Arno
Babajanian was one of the most important composers of Soviet Armenia,
but also was very well-known in the Soviet Union, especially as a
brilliant pianist.
He
was born in Yerevan on January 22, 1921. His childhood friend, composer
Alexander Harutiunian, recalled that at the age of five or six, the
future musician attempted to play the old piano of the kindergarten.
Babajanian himself used to tell about his first meeting with Aram
Khachatourian: “When I was a kindergartener, a man once visited us and
asked us to sing to get to know who had music ear among us. I was
singing and kicking the floor at the same time. Listening to me, that
man said that I should be engaged in music. In the future, I would learn
that he was Aram Khachatourian.”
Afterwards,
in 1929 Babajanian entered the musical school attached to the
Conservatory of Yerevan (now called after Gomidas). In 1930 he wrote his
first composition, the “March of the Pioneers,” which poet Yeghishe
Charents helped publish. In 1947 he graduated from the Gomidas State
Conservatory and the next year he also graduated from the class of piano
of the Tchaikovsky State Conservatory of Moscow. Meanwhile, from
1946-1948 he perfected his studies at the studio attached to the House
of Culture of Armenia in Moscow. He became a remarkable pianist, who was
famous for the interpretations of his own works. Returning to Armenia,
Babajanian taught at the Gomidas State Conservatory from 1950 to 1956.
Afterwards, he settled in Moscow, where he would live and work until the
end of his life.

The
composer was a very eclectic artist, as he worked in various genres:
classical, pop, and jazz. He collaborated with some of the most
celebrated Russian poets at the time, like Evgeny Yevdushenko, Andrei
Voznesensky, and Robert Rozhdestvensky, but he also composed pop and
jazz songs in Armenian, which were very popular at the time. He wrote
the music for William Saroyan’s play “My Heart is in the Highlands,” as
well as for many celebrated Armenian films: “By the Path of the Storm”
(1956), “I Know You Personally” (1957), “The Song of the First Love”
(1958, with Ghazaros Sarian as coauthor), “The Bride from the North”
(1975), “The Mechanics of Happiness” (1982, State Prize of Armenia in
1983), and others.
Arno
Babajanian passed away in Moscow on November 11, 1983. A street in the
Armenian capital remembers him, and his statue has been placed near Swan
Lake, in central Yerevan.