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Armenian Folk Elements in Arno Babajanian's Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor

by

Artur Tumajyan

A Research Paper Presented in Partial Fulfillment


of the Requirements for the Degree
Doctor of Musical Arts

Approved April 2016 by the


Graduate Supervisory Committee:

Katherine McLin, Chair


Danwen Jiang
Ellon Carpenter

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY

May 2016
ABSTRACT

Armenian music has a rich history. It started as independent, monodic song, and

succeeded in keeping its uniqueness from the influences of other countries' musical

traditions. During the nineteenth century the great Armenian musicologist and composer

Komitas started to travel and write down these songs from Armenian villages. Komitas,

who had higher education in Western classical music, was one of the first composers to

harmonize Armenian songs and sacred music using Western classical techniques. This

was a milestone in the development of Armenian music. Arno Babajanian was a Soviet

Armenian composer who, like Komitas, was interested in the combinations of Armenian

folk and Western classical traditions. This document provides a formal and harmonic

analysis of his Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor, written in 1952. By identifying Armenian

folk tunes used in his trio, I will demonstrate that Babajanian achieved interesting results

by inserting exotic Armenian folk melodies, harmonies, and other elements into the

Western classical sonata form. This document also points out the influence of other

composers of the Soviet era on Babajanian's music. By combining Armenian folk and

western classical elements in his Piano Trio, Babajanian created a piece that resonates

with native Armenians and classical music lovers and deserves a place in the violin

repertoire.

i
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Firstly, I would like to express my sincere gratitude to my advisor Dr. Katherine

McLin for the continuous support of my DMA study, for her patience, motivation, and

immense knowledge. I could not have imagined having a better advisor and mentor for

my DMA study.

Besides my advisor, I would like to thank Dr. Ellon Carpenter for her immense

contribution in the analysis section. Her encouragements and insightful comments were

vital for this project.

My sincere thanks also goes to Professor Danwen Jiang for her greatly

appreciated time and support.

Last but not the least, I would like to thank my family: my parents and my

brother, my beautiful wife and her parents for supporting me spiritually throughout this

project.

ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

LIST OF FIGURES ........................................................................................................... iv

LIST OF EXAMPLES ........................................................................................................ v

CHAPTER

1 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................... 1

2 ARNO BABAJANIAN: LIFE AND CAREER ..................................................... 4

3 ARMENIAN FOLK MUSIC ................................................................................ 18

4 ARMENIAN NATIONAL CLASSICAL MUSIC .............................................. 27

5 A PERFORMER’S ANALYSIS OF ARNO BABAJANIAN’S PIANO

TRIO IN F SHARP MINOR: STRUCTURE ....................................................... 32

Movement 1 .................................................................................................... 38

Movement 2 ...................................................................................................... 49

Movement 3 ...................................................................................................... 57

6 CONCLUSION...................................................................................................... 68

REFERENCES ................................................................................................................. 70

iii
LIST OF FIGURES

Figure Page

1. Diagram of the Introduction Theme ................................................................ 32

2. Diagram of the Movement I ............................................................................ 38

3. Diagram of the Movement II ........................................................................... 49

4. Diagram of the Movement III .......................................................................... 57

iv
LIST OF EXAMPLES

Example Page

1. a) Folk tune “Garuna” [It’s Spring] ................................................................. 33

b) Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Movement 1, mm. 1-4 .................................... 34

2. Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 1, mm. 16-20 ...................................... 34

3. a) Babajanian A. Piano trio: Movement 1, mm. 63-64 ................................... 35

b) Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Movement 2, mm. 1-3 ..................................... 35

4. Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 3, mm 71-75........................................ 36

5. Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 1, mm. 83-85 ...................................... 45

6. a) Komitas: Armenian folk song "Antuni" ...................................................... 51

b) Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Movement 2, mm. 1-4 .................................... 51

7. Komitas: Armenian folk song "Antuni" ........................................................... 53

8. a) Komitas: Armenian folk song "Habrban" .................................................... 54

b) Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 2, mm. 31-35 .................................. 54

c) Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 2, mm. 35-37 .................................. 55

d) Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 1, mm. 76-78 .................................. 55

9. a) Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 3, mm. 1-4 ..................................... 61

b) Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 3, mm.71-78 ................................... 62

v
CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION

Armenia has a rich history of traditional music. Beginning as independent,

monodic church music and peasant songs, Armenian music succeeded in maintaining its

unique characteristics despite the later influences of other musical traditions. Most of

early Armenian music was not notated and was improvisational in character. During the

nineteenth century, however, the great Armenian musicologist and composer Soghomon

Soghomonyan (1869-1935), known as Komitas, began collecting and notating folk songs

from rural villages. Having studied at the private conservatory of Professor Richard

Schmidt and at Kaiser Frederick William University, both in Berlin, he was the first

composer to document Armenian songs and sacred music for preservation. Like Komitas,

the Soviet-Era composer Arno Babajanian continued to combine existing Armenian folk

and Western classical traditions in his compositions. Babajanian received rigorous

training in piano performance and compositional techniques at the Moscow

Conservatory. This educational background, as well as his exposure to other Russian and

Soviet composers, had a strong influence on his music. These Western classical

influences, along with his masterful use of Armenian folk elements, helped Babajanian to

create his own compositional style and become one of the most beloved Armenian

composers.

Arno Babajanian (1921-1983) is an important national figure in Armenia but is

less well known outside of the country. The availability of research regarding his life and

legacy is limited and virtually all existing scholarship is written in Russian. In research

for this document, I translated source material from books written by native Armenians

1
about their traditional music as well as from published journal articles, documentaries,

live recordings, and interviews found on Babajanian’s official website. The website is

managed by the composer's son Araik Babajanian, who also created the "Arno

Babajanian Fund," which financially supports the spread of Babajanian's compositions

and legacy.

In this document I will explore the compositional techniques and outside

influences in Babajanian's Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor, written in 1952. This

composition is considered one of Babajanian's major works. By combining traditional

Armenian musical and Western classical elements in his Piano Trio, Babajanian created a

piece that resonates with native Armenians and classical music lovers alike, and deserves

a place in the string repertoire. One of Babajanian's most distinguished admirers of his

work was none other than Dmitri Shostakovich. After hearing the Moscow premiere of

the trio (performed by David Oistrakh on violin, Sviatoslav Knushevitsky on cello, and

the composer himself on the piano), Shostakovich stated: "I am truly impressed by the

performance of this great piece. I do regret that Arno Babajanian does not perform often

enough both his and other composers` works." 1

In exploring the compositional techniques and outside influences on Babajanian’s

Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor, I will review the history of Armenian folk music through

an examination of major milestones and important composers. Additionally, a brief

biography of Arno Babadjanian in included, as well as a discussion of his other major

works and the composers that influenced his compositional language. Finally, I examine

1
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Hayperhrat, 1963), 49.

2
the form of the Piano Trio through a harmonic and structural analysis and will identify

the main elements of Western classical music and Armenian folk music that Babajanian

incorporated in his Piano Trio.

3
CHAPTER 2

ARNO BABAJANIAN: LIFE AND CAREER

Arno Babajanian was born in 1921. His parents noticed his natural musical talent

from an early age. It was during a family vacation to Borjomi, Georgia, that Babajanian

heard a symphony orchestra for the first time in his life, the sounds of which fascinated

him. 2 At the age of seven, he entered an elementary school program specializing in music

study. His parents first signed him up for violin lessons but soon switched him to piano

with Yevgine Khosrovyan. 3 He finished fourth grade by performing Beethoven's Piano

Concerto No. 1 with the orchestra. 4 Young Babajanian also demonstrated an interest in

composing and he completed his first piece, called Pioneer's March, at the age of nine. 5

Thousands of copies of this work were published and labeled as his Op 1 in 1932. 6

Musical life in 1930s Soviet Armenia flourished with concerts of many guest

artists from the Soviet Union. 7 One of the most important events that influenced the

future of Armenian classical music was the opening of the Alexander Spendiarian

Armenian National Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet. The opening of the theatre

created a cultural center, resulting in the increased interest in the creation of new music

and art. The inaugural performance at the theater took place in 1933 and was the

2
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 6.
3
Ibid, 8.
4
Ibid, 10.
5
Ibid, 12.
6
Ibid, 13.
7
Ibid, 14.

4
Armenian premiere of the opera Almast, written by Alexander Spendiarian. The opera

was first performed in Moscow, Russia in 1929 shortly following Spendiarian's death in

1928. The libretto was based on Tmbkaberdi Arumy [The Capture of Tmook Castle], a

poem written by one of the greatest Armenian poet, Hovhannes Tumanyan. 8 It describes

the historic event in the eighteenth century where the Armenian castle Tmook was

captured by Persian Shah Nadir with the help of the Armenian traitor Princess Almast,

who in return wished to be crowned Queen of Persia. Instead, she was thrown in Nadir's

harem, and, after a failed plot to assassinate the shah, was executed at the end of the

opera. The original libretto was in Russian and was translated to Armenian for the 1933

Armenian premiere. 9

The national musical language used in Almast, with its folk rhythmic and melodic

elements, profoundly influenced Babajanian, who considered this opera as one of the

main musical influences of his youth. 10 His attraction towards Armenian folk music was

obvious from this time by his passion for and incorporation of folk music in his own early

compositions. After entering the special program for talented children at Yerevan State

Conservatory in 1928 (at the age of seven), Babajanian, along with other talented young

students, was chosen to study composition with Vardges Talyan, the son of notable

8
Khachatur Pilikian, Opera and the Armenians, (lecture, Center for Armenian Information and Advice--
Hayashen, London, March 3, 2013), 21, accessed March 27, 2016, http://www.abovian.nl/wp-
content/uploads/2013/05/OperaAndArmeniansGBAM.pdf.
9
Ibid, 23.
10
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 15.

5
Armenian ashuger 11 Sheram. 12 Among his students were Alexander Harutyunyan and

Lazar Saryan, who later became important Soviet Armenian composers. 13 These brief

years were critical in the development of Babajanian's compositional style as his teacher

Talyan, being an expert in Armenian folk music, inspired a love and interest towards folk

music in many of his young composition students. 14 One of the requirements in Talyan's

class was the mandatory study of Komitas and Armenian folk song. The legacy of

Komitas fascinated Babajanian and influenced his whole compositional career.

