He is the author of 3 Operas – ‘The Path lit by the Sun’ (2019), ‘The Mysterious Lady’ (2019) and ‘The Bruce’ (2023) – and more than 150 music compositions, ranging from solos, duos, trios, quartets, quintets, chamber and vocal works to symphonies, concertos, cantatas, such as ‘Kazakh rhapsody’, ‘Forward into the Sunlight’, ‘The Will to Live’[2], ‘God’s Dwelling’, ‘Aftersounds of Romanticism’, ‘Beyond the Darkness’[3] ‘Time Run’[4], ‘Des pensées de loin’[5], ‘Tears of Silence’[6], ‘A drop of Eternity’[7], ‘The Sacred Universe of Particles’[8], ‘Phantom reflections’[9], ‘Shadows of the Void’[10], ‘Serenade of Invisible Stars’[11], ‘Ghosts of Immortality’[12], ‘Qubylys’, ‘Quantum reality’, ‘I raggi di Dante’[13], ‘Chaos and Order’ etc.
He was awarded the Silver Medal 2024 of the Worshipful Company of Musicians, London, UK[15][16] Rakhat-Bi Abdyssagin was born in Almaty on February 2, 1999.
[19][21][22] In 2024 Rakhat-Bi was awarded the Doctor of Philosophy (PhD in Music) degree at the University of St Andrews / Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, UK[23].
[24][25][26][27] Rakhat-Bi's compositions are featured in South Illinois University's Global Discography of Music for Piano and Orchestra alongside the classic masterpieces.
The endorsements for the back cover were written by physicist, Nobel laureate Hugh David Politzer, a mathematician Ian Stewart FRS, and a composer, co-founder of the spectral technique Tristan Murail.
In October-December 2023 Rakhat-Bi was a Visiting Scholar at Wolfson College, University of Oxford[43], where he continued his research on correlations between quantum physics and contemporary music, and in October-December 2024 he was an Academic Visitor at the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Cambridge, conducting research on applicability of logic and set theory in the structural analysis of the timbral-textural dimension of avant-garde music.
He gave talks and presentations at the scientific seminars at the universities of Oxford[44], Cambridge[45], UCL, LSE[46], Amsterdam[47][48], Heidelberg[49][50], Frankfurt, Tübingen, etc.