Tigran Tchoukhajian

Armenian conductor
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroArmenian conductor
A.K.A.Dikran Tchouhadjian
A.K.A.Dikran Tchouhadjian
PlacesArmenia
wasEducator Musician Conductor Composer Music educator
Work fieldAcademia Music
Gender
Male
Birth1 January 1837, Istanbul, Istanbul Province, Turkey
Death23 March 1898İzmir, Izmir Province, Turkey (aged 61 years)
The details

Biography

Tigran Tchoukhajian (Armenian: Տիգրան Չուխաճեան, 1837 – March 11, 1898) was an Armenian composer, conductor, public activist and the founder of the first opera institution in the Ottoman Empire. He is considered the first opera composer in Turkish history.

Biography

Tchoukhajian was born in Constantinople. He studied at composer Gabriel Yeranian's class, then had classes in Milan. Along with other Armenian intellectuals of that period he fought for the development of national culture, organized Armenian musical societies, theatres, schools, papers and free concerts. In his works, Tchoukhajian used the elements of European musical techniques and Armenian folk melodies. He is an author of pieces for piano, songs and romances, chamber and symphonic works, operas (Zemire, 1890; Leblebiji, 1875) etc. He died in Smyrna (now İzmir). Tchouhadjian is buried in the Armenian cemetery of Smyrna.

He created the first Armenian opera, Arshak II (1868, partially staged in 1873), based on the historical figure King Arsaces II (Arshak II). It is the first “Armenian grand opera” with choruses and ballets, and was assembled on November 29, 1945 at the Armenian Opera Theater opera theater in Yerevan. Arshak II is a "gem" of Armenian musical culture and it has continued to grace the repertoire of the Yerevan Opera Theater. In 2001, it was staged at the San Francisco Opera.

Tchoukhajian is also remembered as the composer of what may have been the first original opera in Turkish, Arif'in Hilesi (Arif's Deception), though Donizetti's Belisario had been staged in Turkish translation in 1840.

Selected compositions

Operas

  • Arshak II (1868)
  • Leblebidji Hor-Hor Agha (1875)
  • Zémir (1891)
  • Indiana (1897)
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