Babajanian enjoyed numerous early successes in his study at Yerevan State

Conservatory. In 1936, he performed his Scherzo and Andante in Rondo Style for a

composition studio recital. It was well received by the audience. 15 In spring of 1937,

Babajanian won the first prize in a piano competition among the students of Yerevan

State Conservatory. Later that same year, Babajanian, along with several other young

composers from Talyan's class, was invited by the Armenian cultural center of Russia to

perform his new compositions in Moscow. 16 Khachaturian, who was one of the

participants and the organizers of the festival, wrote an article in the magazine Sovetskoe

Iskusstvo [Soviet Art] approving Babajanian's use of Armenian folk elements in his early

11
Ashugers were highly trained traveling musicians who traveled throughout the country and performed
songs which were mostly based on themes of love.
12
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 17.
13
Ibid, 17.
14
Susanna Amatuni, Arno Babadjanian: Instrumentalynoe tvorchestvo, Isledovanie (Yerevan, Armenia:
Sovetakan Grokh, 1985), 9.
15
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 17.
16
Ibid, 18.

6
compositions and comparing his piano performance style with Sergey Rachmaninov's. 17

Babajanian loved Moscow and, at Khachaturian's suggestion, decided to continue his

studies there. 18 In the fall of 1937 he entered the Gnessin Music School in Moscow,

where he was placed in the most advanced course in both composition and piano,

studying composition with Vissarion Shebalin and piano performance with Elena

Gnessina. 19 In 1938, Babajanian graduated from the Gnessin Music School and entered

the Moscow Conservatory primarily to focus on his piano studies with Konstantin

Igumnov. Igumnov's influence on Babajanian both as a pianist and a composer was

immeasurable as, according to the composer, Igumnov made him a true musician by

shaping his musical taste and explaining the performing style of each composer's music. 20

According to Babajanian, another influential piece that shaped his musical style with its

deep philosophical thoughts and dense musical language was Tchaikovsky's Symphony

No. 6, which he first heard at the Moscow Conservatory. 21

As he was focused on mastering his piano skills, Babajanian's compositional

career was not prolific during his years at the Moscow Conservatory. 22 The start of

World War II interrupted his education and resulted in his evacuation back to Yerevan in

17
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 19.
18
Ibid.
19
Ibid.
20
Ibid, 23.
21
Ibid, 20.
22
Ibid, 23.

7
1942. 23 Babajanian became actively involved in serving the community by both

conducting the national military orchestra and resuming his composing, with pieces such

as the String Quartet No. 1, Piano Sonata, and Concerto for Piano and Orchestra written

during this time. 24 Babajanian wrote that his Piano Concerto was influenced by

Khachaturian's Piano Concerto as according to him, Khachaturian's composition was the

second most important Armenian piece after the opera Almast, which had initially

sparked his interest in Armenian folk music. 25

The world premiere of Khachaturian's Piano Concerto took place in 1937. It was

performed by Lev Oborin, to whom the work was later dedicated. 26 It soon gained

international popularity. The harmonic language of the concerto was chromatic, with

frequent use of cluster chords and polychords. 27 Khachaturian also used many distinctive

harmonies of triads added with major and minor seconds, which came from Armenian

folk music traditions. 28 Another element that Khachaturian used in the Piano Concerto

was frequent meter changes. 29 This is also a common technique used in Armenian folk

music.

23
Ibid, 25.
24
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 26.
25
Ibid, 30.
26
Joanna Hyeyoung Kim, "Pedagogical Guide to Khachaturian's Piano Concerto in D-flat Major" (DMA
diss., University of Georgia, 2010), 1, accessed on Theses and Dissertations, February 20, 2016.
27
Ibid, 2.
28
Ibid, 3.
29
Ibid, 17.

8
In particular, the early stage of Babajanian's compositional career was strongly

influenced by Aram Khachaturian. 30 This was predictable given that Khachaturian, by

incorporating Komitas's achievements into Western musical traditions, established a

national Armenian musical tradition that appealed to many, including Babajanian. 31

Supervised by Khachaturian in his continued studies in Russia, (1938-1948) Babajanian

admired his mentor’s compositions and achievements and the influence is very noticeable

in the younger man's early opuses. As a talented and successful pianist, Babajanian was

also drawn to the compositional style of Rachmaninov with his expressivity and vocally-

inspired melodic lines. 32 This appreciation was an influence we can see in his Piano Trio,

where the piano writing is dense with extremely romantic melodic lines in all parts. In

Babajanian's Sonata for Violin and Piano, written in 1959, one can observe some

influence of Prokofiev's and Shostakovich's harmonic language and compositional

style. 33 Babajanian, like Shostakovich and other Soviet composers who were living in the

time of war, was also fascinated with themes of the heroic fight. Thus, his later classical

works borrowed some of Shostakovich’s and Prokofiev's extreme mix of emotional

musical language. For example, in his Sonata for Violin and Piano second movement, the

violin plays a beautiful melody accompanied by a short, articulated, and sarcastic-

sounding piano part. In particular, Shostakovich’s influence on Babajanian's life was

30
Susanna Amatuni, Arno Babadjanian: Instrumentalynoe tvorchestvo, Isledovanie (Yerevan, Armenia:
Sovetakan Grokh, 1985), 26.
31
Ibid.
32
Ibid, 10.
33
Ibid, 67.

9
significant. As a colleague and friend, Shostakovich was a strong advocate for

Babajanian’s music and his abilities as a performer and educator, which helped build

Babajanian’s reputation as a major figure in the Soviet Union’s musical life.

Because of his gaining reputation as a promising and talented student, Babajanian

was among a group of young Armenian composers chosen by the Cultural Committee of

Armenia to study in Moscow with composers such as Aram Khachaturian, Genrikh

Litinski, Victor Zukerman, and Nikolai Peyko after the end of the war in 1946. 34

Although he continued taking piano lessons with Igumnov at Moscow Conservatory, his

reputation as a composer developed steadily. 35 In 1947, Babajanian won the second prize

in Prague International Competition with his Prelude, Vagharshapats's Dance and

Polyphonic Sonata. 36 He completed his Violin Concerto in 1949 but it was criticized for

its lack of individuality, sharing too many similarities with Aram Khachaturian's Violin

Concerto. 37 Babajanian took the criticism seriously and a year later, in 1950, wrote one

of his masterpieces; The Heroic Ballad for Piano and Orchestra. 38 Being a pianist

himself, Babajanian was more successful developing his own unique compositional style

in this piece. The Heroic Ballade won a Stalin Prize in the same year. 39 The Stalin Prize

34
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 33, 34.
35
Ibid, 34.
36
Ibid, 36.
37
Ibid, 39.
38
Ibid, 40.
39
Ibid.

10
was the highest award for a single work in science or culture given by the Soviet State. 40

This was the Soviet version of the Nobel Prize and played a crucial role in the promotion

of government sanctioned political and ideological agendas. 41 The Stalin Prize had three

class levels which came with a significant (for that time) prize of 100.000 rubles and

improved working and living conditions. 42 From 1941 to 1953 over 1000 Stalin Prizes

were awarded in the field of art and culture. Among the other Soviet composers who won

the prize were Prokofiev, Shostakovich and Khachaturian.

The award significantly boosted Babajanian's reputation as a composer. One of

the French music journals, Journal Musical Francais, wrote: "We need to pay attention

to this new composer's next compositions." 43 In another article Dmitri Shostakovich

wrote, "Arno Babajanian is a great musician gifted with compositional talent. His piano

performance skills are outstanding. It's necessary to involve him in the pedagogical area,

since with his knowledge of both composition and piano performance he achieved many

things and can achieve more in his own students' future.” 44

After graduating from Moscow State Conservatory in 1948, Babajanian moved

back to Yerevan to teach piano at Yerevan State Conservatory. 45 The conservatory pay

40
Oliver Johnson, "The Stalin Prize and the Soviet Artist," Slavic Review, vol. 70, no. 4 (2011): 819,
accessed on JSTOR, January 15, 2016.
41
Ibid, 820.
42
Ibid, 821.
43
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 46.
44
Ibid, 47.
45
Ibid, 46.

11
was significantly low for his position and Babajanian was upset at not being able to

support his family. 46 His wife Tereza, whom Babajanian met while studying in Moscow

conservatory, was a successful pianist herself and served as the main supporter of the

family through freelance accompanying. 47 Tereza Babajanian's role in her husband's

career and life was significant, as she supported him by copying his music and

advertising his songs and other compositions by sending them abroad. 48

In 1952, Babajanian finished his Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor. The first

performance was in Yerevan, Armenia with H. Vardanyan on violin and A. Matevosyan

on cello, two young and enthusiastic musicians. 49 Babajanian performed the piano part. 50

Later in 1953, it was performed and recorded in Moscow by David Oistrakh on violin and

Sergey Knushevitski on cello with Babajanian once again on the piano part. 51 The

premiere was very successful and the piece was immediately deemed an important work

in the Soviet chamber repertoire. 52 The French music community also commented on the

work. Rene de Juvenele in Les Lettres Françaises magazine wrote: "Recently the

recording of Arno Babajanian's Heroic Ballade in France made the audience talk about

the new unique composer who was worth attention. This attention was proved especially

46
TV-Russia, "Chertovoe koleso Arno Babajaniana" (video), posted November 28, 2012, accessed
February 25, 2015, https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YwF-ppARBck.
47
Ibid.
48
Ibid.
49
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 49.
50
Ibid.
51
Ibid.
52
Ibid.

12
after the audience heard the new great piece, The Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor performed

by Oistrakh, Knushevitski and Babajanian." 53

Despite the high praise received for his teaching, Babajanian in 1956 ended his

professorship and moved back to Moscow to establish his compositional career. 54 The

late 1950s and early 1960s were prolific years for Babajanian's compositional output in

classical genres. 55 Following the trio, Babajanian wrote his next significant chamber

piece, Sonata for Violin and Piano, in 1959. Well received by the audience, the sonata

was dedicated to Shostakovich, for whom Babajanian had great admiration. 56 At this

point in his compositional career, Babajanian became more interested in twentieth-

century compositional techniques such as serialism. This can be seen in his later works

such as the Concerto for Cello and Orchestra and a virtuosic Shesty Kartin (Six Pictures)

for solo piano. 57 Along with his use of serialism, Babajanian continued borrowing

Armenian nationalistic melodies and transforming them in his works. 58 For example, in

the second movement of Shesty Kartin [Six Pictures], Babajanian borrows the melody

53
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 53.
54
TV-Russia, "Chertovoe koleso Arno Babajaniana" (video), posted November 28, 2012, accessed
February 25, 2015, https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YwF-ppARBck.
55
Susanna Amatuni, Arno Babadjanian: Instrumentalynoe tvorchestvo, Isledovanie (Yerevan, Armenia:
Sovetakan Grokh, 1985), 68.
56
Arno Babajanian, Sonata for Violin and Piano (Yerevan, Armenia: HayPetHrat, 1963), 1.
57
Susanna Amatuni, Arno Babadjanian: Instrumentalynoe tvorchestvo, Isledovanie (Yerevan, Armenia:
Sovetakan Grokh, 1985), 80.
58
Ibid, 81.

