Arno Babajanian
Arno Babajanian (Armenian: Առնո Բաբաջանյան) (January 22, 1921 – November 11, 1983) was an Armenian composer and pianist during the Soviet era.
Arno Babajanian Առնո Բաբաջանյան | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Yerevan, Armenia | January 22, 1921
Died | November 11, 1983 62) Moscow, Soviet Union | (aged
Years active | 1952-1983 |
Biography
Babajanian was born in Yerevan, Armenia. By age 5, his musical talent was apparent, and the composer Aram Khachaturian suggested that the boy be given proper music training. Two years later, in 1928, Babajanian entered the Yerevan State Musical Conservatory. In 1938, he continued his studies in Moscow with Vissarion Shebalin.
He later returned to Yerevan, where from 1950 to 1956 he taught at the conservatory. In 1952 he wrote the Piano Trio in F-sharp minor. It received immediate acclaim and was regarded as a masterpiece from the time of its premiere. Subsequently, he undertook concert tours throughout the Soviet Union and Europe. In 1971, he was named a People's Artist of the Soviet Union.
Babajanian wrote in various musical genres, including many popular songs in collaboration with leading poets such as Yevgeny Yevtushenko and Robert Rozhdestvensky. Much of his music is rooted in Armenian folk music and folklore, which he generally uses in the virtuosic style of Rachmaninov and Khachaturian. His later works were influenced by Prokofiev and Bartók. Praised by Dmitri Shostakovich as a "brilliant piano teacher", Babajanian was also a noted pianist and often performed his own works in concerts.
List of principal works
Piano works
for piano solo
- Prelude (1938?)
- Vagharshapat dance (1943)
- Impromptu (1944)
- Polyphonic sonata (1946, revised 1956)
- Capriccio (1951)
- Six pictures (1963–64)
- Poem (1965)
- Meditation (1969?)
- Melody and Humoresque (1970)
- Elegy (1978)
for two pianos
(co-composed by Alexander Arutiunian)
- Dance (early 1940s)
- Armenian Rhapsody (1950)
- Festive (1960, includes percussive instruments)
Works for solo instrument and piano
- Violin sonata (1958)
- Air and Dance for Cello (1961)
Chamber works
- String quartet No. 1 (1938)
- String quartet No. 2 (1947?)
- Piano trio (1952)
- String quartet No. 3 (1976)
Orchestral works
- Poem-rhapsody (1954, revised 1980)
- March of the Soviet Police (1977)
Concerto
- Piano concerto (1944)
- Violin concerto (1948)
- "Heroic ballade" for piano and orchestra (1950)
- Cello concerto (1962)
Ballet pieces
- "Parvana" (Парвана) (1954–56; incomplete, probably lost)
- Pas-de-deux (Па-де-де)
- "Stellar symphony" (Звездная симфония) (early 1960s)
- "Umbrellas" (Зонтики)
- "Sensation" (Сенсация)
Pieces for stage orchestra
- Armenian Lipsi
- Rhythmic dance
- In Karlovy Vary
- Come to Yerevan
- Festive Yerevan
- Nocturne (Concert piece for piano and orchestra) (1980)
- Dreams (Concert piece for piano and orchestra) (1982)
Film scores
- Looking for the addressee (В поисках адресата) (1955)
- Path of thunder (Тропою грома) (1956)
- Personally known (Лично известен) (1957)
- The Song of First Love (Песня первой любви) (1958)
- A Groom from the Other World (Жених с того света) (1958)
- Bride from the North (Невеста с севера) (1975)
- My heart is in the Highlands (В горах мое сердце) (1975)
- Baghdasar's divorce (Багдасар разводится с женой) (1976)
- Chef contest (Приехали на конкурс повара) (1977)
- The flight starts from the Earth (Полет начинается с земли) (1980)
- The mechanics of happiness (Механика счастья) (1982)
Songs (over 200 in total; selection)
- "Nocturne" ("Ноктюрн")
- "Bring me back the music" (""Верни мне музыку")
- "Beauty queen" ("Королева красоты")
- "Wedding" ("Свадьба")
- "Best city in the world" ("Лучший город Земли"), originally performed by Jean Tatlian and made a classic by Muslim Magomaev[1]
- "Grateful to you" ("Благодарю тебя")
- "The devil's wheel" ("Чертово колесо")
- "Heart on snow" ("Сердце на снегу")
- "The blue taiga" ("Голубая тайга")
- "Dum spiro, spero" (Пока я помню, я живу)
Honors, prizes and medals
- 1935 - First two prizes for two songs dedicated to the 15th anniversary of Soviet Armenia
- 1937 - First prize for the best performance of Alexander Glazunov's Piano Variations at Yerevan Conservatoire
- 1939 - First prize for the best performance of works by Soviet composers
- 1945 - Medal "for defence of the Caucasus"
- 1945 - Medal "for valiant labour"
- 1947 - Second prize for three piano pieces (or the Piano Concerto) at the 1st World Festival of Youth and Students in Prague
- 1951 - Stalin Prize, third degree, for the "Heroic Ballade" for piano and orchestra
- 1953 - Second prize for the song "Fly Aloft the Friendship Banner" at the 2nd World Festival of Youth and Students in Bucharest
- 1956 - Order of the Red Banner of Labour[2]
- 1956 - Meritorious Artist of the Armenian SSR
- 1962 - People's Artist of the Armenian SSR
- 1967 - Armenian SSR State prize for "6 pictures" for piano solo
- 1971 - People's Artist of the USSR
- 1973 - Best composer's award at the 2nd Tokyo Music Festival for the song "The devil's wheel"
- 1973 - Honorable citizen of two cities in Texas
- 1981 - Order of Lenin
- 1983 (posthumously) - Armenian SSR State prize for the OST for the film "Mechanics of happiness"
A minor planet, 9017 Babadzhanyan, was named after him.[3]
Legacy
- Babajanian on an Armenian stamp
- Arno Babajanian Concert Hall, Abovyan Street, Yerevan
- Babajanian's statue in Yerevan
- Arno Babajanyan's plaque on Mashtots Avenue, Yerevan
References
- Artemy Troitsky. Артемий Троицкий о песнях о Москве [Artemy Troitsky on the songs about Moscow]. Cosmopolitan (in Russian) (September 2010).
- "Arno Babajanian". Retrieved 15 November 2012.
- Schmadel, Lutz D. (2003). Dictionary of Minor Planet Names (5th ed.). New York: Springer Verlag. p. 675. ISBN 3-540-00238-3.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Arno Babajanian (Armenian Wikiquote) |