Tag: Armenian composer

  • Aram Khachaturian Composer of the Sabre Dance

    Aram Khachaturian Composer of the Sabre Dance

    Aram Khachaturian may have been the most renowned Armenian composer of the 20th century, but he was actually born in Georgia, in the capital city of Tiflis (Tblisi) or thereabouts, on this date in 1903. Tiflis had a large Armenian population and served as a major Armenian cultural center.

    Following the Sovietization of the Caucasus, Khachaturian moved to Moscow in 1921. There, he studied cello and composition at the Gnessin Musical Institute – which it is said he entered without any formal musical training – and the Moscow Conservatory, where Nikolai Myaskovsky was among his teachers.

    In his lifetime, he was celebrated both at home and abroad. Everyone knows the manic “Sabre Dance” from his ballet “Gayane,” once the preferred music of plate-spinners everywhere, and frequently employed at the circus. Liberace played the “Sabre Dance” on his TV show. In 1968, Stanley Kubrick used the Adagio from “Gayane” on the soundtrack to “2001: A Space Odyssey.” The same year, the Adagio from the ballet “Spartacus” was featured in the film “Mayerling,” starring Omar Sharif and Catherine Deneuve. More recently, the Coen Brothers used “Spartacus” (as well as the “Sabre Dance”) in “The Hudsucker Proxy.”

    In the West, the public loved him, even as his music came in for critical brickbats, variously described as “lightweight,” “pop” and “schlock.”

    At home, that’s precisely what they loved about him. Anyone who got too introspective or innovative was in danger of being labeled “formalist” and “anti-people.”

    From the late 1930s, Khachaturian was rewarded with several high posts in the Union of Soviet Composers. But nobody was allowed to get too big in Stalin’s USSR. So in common with just about every other Soviet composer, Khachaturian was denounced, busted down, and humiliated, only to be built back up when it was thought he had been sufficiently humbled. As punishment, he was sent to Armenia – which I would think would be the equivalent of sending someone to their room, with all their things around them, when grounded!

    Once Khachaturian was restored to favor, he taught at the Gnessin Institute and the Moscow Conservatory. As a conductor, he toured Europe, Latin America, and the United States. In 1957, he was appointed Secretary of the Union of Soviet Composers, a position he held until his death in 1978.

    There’s plenty of great Khachaturian footage on YouTube. Below are some links to “Kach” at your convenience.

    Happy birthday, Aram Khachaturian!


    Khachaturian conducting his Violin Concerto, with a 13-year-old Yoko Sato the soloist

    David Oistrakh and Leonid Kogan have a go at it

    Khachaturian conducts his Piano Concerto, with Nikolai Petrov, the soloist (complete)

    Petrov plays the Concerto-Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra, in color (complete)

    Mstislav Rostropovich plays the Concerto-Rhapsody for Cello and Orchestra (complete)

    Khachaturian at the keyboard

    Khachaturian conducting his biggest hit, the “Sabre Dance,” at the Bolshoi

    A “making of” featurette with lots of Khachaturian footage

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MsuE8x77id0


    The Manny, Moe and Jack of Soviet music: (left to right) Prokofiev, Shostakovich, and Khachaturian in 1945

  • Arutiunian’s 100th Birthday A Celebration

    Arutiunian’s 100th Birthday A Celebration

    Today would have been the 100th birthday of Alexander Arutiunian. He almost made it, too! Arutiunian, one of the most famous of Armenian composers (after Khachaturian), died in 2012.

    Necessarily, a portion of his output was given over to empty, patriotic, Socialist Realist claptrap, of the kind expected of all artists under Stalin. This, however, ensured the receipt of a State Stalin Prize in 1949.

    He also wrote a fair amount of music inspired by the folk traditions of his native land, including a cantata with spoken word, “The Tale of the Armenian People,” a woodwind quintet, “Armenian Scenes,” and a violin concerto in response to the Spitak earthquake, subtitled “Armenia-88.”

    Far and away, however, his greatest international hit was his Trumpet Concerto in A-flat major of 1950. This too evokes the flavor of Armenian ashughner improvisation.

    Among Arutiunian’s other honors, he was named People’s Artist of the USSR, People’s Artist of Armenia… and Honorary Citizen of the State of Kentucky!

    Here’s the Arutiunian Trumpet Concerto, performed by its dedicatee, Timofei Dokschitzer:

    And an “Armenian Rhapsody” for two pianos, written in collaboration with Arno Babadjanian:

    Happy birthday, Alexander Arutiunian!

  • Hovhaness Celestial Gate Symphony Birthday Salute

    Hovhaness Celestial Gate Symphony Birthday Salute

    Busy day today. Here’s an eleventh hour salute to Alan Hovhaness (1911-2000) on his birthday – the Symphony No. 6, “Celestial Gate”:

    PHOTO: Hovhaness with his cat, Rajah Mahatma Hoyden

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