13
from the Almast opera by Spendiarian 59 In the 1960’s, Babajanian wrote, in cooperation

with fellow Armenian composer Alexander Arutyunyan, another technically challenging

work for two pianos and percussion called Tonakan [Holiday], also based on Armenian

folk elements. In 1976, Babajanian wrote and dedicated his String Quartet No. 3 (his first

two Quartets were written very early in his career and never published) to Shostakovich

after his death. 60 As a sign of respect and admiration, he used Shostakovich's DEsCH

signature in his Quartet followed by his own AB. 61The String Quartet No. 3 is in one

movement and free sonata form. Babajanian also used elements from Armenian

traditional folk funeral harmonies called Voxber [Cries] in the quartet. 62 The String

Quartet No. 3 was the last significant classical work Babajanian wrote. Babajanian's

career as a serious classical music composer ended with his miniature piano piece called

Elegia composed in 1980. The theme is borrowed from the great Armenian ashuger Sayat

Nova's famous song Qani Vur Janim. This melody was one of Aram Khachaturian's most

favorite tunes, and Babajanian dedicated the work to Khachaturian after his death. 63

Later in the same year that he premiered the Piano Trio, Babajanian, along with

several other popular young composers throughout the Soviet countries, left for the

59
Susanna Amatuni, Arno Babadjanian: Instrumentalynoe tvorchestvo, Isledovanie (Yerevan, Armenia:
Sovetakan Grokh, 1985), 82.
60
Ibid, 26.
61
Ibid, 94-96.

62
Ibid, 94.
63
Ibid, 98-99.

14
World Festival of Youth and Students in Bucharest, Romania. 64 This was the first time he

experimented with writing in the popular song genre. His “Bardzr Pahenq Mer

Barekamutyan Droshnery” [Let's Keep Our Flags of Friendship], a song that he wrote for

the festival, became very popular and successful. 65 This inspired Babajanian to continue

writing popular songs, which eventually brought him his greatest fame throughout the

Soviet Union. The first song that earned wide-spread popularity was called “Arajin Siro

Ergy” [The Song of the First Love], written for a movie of the same name. 66

It was during this period that Babajanian began to experience health issues. 67 In

1959 at the age of 32, Babajanian was taken to a hospital where doctors diagnosed him

with sarcoma. 68 This was kept secret from the composer for many years, as was common

practice in Armenian culture. As the illness progressed, the intensive care, expensive

medicine, and doctors’ care from abroad prolonged the life of Babajanian for another 30

years, uncommon for such a deadly illness. 69 Although Babajanian was mobile and

largely out of hospital, the pain and discomfort did not allow him to concentrate on the

creation of large symphonic works. 70 Babajanian instead turned his attention to

64
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 53.
65
Ibid, 54.
66
Ibid, 55.
67
TV-Russia, "Chertovoe koleso Arno Babajaniana" (video), posted November 28, 2012, accessed
February 25, 2015, https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YwF-ppARBck.
68
Ibid.
69
Ibid.
70
Susanna Amatuni, Arno Babadjanian: Instrumentalynoe tvorchestvo, Isledovanie (Yerevan, Armenia:
Sovetakan Grokh, 1985), 98.

15
composing light popular music. As a result, in the period of 1956-58, Babajanian wrote

music for five movies, four of which were Armenian and one Russian. 71 His

collaboration with one of the best lyricists in the Soviet Union of that time, Robert

Rojdestvensky, and a young new rising singer Muslim Magomaev, was very successful,

and they soon gained popularity throughout the whole Soviet Union. 72 Soviets in this

post-Stalin era were attracted to new ideas and styles both in music and fashion. Jazz

festivals and other contemporary musical styles from Western countries were popular

among Soviet people, especially with the younger generation. 73 The popularity of this

new style of music marked the beginning of the era of Russian popular song or Estrada

(from the Spanish word “Estrada,” meaning platform, or stage). The subject of these

songs was usually love or patriotism and the songs were accompanied by large

symphonic orchestra with drums (later with electronic instruments). Famous Estrada

singers of the 1960s included Iosif Kobzon, Lev Leshchenko, and Muslim Magomaev

and Babajanian composed some of the era’s most famous Estrada songs such as“Arajin

Siro Ergy”[The Song of the First Love],“Im Yerevan”[My Yerevan],“Chertovoe

Koleso”[The Devil's Wheel],“Blagodaryu Tebya”[Thank You],“Gisherayin

Serenad”[Nocturnal Serenade] and“Ororocayin [Lullaby], among many others. 74 With his

growing popularity and success, Babajanian was criticized by some of his fellow

71
Seda Tashchian, Arno Babadjanian (Yerevan, Armenia: Haypethrat, 1963), 55.
72
TV-Russia, "Chertovoe koleso Arno Babajaniana" (video), posted November 28, 2012, accessed
February 25, 2015, https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YwF-ppARBck.
73
Ibid.
74
Ibid.

16
composers for writing popular and not serious music. 75 Despite this, Babajanian never

returned to classical music composition. He died in 1983 after a prolonged battle with

sarcoma and is buried in the Tokhmakh Cemetery in Armenia.

75
TV-Russia, "Chertovoe koleso Arno Babajaniana" (video), posted November 28, 2012, accessed
February 25, 2015, https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YwF-ppARBck.

17
CHAPTER 3

ARMENIAN FOLK MUSIC

Dance and song in Armenian culture are inseparable from each other and both

serve as important representations of the culture. Like most cultures, Armenians

developed their own traditions, religion, and rituals, and enriched all of these with music,

particularity with folk songs. From ancient times, Armenian music, both sacred and

secular, was monodic, created without any harmonic accompaniment. Church music in

particular was sung by a single male voice up until recent history. The main reason for

this was the influence of the hierarchical structure of the Church, which rejected the idea

of harmonizing monodic church music by the belief that God is one and so the music

should be one melodic voice. 76 This idea affected the development of folk music as well.

Armenian folk song was almost entirely monophonic.

In the fifth century the Armenian alphabet was created, and the result was a large

increase in the cultural production of music, literature, and national folklore. This led to

the appearance and popularity of gousaners (Armenian troubadours). 77 The troubadour

tradition in Armenia literature developed after Armenia was divided between Safavid

Persia and the Ottoman Empire. 78 These professional musicians and storytellers were

76
Harpik Der Hovhannissian, "Armenian Music: A Cosmopolitan Art" (PhD diss., Florida State
University, 1956), 61, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
77
Cynthia Kay Wolverton, "The Contributions of Armenian Composers to the Clarinet Repertoire" (DMA
diss., University of North Texas, 2002), 5, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
78
Ibid.

18
beloved by Armenians and would perform at events such as weddings, funerals and

festivals. Ashugers came to replace gousaners in the seventeenth century. 79

The Armenian folk song shares many similar characteristics. Its repertory can be

divided into different categories such as work, love, ritual, and dance songs. 80 The main

characteristics of Armenian folk songs are the following: repetitive short motives in

sequences, use of free rhythm that leads to a mixed meter, and speech-like singing. 81 Folk

songs were monophonic and mostly composed in diatonic modes, with the most popular

mode being the Phrygian mode. 82 The interval range of the melodies is usually a fifth or

less. 83 Often one note is used as a tonal center with the tune constructed around it.

Anticipations are the most common embellishments. The most popular form of Armenian

folk song is the variation. 84 There are a variety of meter types used in Armenian folk

music such as simple, compound, or even mixed. 85 One of the unique characteristic

rhythms in Armenian folk music is a 3/8 meter with an accented eight note followed by

quarter note. 86 In fact, it is characteristic in Armenian dance music to accent the short

79
Cynthia Kay Wolverton, "The Contributions of Armenian Composers to the Clarinet Repertoire" (DMA
diss., University of North Texas, 2002), 5, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
80
Ibid.
81
Ibid.
82
Ibid.
83
Ibid.
84
Ibid.
85
Ibid.
86
Harpik Der Hovhannissian, "Armenian Music: A Cosmopolitan Art" (PhD diss., Florida State
University, 1956), 109, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.

19
beat of the triple time meter. Another specific rhythmic figure in Armenian music is the

two sixteenths-eighth note pattern, which also creates the illusion of an accent on the

shorter-value notes due to their placement on the beat. 87 Like most folk music, these

songs and dances were passed orally thorough generations until they were finally written

down by the musicologist Komitas. 88

Komitas was born in Western Anatolia (modern-day Turkey) in 1869. 89 His

mentors noticed he had an exceptional singing voice from childhood. At the age of

twelve, Komitas entered Gevorgyan Jemaran (Jemaran is Armenian word for Lyceum). 90

From his first days of formal study he gained recognition for his great soprano voice and

aptitude in music. 91 During the first two years of school, he earned the respect of his

fellow students and professors for his outstanding passion and ability to learn. 92 Young

Komitas became interested in choir music and was one of the most active and leading

members of the school choir.

Once, while visiting a classmates’ village, he heard an Armenian folk song for the

first time in his life. 93 This event was hugely influential for his later life. Folk music

87
Harpik Der Hovhannissian, "Armenian Music: A Cosmopolitan Art" (PhD diss., Florida State
University, 1956), 109, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
88
Cynthia Kay Wolverton, "The Contributions of Armenian Composers to the Clarinet Repertoire" (DMA
diss., University of North Texas, 2002), 5, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
89
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,. University
of Michigan, 1964), 1, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.
90
Ibid, 8.
91
Ibid.
92
Ibid, 10.
93
Ibid, 17.

20
became his passion. Being at a school with students from diverse backgrounds and

geographic locations, Komitas had many sources at his disposal, and he started to notate

all the songs he could find. 94

Prior to this, only Hambardzum Limonjyan (1768-1839) had attempted to notate

Armenian folk music. 95 Limonjyan was one of the leaders of the reformation movement

to protect Armenian music from the influences of Turkish "oussoulis" and Arabic

"maqam". 96 "Oussoulis" were modes based on quarter tone intervals and were common in

Turkish music. The "maqams" were more common in Persian, Kurdish and Arabic

melodies. 97 Limonjyan studied abroad and was therefore familiar with western music

notation. 98 He realized, however, that, to notate and preserve Armenian music, a new

notation system was needed, since Armenian Church and secular music used smaller

intervals such as quarter tones (this theory was developed by Sirvard Poladyan in her

study Armenian Folk Songs). 99 Therefore, Limonjyan invented a new notational system

for Armenian music. 100 It was similar to the Western diatonic scale, except Limonjyan

94
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,. University
of Michigan, 1964), 17, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.
95
Ibid, 12.
96
Harpik Der Hovhannissian, "Armenian Music: A Cosmopolitan Art" (PhD diss., Florida State
University, 1956), 53, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
97
Ibid, 53.
98
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,. University
of Michigan, 1964), 12, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.
99
Harpik Der Hovhannissian, "Armenian Music: A Cosmopolitan Art" (PhD diss., Florida State
University, 1956), 55, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
100
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,.
University of Michigan, 1964), 12, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.

