos, with his student and Byzantine singer Karantzi and the ecclesiastical Byzantine choir, Glorifier (led by Dimitris Verykios).
Nowadays he teaches traditional singing in Chalandri, at the Zisis Foundation and the Central Conservator in Athens.
He is artistic director of the Center for the study of the Musical Tradition of Thrace, Asia Minor and Euxeinos Pontos and also the creator and inspirer of the Workshop for Traditional Music in Alexandroupoli. He is also one of the founders of the Archive of Greek Music.
Politics
An important incident changed his life, when in 1953 the great folklore scientist Polydoros Papachristodoulou proposed him to participate in his radio show entitled Echoes from Thrace, presenting for the first time the musical treasure of his fatherland.