21
used old Armenian neumes for notating the pitches and added a few neumes to raise or

lower a pitch quarter tone. 101

Komitas soon realized that Limonjyan's music notation system, which he learned

at the Jemaran, was inadequate for harmonizing the folk tunes, and therefore became

interested in learning Western notation. 102 This desire became more obvious when

Chrostopher Kara-Murza, an Armenian composer who had received Western musical

training at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory and recently returned to Armenia, entered

the school as a professor of Choir and Western Notation. 103 Kara-Murza's high

expectations for musical reform, including advocating for dispensing with Limonjyan's

inadequate notation system and incorporating Western notation in order to harmonize

folk and church melodies, were met negatively by the church. 104 Kara-Murza was fired

after only one year of teaching at the Jemaran despite his popularity among students and

their effort to advocate for his continued employment. 105 Komitas, being the most

advanced and successful student, was offered the suddenly vacant position of Choral

Director. 106 He took the position with hesitation, as he realized it would be hard to gain

respect from students who were still upset with Kara-Murza's dismissal. Additionally, he

101
Harpik Der Hovhannissian, "Armenian Music: A Cosmopolitan Art" (PhD diss., Florida State
University, 1956), 55, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
102
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,.
University of Michigan, 1964), 18, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.
103
Ibid, 19.
104
Ibid, 19-20.
105
Ibid, 20.
106
Ibid, 23.

22
knew that the Catholicos (an Armenian word for the chief bishop of the Armenian

Apostolic Church) wanted him to go back to non-western approach and Limonjyan's

system of notations. 107 None of these however concerned him from continuing his

experiments of harmonizing Armenian folk songs for four-voiced choir and performing

them in Jemaran. Catholicos Khrimian, who was fond of Komitas and also is considered

as one of the most open minded leaders in the history of Armenian church, soon accepted

Komitas' new westernized musical views and later even approved his departure to study

in Berlin to further his Western music education. 108 The students soon accepted him as a

teacher, acknowledging his passion towards music. 109 Komitas concentrated on teaching

monodic folk music.

During this period, Komitas continued collecting folk music. 110 He frequently

traveled to villages to notate them personally. His presence created challenges at times as

the villagers would become shy and self-conscious after realizing that they were being

observed. To fight this phenomenon, Komitas would often be forced to observe and

notate the singers from a different room or from behind a wall. This shyness was

especially true with young girls, who were not encouraged to interact with strangers of

the opposite sex due to the conservative religious views of the time. 111

107
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,.
University of Michigan, 1964), 39, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.
108
Ibid.
109
Ibid, 28.
110
Ibid, 30.
111
Ibid, 61.

23
In 1895, Komitas began experimenting with harmonizing the folk songs he had

collected. 112 The same year he published his first anthology of folk songs, which included

a variety of genres such as lullabies, work songs, bridal songs, and dance songs. Komitas

studied arranging with Makar Yekmalyan, who taught him Western music theory and

prepared him to study in a European conservatory. 113 These lessons were highly

influential for the future compositional career of Komitas. They also served as the

impetus for him to finally accomplish his dream of studying abroad. 114

In 1896, Komitas, following the advice of famous violinist Joachim, traveled to

Berlin and entered Richard Schmidt's Conservatory and later the Friedrick Wilhelm

University. 115 While studying, Komitas became a member of the International Music

Society and actively lectured about and championed Armenian music. 116 In 1899, after

graduating from both institutions, Komitas returned to Armenia to continue his work

collecting, arranging, and performing Armenian folk songs. 117 His concert tours to

multiple European capitals in 1907, including Paris, brought widespread recognition to

Armenian music. 118

112
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,.
University of Michigan, 1964), 58, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.
113
Ibid, 36.
114
Ibid.
115
Ibid, 41.
116
Ibid, 52.
117
Ibid, 56.
118
Ibid, 60.

24
In 1910, Komitas moved to Constantinople, which at that point was the largest

center of Armenian culture. 119 By directing choirs and lecturing about Armenian music,

he tried to stop the mixture of Armenian musical heritage with Arab and Turkish

music. 120 In 1913, Komitas finished his own version of the Divine Liturgy. 121 Although

Yekmalyan’s version of the Divine Liturgy, written in the more traditional 3-voice male

arrangement, remains the most popular and acceped in Armenian churches today,

Komitas’s version is preferred among Armenians in the United States and other places

where Western music traditions are present. 122 Komitas' version is acknowledged as the

most scholarly written version. It is written for four-voice male choir in contrapuntal style

and was first published in Paris in 1933. 123

After the end of Russo-Turkish war in 1868, an agreement was reached by the

Congress of Berlin by which the Russian troops would leave Turkey and the Christian

minorities, including Armenians, would receive protection from Muslims by the Turkish

government. 124 Shortly after this, the newly-formed so-called "Ittihad Society" or Young

Turks, who opposed Sultan Abdul Hamid's already shaky "protection" program, started

mass massacres and forced exiles of the Christian population, resulting in an Armenian

119
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,.
University of Michigan, 1964), 152, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.
120
Ibid, 153
121
Ibid, 194.
122
Ibid, 195.
123
Harpik Der Hovhannissian, "Armenian Music: A Cosmopolitan Art" (PhD diss., Florida State
University, 1956), 65, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
124
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,.
University of Michigan, 1964), 220, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.

25
Genocide that took more than 1.5 million Armenian lives. 125 In 1915, Komitas, along

with other Armenian scholars, was arrested in Constantinople and exiled to Changiri,

Anatolia. With the help of Henry Morgenthau, the American ambassador to Turkey (at

that time the Ottoman Empire), Komitas was able to return to Constantinople from exile

in 1919 but was so profoundly affected from the scenes of massacres leading to his exile

that he spent the rest of his life in a mental hospital in Paris, where he died in 1935. 126

Komitas' work serves as an important milestone in the creation of a national

Armenian music identity. His research, harmonization of folk songs, and promotion of

Armenian music through performances and concert tours paved the way for future

generations of composers such as Alexander Spendiarian, Aram Khachaturian, and Arno

Babajanian to create unique but distinctly Armenian voices through the incorporation of

national folk music in a Western classical music context.

125
Harry Begian, "Gomidas Vartabed: His Life and Importance to Armenian Music" (Ed.D diss,.
University of Michigan, 1964), 220-221, accessed on ProQuest, March 27, 2016.
126
Edward Gulbekian, Armenian Sacred Music and Folk Music (England: Curzon Press, 1998), 19.

26
CHAPTER 4

ARMENIAN NATIONAL CLASSICAL MUSIC

Armenia was under constant aggression by Persians and the Ottoman Empire until

the end of World War I. After a short period of independence in 1921, Armenia then

became part of the Soviet Union in 1922. This brief brush with independence, however,

inspired a surge in the country's cultural output. 127 This was particularly visible in the rise

of nationalistic music. Prior to 1921, the long absence of national independence did not

allow the development of a nationalistic music school, and the musical culture in

Armenia was largely promoted by gousaners and ashugers. After Armenia entered the

Soviet Union in 1922, there was more freedom and less discrimination towards

Armenians. Prior to this, Armenians had to pay double taxes and lived in fear of the

abusive Ottoman Empire government. Once they entered the Soviet Union, however, they

finally had a chance to explore their cultural heritage, which allowed for the development

of a national music school. The composers of this early Armenian nationalistic movement

were the first to incorporate elements from traditional folk music with Western classical

music traditions. One of the first composers who combined the study of Komitas, the

traditions of ashugers, and Western music was Alexander Spendiarian.

Born in 1871 in Crimea, Alexander Spendiarian, along with Komitas, is

considered a founder of Armenian national music of the twentieth century. 128 After

finishing a law degree at Moscow State University, Spendiarian changed career paths and

127
Cynthia Kay Wolverton, "The Contributionsg of Armenian Composers to the Clarinet Repertoire"
(DMA diss., University of North Texas, 2002), 8, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
128
Svetlana Sarkisyan, "Spendiaryan, Aleksandr" Oxford Music Online, accessed March 27, 2016.

27
moved to Saint Petersburg in 1896 to study composition with Rimsky Korsakov. 129 Due

to his Russian training and studies with Rimsky Korsakov, Spendiarian’s orchestral

writing was heavily influenced by Russian national music. 130 His most popular

symphonic works, such as Three Palm Trees, Krimskie Eskizi, Etyud na Yevreiskie Temi,

and Yerivanskie Etyudi, show the influence of Rimsky Korsakov's interest in oriental and

nationalistic music traditions. 131

In Almast, Spendiarian composed the first Armenian national opera. 132

Spendiarian uses Armenian and Persian national folk elements along with a complex

leitmotif system, which resulted in a rich symphonic style of writing. 133 The opera was

hugely popular and the theater that was built and opened for the premiere of Almast in

1933 is named after Spendiarian. 134 He died in 1928, leaving a legacy of new national

music that would be studied and continued by future generations of composers.

Aram Ilyich Khachaturian's role in continuing the development of National

Armenian Classical music was remarkable. He composed the first Armenian classical

symphony that combined traditional Armenian folk and Western Classical elements, his

Symphony No.1 in E minor. Other popular works, such as his Violin Concerto in D minor

and Piano Concerto in Db Major, were important pieces that influenced many Soviet and

129
Svetlana Sarkisyan, "Spendiaryan, Aleksandr" Oxford Music Online, accessed March 27, 2016.
130
Ibid.
131
Ibid.
132
Ibid.
133
Ibid.
134
Ibid.

28
Armenian composers, including Arno Babajanian. In addition to being one of the most

famous Armenian composers, Khachaturian is often mentioned as one of the most

important Soviet composers of the twentieth century, along with Dmitri Shostakovich and

Sergei Prokofiev. 135

Aram Khachaturian was born in 1903 in Tbilisi, Georgia. After moving to

Moscow in 1921, he studied geology at the Moscow University and cello at the Gnessin

Music School. 136 He soon transferred his interest to composition studies, however. 137

Even his earliest attempts at composition were a success. Dance, written in 1926 for

violin and piano, and Poem for piano from 1927, were published. In his youth,

Khachaturian was inspired by the music of Ravel and Debussy and his earlier

compositions incorporated elements of French impressionistic music. These elements

later disappeared however, as his attraction to native folk music heritage grew. 138 Despite

living far from his native country, Khachaturian learned about Armenia and its culture

with regular visits to the Armenian Cultural house in Moscow, where he interacted with

many representatives of Armenian intelligentsia. 139 Most of Khachaturian's early works

were performed here, and were later published with the financial aid of the Armenian

135
Sima Mannick, "Aram Khachaturian and the Soviet Creative Artist" (MM thesis, University of
Southern California, 1947) 7, accessed on ProQuest, February 21, 2016.
136
Svetlana Sarkisyan, "Aram Khachaturian," Oxford Music Online, accessed March 27, 2016.
137
Ibid.
138
Sima Mannick, "Aram Khachaturian and the Soviet Creative Artist" (MM thesis, University of
Southern California, 1947) 73, accessed on ProQuest, February 21, 2016.
139
Ibid.

29
community. 140 Khachaturian continued composition at the Moscow State Conservatory

in 1929-1934 with Nikolai Myaskovsky. During this time, he wrote his Military Marches

Nos. 1 and 2, which received wide acclaim, and his Trio for Clarinet, Violin and Piano.

The trio in particular was accepted with enthusiasm and is considered one of

Khachaturian's first important compositions. Khachaturian graduated from the Moscow

Conservatory in 1934 with his First Symphony as a graduation piece. The Symphony No.

1 was dedicated to the 15th anniversary of Soviet Armenia. The folk melodies and

improvisational style borrowed from Komitas and Djivani (a famous Armenian ashuger,

1846-1909), as well as a continuation of the Russian symphonic traditions of Borodin,

whom Khachaturian admired greatly, made this work appealing with its freshness of

harmonic and rhythmic language. 141 Khachaturian's next major symphonic work was his

Piano Concerto in Db Major. In 1940, Khachaturian completed his Violin Concerto in D

Minor. The violin part was written based on a collaboration with the leading violinist of

the period, David Oistrakh, to whom the concerto was later dedicated. The premiere was

a triumph and won a Stalin Prize. Khachaturian's other major pieces are his Gayane and

Spartacus ballets and the Symphony No. 2, written in 1943. The symphony is known by

its nickname of “Bell” due to the significant use of a bell in the percussion section. The

Symphony No.2 is also one of many classical works of the time to follow a war theme,

portraying the struggles of the people, their hatred towards the enemy, and the sorrow for

140
Sima Mannick, "Aram Khachaturian and the Soviet Creative Artist" (MM thesis, University of
Southern California, 1947) 73, accessed on ProQuest, February 21, 2016.

141
Ibid, 92.
30
lives lost. It is similar to Shostakovich's Symphony No. 7, Leningrad, for its philosophical

views and ideas.

Khachaturian's music is diverse in genres. His most popular works are mostly

symphonic, such as his instrumental concertos, symphonies, and ballet music. He was the

first composer in the country who wrote music for movies with sound. 142 Khachaturian

was also the first composer who succeeded in introducing Armenian folk music to a wide

international audience. The driving rhythmical style and metric diversity in his music

come from the Armenian ashugher tradition. This is especially apparent in his Gayane

and Spartacus ballets. The instrumental concertos also demonstrate the influence of

virtuosic ashughers in the technical demands Khachaturian places on the soloists. The

harmonic language in Khachaturian's music is full of intervals such as minor seconds,

perfect fours and fifths, which are the basis of the tuning system for an Armenian folk

instrument called "Saz". Overall, he embedded a folkloristic overtone to his works

through use of those specific harmonies and imitation of folk instruments.

Khachaturian is one of the first and main figures of the twentieth century to blend

the musical traditions of western and eastern cultures. Arno Babajanian, along with his

other contemporary Armenian composer colleagues, was highly influenced and even in

some ways overshadowed by Khachaturian's influence. As Babajanian matured, however,

he developed his own distinctive musical style that set him apart from Khachaturian and

other Armenian composers. This will be explored in the following chapter through an

analysis of his Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor.

142
Svetlana Sarkisyan, "Aram Khachaturian," Oxford Music Online, accessed March 27, 2016

31
CHAPTER 5

A PERFORMER’S ANALYSIS OF ARNO BABAJANIAN’S PIANO TRIO IN F-

SHARP MINOR: STRUCTURE

Babajanian wrote his Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor in 1952. The work is in three

contrasting movements. The first movement, Largo-Allegro Espressivo, and the third

movement, Allegro Vivace, are both in F# minor and in sonata form. The slow second

movement, Andante, is in the tritone-related key of C Major and is ternary in form. Two

special features of this work are its cyclic theme, first presented in the introduction to the

first movement and appearing throughout the work, and Babajanian’s adaptation of

Armenian folk elements. These elements most notably include the incorporation of

Armenian folk tunes, the instrumental adaptation of an Armenian singing motive, and the

use of mixed modes and other harmonic practices closely aligned with Armenian folk

music. Babajanian combines these cyclic and folk elements with traditional forms of

Western music, thus creating a distinctive approach to the melding of different traditions.

1st movement: 2nd movement: 3rd movement:


mm. 1-15: d#m mm. 51-55: ebm (Recapitulation before Coda)
1-4: D#m 246-257
5-8: D#m 246-248: CM-E dim.
8-11: Cm-DM 249-253: Eb-E-D-C#
12-15: DMm 254-257: Bm (=12=15)

(Recapitulation)
mm. 139-147: Gm
139-143: Gm-DM
144-147: Dm

(Coda)
mm. 213-219: f#m

Figure 1. Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Introduction theme in all three movements.


32
The cyclic introduction theme of the Trio is the core of the piece. Based on an

Armenian folk song, “Garuna” [It’s Spring], it provides the basic thematic material for

virtually all subsequent melodies in the Trio. The theme’s statements are also of

structural importance in all three movements, appearing five different times, each usually

in a different key. In the first movement, the introduction reappears at the beginning of

the recapitulation and again at the very end of the movement, as part of the coda. In the

ternary second movement, it occurs briefly before the return of the initial material (A’

section). In the third movement, it appears in the truncated recapitulation instead of the

second and closing themes, followed by a brief coda. However, the only times it appears

in F# minor, the original key of the trio, is the end of the first movement and in the third

movement before the coda. Example 1 provides the folk tune itself and Babajanian’s

rendition in the first four measures of the first movement.

a)

Example 1. a) Folk tune “Garuna” [It is Spring] 143

143
Komitas. Hay Qnar: Havaqacu Gekhchuk Yergeri [Armenian Lyre: Compilation of Armenian Peasant
Songs]. Paris, 1906.

33
b)

Example 1. b) Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Movement 1, mm. 1-4 144

Babajanian utilizes the elements of the folk tune through motivic borrowing and

transformation. For example, the primary theme of the first movement contains the

slightly altered beginning motive of the introduction theme (motive “a”) as well as the

variations of the motive “b”. Example 2 shows the first appearance of the primary theme

in measure 16.

Example 2. Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 1, mm. 16-20. 145

144
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953.

145
Ibid.
34
There are many similarities in the constructions of the themes. The “a” and “b”

motives of the introduction theme are commonly used by Babajanian throughout the

piece. The motive “a” is a gap-fill pattern beginning on tonic, and motive “b” is a turn

figure (upper and/or lower neighbor notes) on tonic (see Example 1) The “b” motive

especially appears in many themes as shown in Example 3.

a)

Example 3. a) Babajanian A. Piano trio: Movement 1, mm. 63-64. 146

b)

Example 3. b) Babajanian A. Piano trio: Movement 2, mm. 1-3. 147

146
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953.
147
Ibid.
35
Babajanian’s use of the neighboring motive in the last example will be discussed

in further detail later in the chapter as it is another common element in Armenian folk

music traditions. All the varieties of this motive are different in rhythm and structure but

are related to the “b” motive from the introduction theme, which again serves to unify the

piece.

Another character that Babajanian borrows from the Armenian folk heritage may

be seen in the third movement's secondary theme. This melody is related to the main

theme, just moved to different scale degrees and inverted. Instead of the minor third

moving from tonic to scale degree b3, here it moves from scale degree 3 to 5. He

abandons the overall melodic structure of the tune, instead using motivic variation within

its original harmonic language and mode. The secondary theme of the third movement

thus is in harmonic major with lowered sixth and raised seventh degrees, as shown in

Example 4.

Example 4. Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 3, mm 71-75. 148

Babajanian's music in general is very melodic. Even later in his career when he

experimented with 12-tone compositional technique in works such as his String Quartet

No. 3, his melodies retain a close connection with Armenian folk song. One of the

reasons for this was his intensive study of Komitas and Armenian music in his early

148
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953.
36
school years. The themes of the trio are no exception. All of the themes in the piece, with

the exception of the third movement's primary theme, have a melodramatic and emotional

feel to them. The ends of all the themes except the primary theme of the third movement

are similarly constructed with descending last notes. This suggests an Armenian folk

technique called "One Breath," in which the singer, for convenience purposes, starts from

a higher pitch and gradually descends to lower pitches as they run out of breath. I will

discuss this with more details and examples later in the chapter.

Babajanian's trio is rich with Armenian folk harmonies. He achieves this by either

incorporating a tune from traditional folk song or through use of the harmonic major-

minor modal language found in Armenian folk music. In general, the trio's harmonic

language is chromatic, with traditional nineteenth-century practices such as the minor-

third cycle, omnibus, and augmented-sixth chords and their irregular resolutions.

Particular practices from the twentieth century include the shared-third phenomenon and

the octatonic mode. The diagram in Figure 1 shows the diversity of the keys that appear

in first fifteen measures of the introduction alone, where the key modulates four times

starting in D# minor and finishing in B minor.

Although Babajanian uses the sonata form from western music traditions, he does

not directly follow the general practices of the key relations of the themes or the

restatement of themes. For example, the first movement's primary and secondary themes

are not in the close relative key but rather in more distant relationships, moving from F#

minor to F Major. Another example of his departure from traditional sonata form

conventions can be seen in the third movement where Babajanian skips the secondary

and closing themes and restates the introduction theme instead.

37
Movement I

Introduction: mm. 1-15


1-4: D#m
5-8: D#m
8-11: Cm-DM
12-15: DMm
15 15

Exposition: mm. 16-82


P (mm. 16-30) T (mm. 31-47) S (mm. 48-69) K (mm. 70-82)
F#m AM-F#m-GbM FM-AbM GbM-C#m
16-20: F#m-Bm 31-36: AM-BbM 48-52: FM 70-77:GbM-C#m
21-24: f#m-DM 37-39: F#m-CM 53-56: FM. 78-82: C#m
25-28: f#m 40-41: F#m 57-60: FM
29-30: Em-BbM 42-47: F#m 61-65: AbM.
66-69: AbM
15 17 22 13

Development: mm. 83-138


I (mm. 83-109) II (mm. 110-129) Retransition (mm. 130-138)
83-86: EM 110-113: dDbM-Dm 130-134: GM-D#M
87-92: AM-FM 114-118: Dm-Ebm 135-138: Dm-AbM-DbM
93-109: FM-FBM 119-120: em
121-125: Em-Fm
124-129: CM
27 20 9 =56

Recapitulation: mm. 139-189


Intro: mm. 139-147
139-143: Gm-DM
144-147: Dm
9 =9

P (mm. 148-162) T (mm. 163-168) S (mm. 169-177) K (mm. 178-189)


139-162=16-30: 163-168: f#m 169-177=48-56: F#M 178-189=70-82: EM-GM-DM
15 6 9 12 =42

Coda (mm. 190-219)


190-193: Cm
194-197: Am
198-201: F#m
202-212: F#m
213-219: F#m
30 =30

Figure 2: Babajanian, A. Piano trio: Diagram of the Movement 1.


38
The first movement, in sonata form, is relatively proportionate with the

introduction plus the exposition, 82 measures, is roughly equal to the recapitulation and

coda, 81 measures. The development is shorter at 56 measures. Without the 15 measure

introduction theme in the beginning (and its 14 measure reappearance in the

recapitulation of the first movement, divided between the beginning and the end), the

three sections are slightly more equal: 67: 56: 67. However, without the coda of 30

measures, the recapitulation is somewhat shorter than the exposition at 51 mm. (see

Figure 2.)

The movement begins with an introduction theme in D# minor, which is repeated

both in the middle (G minor) and the end of the movement (F# minor). The first

appearance of the theme, 15 measures, is the longest of any of the theme’s restatements

in this or in other movements. It is first stated by the violin and cello in unison,

accompanied by piano with sustained chords, modulating to B minor when the cello takes

over the melody alone. The subsequent appearances of the introduction theme in the first

movement are half as long in duration, lasting only nine and six measures, respectively.

As mentioned earlier, Babajanian does not follow the traditional key relationship

for sonata form themes. For example, the primary theme in the first movement is in F#

minor, which means that the secondary theme should be either in the relative major or at

least in a closely related tonality. However, the secondary theme's key in the first

movement is in F Major. The relationship between these two keys is called the shared or

common third phenomenon, in which the two keys share the same third scale-degree

pitch, in this case, the pitch A. This technique is frequently seen in Russian twentieth-

century music as well as in the music of Bela Bartok.

39
Exposition.

As we see from the diagram, the primary theme cadences in seven different keys:

four minor and three major. One of the major keys is in fact the relative major of F#

minor, A Major, which is one of the few times Babajanian follows traditional sonata form

key relations. The whole secondary theme is in major keys: F Major modulating to Ab

Major at the end of the section. The closing theme, however, consists of only minor keys

(C#, E, G#, A).

Primary theme

As with many of the smaller sections in this work, the primary theme is in two

parts; the main theme and its varied sequence, followed by a slightly longer theme that

leads to the transition. As mentioned earlier, the primary theme is directly related to the

introduction theme and uses both the gap-fill motive “a” and the turn-figure “b.” It is first

stated by the cello in measures 16-20 and cadences in B minor, the subdominant of the F#

minor. In mm. 21-24, the violin repeats an altered version of the theme harmonized by

tonalities a major third below what would be expected based on the pitches of the theme:

G Major instead of B minor, and ending in D Major instead of F# minor. In measures 25-

28, a melody appears in the piano part beginning on the third scale degree of F# minor

(and harmonized by its triad, A minor) that initially utilizes the turn figure (motive “b”)

with whole steps instead of half steps. The entire melody could be in D harmonic Major,

starting on the dominant pitch, reaching down to the second scale degree, then up to the

tonic pitch and down through the flat six scale degree to the third scale degree, F#, our

original tonic. Babajanian also harmonizes this melody mostly with harmonies a minor

40
third apart: A, C, Eb, F#. This melody is then continued in the violin part for two

measures mm. 29-30), extending the third G to E back up to A and then moving down

through F natural to end on C# and a repeat of measure 16, harmonized by A Major and

G minor triads. This begins the transition.

Transition

The transition encompasses mm. 31-48. It consists of short bursts of the first two

measures of the primary theme interrupted by triadic outlines in most parts. Babajanian

returns to F# minor and the opening measures of the original theme in mm. 37, 40, and

42. This last statement is continued by emphasis on the pitches F# and G in the cello,

accompanied by the appropriate triads of F# minor and G minor. An omnibus portion

(mm. 45-46, C7-A7) leads to triads Eb and Gb (again the minor third cycle C-Eb-Gb-A),

and the Gb minor triad is followed immediately by an F Major triad, which signals the

beginning of the secondary theme. This half-step motion is an important characteristic of

this piece, and occurs either between shared-third chords (for example Eb minor to D

Major in m. 11, or E minor to Eb Major in m. 19), or between two triads a half-step apart

in all three notes, i.e., major to major or minor to minor, as here (Gb Major to F Major, a

Neapolitan progression). Babajanian uses this chord juxtaposition quite freely, either

within a phrase or at a cadence.

Secondary theme

The section encompassing the secondary theme, mm. 48-69, is in two parts, with

the second part (mm. 61-69) a restatement of the first part (mm. 48-60) in a different key

41
and instrumentation. In this theme, Babajanian often uses the lowered sixth and seventh

degrees of the scale to mix the major and natural minor's harmonies. This theme is

introduced solely in the piano part, and is the second longest rest written for the two

string parts in the entire piece. (The longest rest is in the second movement cello part

where the first violin plays the theme in A section and the cello rests for 15 mm.). The

"legatissimo" indication and the chordal outline with near constant triplets in the piano

suggest the contrasting character change. In this section the influence of Rachmaninov's

writing is noticeable. Babajanian uses a wide octave range in the left-hand

accompaniment, and incorporates harmonies from the romantic era such as augmented-

sixth chords. Seen in m. 57 and 59, the first augmented-sixth chord leads to tonic but the

second resolves appropriately to the dominant triad in the half cadence in m. 60.

Babajanian also uses Neapolitan triads, which often lead directly to tonic as at the

beginning of this section.

The theme itself begins in F Major, which shares the third, pitch A, with F#

minor, and is only four measures long, mm. 48-51. A one-measure link (m. 52) leads to a

varied repeat, mm. 53-56. Another four-measure (2+2) phrase extends the cadence of the

theme to conclude on the dominant of F Major in m. 60. This melody begins with a

commanding leap from tonic to dominant, followed by minor-third patterns in both

directions from the dominant, first a gap-fill pattern to Eb and back to C, then a linear

descent from C to A and back. This minor third expansion is derived from the “a” motive

of the Introduction theme. In the varied repeat, the leap from tonic to dominant is filled

in, and neighbor tones (motive “b”) and minor thirds enhance both this filling-in and the

subsequent minor third expansion from the dominant. After this cadenza-like statement of

42
the secondary theme by the piano, the theme is now restated in the violin (accompanied

by the cello and piano) in Ab Major and a much higher register, with more leaps.

Babajanian repeats only mm. 48-56, eliminating the half cadence, and moves directly to

the closing theme. The piano's accompaniment in this section is even wider in register,

reaching over three octaves. The register dramatically drops down in the violin (three

octaves) at the end of the secondary theme with big interval leaps for the closing theme.

The dynamic of the whole secondary theme is soft. The piano starts the theme indicated

mp" and the violin continues in triple piano accompanied by both cello and piano marked

again as a triple piano. This suggests a very intimate character and adds a melancholic

feeling to the section. The use of only major keys in the section also supports this.

Closing Theme

The closing section in the exposition of the trio is short (mm. 70-82) but very

dramatic. The initial theme is only one measure long with a varied repeat, again based on

motive “a” of the Introduction theme, with embellishments. Babajanian places it first in

the piano (mm. 70-71), then repeats it in octaves in both violin and cello (mm. 72-73).

Another two-measure unit played in octaves by the strings, which is also based on the “a”

motive, is repeated (mm. 74-77). An extended cadential section concentrates on C# minor

in the harmony and the pitch E in the upper voices. The harmonies in this section

progress by thirds, tritones, or seconds, never fourths or fifths. However, the first chord

in m. 70 is Gb Major and the final chord is C# minor (enharmonically Db), so again a sort

of tonic-dominant relationship is seen. However, the C# minor ending dissolves into a

43
diminished-seventh chord in m. 82 (A#-C#-E-G), which prepares for the E-Major triad of

the beginning of the development section.

The section starts in pianissimo that gradually crescendos with ascending motion

in the violin and cello played in unison. Overall, the dynamics of the section can be

described as a big hairpin starting from pianissimo, gradually reaching forte and, through

a diminuendo returning back to pianissimo to prepare for the development section.

Babajanian maintains the use of the continuous motion of the triplet figure throughout the

secondary theme as a motor to create dramatic tension along with the crescendo. This

motor motion smoothly transfers from one instrument to another, keeping the tension.

The theme itself incorporates both regular duple and added triplet rhythms, and as each

instrument plays this material, at least one of the other instruments plays a triple or duple

opposing rhythm. Again, Babajanian emphasizes the lowered six and raised seventh scale

degrees in the descending passages.

Development

The development, mm. 83-128, is the most complex and chromatic section of the

piece. It is divided into two main sections; the first section (mm. 83-109) is based on the

primary theme and the second section (mm. 110-129) on the secondary theme. Each of

these sections is further divided within itself by sequential repetition of its main motive.

The main key areas are E Major and F Major for portions of the first part and D minor

and E minor for portions of the second part.

In the first section, Babajanian develops the “a” motive from the introduction

theme as expressed in the primary theme. See Example 5.

44
Example 5. Babajanian, A. Piano trio: Movement 1, mm. 83-85. 149

The first half of this first section, mm. 83-92, is repeated sequentially in mm. 93-

109. In both segments, the “a” motive appears first in the piano part with answering

flourishes in the violin and cello parts in octaves or sixths. The first half starts in E Major

while its sequenced repetition begins in F Major. The “a” motive appears here beginning

on the third scale degree, G# in the first instance, and A in the second, which differs from

the tonic pitch opening of the primary theme. The first appearance is punctuated further

by the use of the omnibus (mm. 84-86), which ends on a C# dominant ninth chord (m.

86). A small-scale varied repetition in mm. 87-92, with the theme now in the strings,

begins in A Major (theme beginning on C#) but returns to the C#9 chord (m. 88). A

second small variation in C Major (theme on E) initiates four bars emphasizing either C

Major or its Neapolitan Db (C#). The final C seventh chord acts as an altered dominant

leading to the following statement of the “a” motive in F Major. In retrospect, the

emphasis on the C#9 chord in mm. 86 and 88, followed by the C7 in mm. 89 and 91,

creates an elongated augmented-sixth chord to the dominant motion in preparation for the

key of F Major that begins the second half.

149
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953.
45
This second half repeats most of the first (beginning a half-step higher, but

continuing a step lower): Measures 93-96 equal mm. 83-86; mm. 97-101 equal 89-92,

and mm. 102-104 equal a varied repeat of mm. 89-92. The final phrase, mm. 105-109,

begins with a two-measure unit with motive “a” followed by motive “b” with an

arpeggiated descending tag; a repeat of these two measures plus a one-bar repeat of the

“b” motive ends this half. Initially, the “b” motive plus arpeggio begins with the turn Ab-

Gb-Ab, and the following arpeggio follows the F minor triad (mm. 106 and 108).

Babajanian accommodates the arpeggio in m. 109 for Fb, and then ultimately Db in mm.

110-112. Arpeggiated or held chords accompany these occurrences. With these measures

he creates the beginning of the transition from the first section to the second section of

the development, mm. 110-130.

The “b” motive in mm. 110-112 is altered so that it resembles the motive in the

violin first heard in m. 91 (over the final C7 at the end of the first half). Essentially the

first note of the lower-neighbor figure Ab-Gb-Ab is dropped, with the whole step

shortened to a half step, so the motive begins with G-Ab. The remaining motive

emphasizes Db and repeats the half-step at the bottom of the arpeggio. Further, it is

expressed in two eighth-note triplets, a pattern that continues as accompaniment for the

development of the second theme which begins in m. 114. The emphasis of Db in the

harmony is changed to a Bb7 in m. 113, which acts as a German augmented-sixth to the

following chord D minor 6/4 in m. 114.

The first three measures of the secondary theme are heard in the piano part, with

the strings playing the accompanying triplet figure. The next two measures, mm. 117-

118, are almost completely arpeggios in all parts and lead to a repeat of mm. 110-118

46
first a half step, then a step lower. The C half-diminished seventh chord in m. 119 acts as

an altered augmented-sixth chord leading to a BM 4/2 in m. 120, which resolves to E6 in

m. 121 with a repeat of the same material from m. 114 and following, now in the key of E

minor. To bring this section to a close Babajanian again uses the omnibus pattern in C,

ending with an F7, which as a German augmented-sixth chord would typically lead to A

Major. However, Babajanian substitutes Ab, which leads to a G Major dominant chord of

C Major in m. 130 and the “piu mosso” section that serves as the retransition section.

This retransition, with a newly introduced rhythm of two rapid sixteenth notes and an

eighth-note rest in the strings that is played against dotted rhythms or quarter-note triplets

in the piano part, drives towards the recapitulation. A persistent ascending motion and

final emphasis on the D-Eb half step in the strings, coupled with descending chordal

motion in the harmony, leads directly to the introduction theme in fortissimo in the

strings in G minor.

Recapitulation

This section of the first movement, like the exposition, starts with the restatement

of the introduction theme. However, this introduction theme is truncated and in G minor,

a different key from both the beginning (D# minor) and from the main key of the

exposition (F# minor). Babajanian delays a sense of closure in the movement by only

returning to the intro theme in F# minor at the end of the Coda.

Babajanian rhythmically shortens the introduction theme to three measures (mm.

139-141), and then, through a one-measure extension, moves directly to an exact repeat

of mm. 11-33 in mm. 143-165. This encompasses both the primary theme and the

47
beginning of the transition, which at six measures is also truncated in this recapitulation.

Babajanian repeats mm. 31-33 from the original transition (mm. 163-165), adds a

continuation measure of m. 33 in m. 163, and then adds two measures similar to mm. 46-

47 to introduce the second theme, which is in F# Major, the parallel major of the main

key of the first movement. Babajanian repeats only the second statement of this theme

(mm. 169-177 equal mm. 61-69), and continues with the K theme (mm. 178-189 equal

mm 70-81). The coda ensues.

Coda

The first portion of the coda consists of an extended omnibus pattern spread out

over three similar phrases, which tracks a descending bass from Ab in m. 190 to D in m.

202. Once the D is reached, Babajanian repeats mm. 128-129 (from the end of the

development), which lead directly to a restatement of the retransition and the introduction

theme, mm. 130-143, but now beginning in C# minor alternating with G Major leading to

the final statement of the introduction theme in F# minor. Babajanian's purpose here is to

establish the final F# minor key and finish the movement with a strong feeling of arrival.

48
Movement 2

A B Intro A’
1-27 28-50 51-55 56-76
CM CM

1-5: CM 28-31: 56-70=1-14


6-9: FM-EM 32-35: 71-72=2-3
10-15: 10-13=6-9 36-39: 73-76: CM
16-21: 16-18=2-4 40-45:
22-27: 46-50:

Figure 3. Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Diagram of Movement 2.

The second movement of the Trio, the shortest of the three movements at 76

measures, is in ternary form, A B A’, with a brief statement of the introduction theme (at

only six measures, mm. 51-56, it is the shortest appearance of it in the piece) inserted

before the return of the A section in m. 57, which forms part of the climax of the

movement. Each of the main sections is progressively shorter than the one preceding it:

the first A section contains 27 measures, while the B and the A’ sections contain 23 and

20 measures, respectively.

The A and A’ sections appear in the tritone-related key of F# minor, C Major, the

main key of this movement. The tonality of the B section is very chromatic, with some

octatonic-related passages, and in some measures does not have a particular key. The A

section's musical texture is more relaxed and simple with triadic chords in the piano part.

Babajanian includes the introduction theme on the same pitches as initially stated, except

enharmonically (Eb instead of D#, etc.) but harmonizes it quite differently so that it

sounds more like Eb minor. After a half cadence in measure 54, he restates motives “a”

and “b” in Ab minor for two bars, which leads to the return of A section and its key of C

49
Major. The meter of the movement is mostly in 9/8, with some switches to 6/8 in the two

A sections.

A section

The A section is marked Andante with no tempo changes until the B section in

measure 28. The musical texture begins simply, with the violin solo part in a high register

marked pianissimo, accompanied in the piano with a rhythmic motive of short-long

(eighth note-quarter note), and becomes more complex as the movement continues. The

cello restates the theme beginning in m. 16, accompanied by the violin and an

arpeggiated texture in the piano. The theme of the A section is related to the introduction

theme. Here Babajanian uses an elongated version of the “b” motive and its alteration.

Overall, the theme is very melismatic. This is also very typical in Armenian folk music,

especially in the ashuger's tradition where the performer would use this technique to have

more freedom singing the text. 150 Babajanian uses this element for other purposes as

well, such as the harmonization of the key and creation of more drama. 151 In Example 6

we clearly see similar embellishments in the following examples from the Armenian folk

song "Antuni" [The Migrant's Song], and the second movement of Babajanian's trio. This

again suggests the influence of Armenian folk music in Babajanian's music.

150
Susanna Amatuni, Arno Babadjanian: Instrumentalynoe tvorchestvo, Isledovanie (Yerevan, Armenia:
Sovetakan Grokh, 1985), 134.
151
Ibid.

50
a)

Example 6. a) Komitas: Armenian folk song "Antuni". 152

b)

Example 6. b) Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Movement 2, mm. 1-4. 153

The theme itself follows a classic Western phrase pattern of

antecedent/consequent (4 + 4, mm. 2-9, with a one-measure introduction in the piano.)

The consequent version is repeated in mm. 10-13, with altered harmonies in mm. 12-13

that end with an E Major triad in mm. 14-15 harmonizing a high B in the violin. A quick

move in the piano part to a dominant-seventh chord in C Major leads to the repeat of the

antecedent phrase in mm. 16-18. Babajanian cuts short the antecedent phrase to introduce

a new consequent phrase in mm. 19-21, beginning in Db Major, which is then repeated in

the violin part in variations in mm. 22-25. Two additional measures provide a cadence

that begins with a dominant G Major triad as though preparing for a C Major authentic

152
Komitas. Hay Qnar: Havaqacu Gekhchuk Yergeri [Armenian Lyre: Compilation of Armenian Peasant
Songs]. Paris, 1906.
153
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953.
51
cadence but that ends surprisingly in a C# Major triad in running arpeggios in all three

parts (harmonies a tritone apart being another favorite progression of Babajanian’s).

B section

This section, marked Poco più mosso, is in two parts. The first part, mm. 28-35,

begins with a four-measure theme (mm. 28-31) again based on manipulations of motive

“a” from the introduction theme of the first movement beginning with its retrograde (A-

B-C-A) and including a direct quote of the motive’s exact pitches but displaced between

two octaves (last note in m. 28 and m. 29). This theme, first played in the piano part, is

repeated at the level of the tritone in the cello part accompanied by the piano in mm. 32-

35. In the second part, mm. 36-50, dramatic interplay between the violin and cello in

sequences of the retrograde motive “a” culminates in a rhythmically unison statement in

tenths accompanied by an omnibus pattern (encompassing the keys C minor and A

minor) that ends in m. 45. A gradual crescendo leads to a fortissimo in the final phrase,

mm. 46-50, in which the piano joins in the motivic interplay in preparation for the

restatement of the introduction theme, marked Più mosso.

In section B, Babajanian uses more unstable, chromatic and nonfunctional

harmonic language, much of it dominated by chords a minor third apart (from a different

minor-third cycle G#-B-D-F). It begins and ends with harmonies from the minor-third

cycle C#-E-G-Bb (although Bb is conspicuously absent).

Both themes of the B section have many elements from Armenian folk music. The

first theme (mm. 27-31) resembles E harmonic minor, with its emphasis on C and D#, the

lowered 6th and raised 7th degrees, which are frequently used in Armenian folk tunes.

52
Example 7. Komitas: Armenian folk song "Antuni". 154

The second half includes emphasis on D and E#, as though it were in F# minor;

however, just as the omnibus ends in m. 45, Babajanian returns to the C-D# pairing but

then immediately negates it in the swift climb in both string instruments to the climactic

portion anticipating the introduction theme in the next measure.

The repeated sequential nature of the themes, with gradually descending motives,

is another Armenian folk element commonly used by Babajanian. As discussed earlier,

the“One Exhale”tradition shadows the ashugers phrase endings in which the singer

descends in register as they run out of breath. 155 This element is widely used in

Babajanian's music. The following Example 8 shows a descending motive from an

Armenian folk melody called "Habrban" [A Peasant Song] and both themes of the B

section as well as an example from the first movement.

154
Komitas. Hay Qnar: Havaqacu Gekhchuk Yergeri [Armenian Lyre: Compilation of Armenian Peasant
Songs]. Paris, 1906.

155
Susanna Amatuni, Arno Babadjanian: Instrumentalynoe tvorchestvo, Isledovanie (Yerevan, Armenia:
Sovetakan Grokh, 1985), 122.

53
a)

Example 8 a). Komitas: Armenian folk song "Habrban". 156

b)

Example 8 b). Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 2, mm. 31-35. 157

156
Komitas. Hay Qnar: Havaqacu Gekhchuk Yergeri [Armenian Lyre: Compilation of Armenian Peasant
Songs]. Paris, 1906.
157
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953.

54
c)

Example 8 c) Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 2, mm. 35-37. 158

d)

Example 8 d). Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 1, mm. 76-78. 159

Babajanian’s use of frequent accents in the piano part, an extended crescendo

resulting in fortissimo in m. 46 and stretto in m. 49 to create a strong motion to the arrival

and culmination of the movement.

158
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953.

159
Ibid.
55
Introduction theme and return of the A section

The introduction theme, marked Più mosso, is different from the previous

appearances in the first movement. Here, Babajanian uses the motive of the second theme

from the B section as an accompaniment in the piano part. The first statement, played by

the violin and cello in unison (mm. 51-54), is in Eb minor, the enharmonic equivalent to

D# minor which is the key of the original introduction theme of the first movement. The

Fb Major triadic chords from the last bar of the B section prepare the arrival of Eb minor,

more half-step motion. Babajanian leaves the second statement of the introduction theme

unfinished (Meno mosso, mm. 55-56) and modulates back to C Major for the return of the

A section.

The second appearance of the A Section is 7 measures shorter from the first

statement. Babajanian restates the entire violin solo (mm. 57-70 equal mm. 1-14), but

eliminates the second theme and gives the cello the first two measures of the theme. The

movement ends with the echo-like statement of the A section's first theme's first motive

in the piano, followed by two quiet measures matching the opening measure in the piano,

all clearly in C Major.

56
Movement 3

Exposition: mm. 1-130


P T S K
F#m AbM
mm. 1-56 mm. 57-71 mm. 72-113 mm. 114-130
1-6: F#m-Em HC 57-71: AM-GM 72-79: AbM HC 114-118: C#m
7-13: EM 80-86: AbM IAC 118-121: Ebm
14-20: C#M-dm 87-91: AbM 122-130: F#m-Ebm
21-28: EM/Octatonic 92-97: AbM-EM
29- 34: F#m 98-105: BM
35-41: Ebm-DbM 106-113: BM
42-57: CM
56 15 42 17 =130

Development: mm. 130-215


I (P) II (S+P) Retransition
mm. 130-171 mm. 172-194 mm. 195-214
130-138: C#M 172-176: BbM 195-198: EM
139-143: C#o7 177-180:bm-Em 199-201: G#m
144-158:Octatonic/stretto 181-184: Am 202-206: C#m
159-162: D 185-188: DM-Am 207-210: EM-G#m
163-167: BM/octatonic 189-194: FM 211-214: Octatonic
168-171: octatonic
41 23 20 =84

Recapitulation: mm. 215-279


P (T) (S) (K) Intro Coda
mm. 215-245: mm. 246-257 mm. 258-279
215-220: F#m (=1-5) 246-248: CM/E dim. 258-265: F#m
221-227: Ebm -DbM 249-253: Eb-E-D-C# 266-279: F#m
228-245: CM (=42-47ff) 254-257: bm (=12-15)
31 12 22 =65

Figure 4. Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Diagram of Movement 3.

In the third movement, Allegro Vivace, the key and the form of the movement are

the same as the first movement; F# minor in sonata form. It is, however, less

proportionate than the first movement. The exposition is 130 measures (the largest

section in the piece), while the recapitulation is only 44 measures, roughly one-third of

57
the exposition's size. The development section is 85 measures, which makes it the second

largest section both in the third movement and in the entire piece. The brief Coda, 22

measures in length, finishes the movement (see Figure 4.)

This disproportion results from the omission of everything in the recapitulation

except the primary theme and the return of the Introduction theme, which occurs after the

primary theme and not before as in previous movements. Thus, like the first movement,

the third movement does not strictly follow traditional sonata form. The Introduction

theme returns in the second movement’s key of C Major, mm. 246-257, and leads

directly to the Coda (mm. 258-279).

Another unique aspect of this movement is its meter, which changes far more

frequently than in the previous two movements. Although the main meter of the

movement is 5/8, with slightly over half the movement (146 out of 279 measures) in that

meter, Babajanian changes it in various sections, using different but specific meters to

identify each section in the movement. For example, the primary theme of the exposition

is mostly in 5/8, while the secondary theme and the closing theme sound in the more

rhythmically stable meter of 6/8. The development section is mainly in 5/8 with

occasional short returns to 6/8. The Introduction theme is stated entirely in 4/4 as in all of

its previous appearances. The Coda starts with 5/8 and 6/8 meters alterations, and ends in

4/4.

The mixture of meter is another common element used in Armenian folk music.

Like most of the elements of the folk music, this metric variety in Armenian folk music

was developed through the natural lifestyle of peasants by the rhythm of their walking,

58
working, or other activities. 160 Singing while walking and working with heavy tools

especially affected the meter of the melody. 161 This serves as a possible explanation of

the many mixed-meter melodies in Armenian folk music. Babajanian incorporates this

characteristic element by using 5/8 mixed meter (3/8+2/8) in his Piano Trio's third

movement.

Primary theme

As in the other movements, the primary theme is derived from the “a” motive of

the Introduction theme. The basic gap-fill motive is enhanced with an opening

descending octave leap on F#, and the gap itself is extended to the raised fourth degree,

B#, which creates the familiar augmented second between it and the third scale degree.

Babajanian fills in the gap in both directions with G#, first as a step between the initial F#

and the B# and then as a lower neighbor during the descending fill, similar to the “a”

motive of the introduction theme. The octave actually serves as an introduction, and the

melody continues with the leap of the major third G#-B# with the turn motive returning

to the tonic pitch, A-G#-A-F# (all notes are eighth notes except the G#-A, which are

sixteenth notes). Those two patterns, always placed in an upbeat-downbeat position (two

beats up and three beats down, hence the 5/8 meter), are repeated in over half of the

measures in this section of the primary theme (26 measures out of 41). Babajanian

alternates this pattern with a similar one that incorporates the same lower-neighbor

160
Harpik Der Hovhannissian, "Armenian Music: A Cosmopolitan Art" (PhD diss., Florida State
University, 1956), 108, accessed on ProQuest March 27, 2016.
161
Ibid, 108.
59
pattern but begins one eighth note early, so that the first two notes carry the sixteenth

notes (see Example 9a.) This latter motive allows him to change pitch levels for the

originating motive. Therefore the main statement of the theme, mm. 1-13, alternates

between three statements of the original motive and three statements of the derived

motive. The original motive occurs first from F#, then from A, and finally from D, all in

the strings. A linking measure, m. 13, leads to the statement beginning in the piano, m.

14, in C# Major. The theme, however, is a step lower than it should be, a practice of non-

congruency between melody and harmony that Babajanian continues until the original

version returns in the piano in m. 29. The character of the primary theme is energetic and

dance-like. Babajanian uses a variety of articulations such as dots, dashes, and accents to

indicate the strong beats in 5/8. This portion of the theme ends in Db Major, with the

theme and harmony in congruence, mm. 38-41. In the closing portion of this section, mm.

42-56, Babajanian continues this theme in C Major, with accented octaves in the piano

and triads in each of the string parts. The notions of congruence/non-congruence

continue, with the boundaries of the theme C and G (instead of B# and F#) initially over

the C-G strong bass, but changing to Bb-G, still over the C-G bass. This powerful and

driving section ends abruptly on an A Major triad in m. 57, signaling the transition.

Transition

In the transition the meter becomes even more irregular. Babajanian continues the

motive of the previous section but from E to Ab this time, first over the A Major triads,

then finally over G Major triads, first fortissimo beginning in m. 64, then diminishing to

piano in m. 68. Fragments of this motive are repeated in the rhythmically complex

60
section in mm. 60-63, in which Babajanian introduces 2/8 and 4/8 along with 5/8, altering

them in every measure. The key of G Major is the flat second of F# minor and the leading

tone of the Ab Major, the key of the secondary theme.

Secondary theme

The secondary theme contrasts with the primary theme in that it is more melodic

and song-like. This melody is closely related to the primary theme of the third movement,

just transposed to different scale degrees and inverted. Instead of having the minor third

from tonic to the b3 scale degree, it is from scale degree 3 to the dominant. Also, instead

of using the leading tone, which is a half-step below the tonic, Babajanian uses b6, which

is a half-step above the dominant.

a)

Example 9. a) Babajanian A. Piano Trio: Movement 3, mm. 1-4 162

162
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953
61
b)

Example 9. b) Babajanian, A. Piano Trio: Movement 3, mm.71-78 163

In the secondary theme, Babajanian follows the pattern of tonality from the first

movement. Like the first movement's secondary theme, here Babajanian uses only major

keys (Ab, E, B).

The meter, inconsistent at first, alternating between 5/8 and 6/8, eventually settles

in 6/8 with only a few returns to 5/8. The secondary theme is stated first by the cello,

mm. 72-97, and then by the piano, mm. 98-13. The violin part does not play the theme

but merely accompanies for both appearances. The theme is 16 measures long, and is

essentially a parallel period, with an internal cadence on the dominant (mm. 78-79), and a

final cadence on the tonic, m. 87. In the following ten measures (mm. 88-97), Babajanian

seemingly begins with a variant of the theme, mm. 88-91, but then uses the "Descending

Sequence" discussed in the first movement, ending with Eb in the melody against D-B in

the bass. The second statement in the piano, mm. 98-113, is stated broadly in B Major,

with the same parallel period structure as previously.

163
Arno Babajanian. Piano Trio in F sharp minor. Moscow, Russia: Gosudarstvennoe Muzikalynoe
Izdatelystvo, 1953.
62
Closing theme

In the closing theme, Babajanian slowly transforms a restatement of the second

theme, mm. 113-116 in the piano, followed by the violin and cello, mm. 118-121, into a

motive that exploits the shared third A between F# minor and F Major, beginning in m.

122. With A as the constant pitch, Babajanian alternates it with either Bb or C, with the

Bb enharmonically serving as the raised third in the F# triad accompanying in the piano.

The C is used for the alternate harmony, F Major (m 1243). This descending progression

from F# to F continues in the piano part, from D minor to Db Major (another shared third

pairing) mm. 123-124. Another progression, ascending this time, also from F# minor,

accompanies the A-Bb alternation in the strings and reaches Eb in m. 129 before ending

abruptly and loudly (sforzando) on a C# dominant-seventh chord, m. 130. This ends the

closing theme. The whole section is in a stable 6/8 meter.

Development

The development, mm. 130-214, has two main sections. The first section, mm.

130-171, is based on the primary theme, while the second section concentrates on

motives from the secondary theme, with references also to the primary theme, mm. 172-

214.

This first section begins and ends with passages in the octatonic mode. The

primary theme is used, but without the raised fourth scale degree in the theme itself, with

the bass encompassing a C# minor-ninth chord and the motive seemingly in F minor with

the pitches of F-G-Ab-Bb, (transposition: C#-D-E-F-G-Ab-Bb-Cb-C#), m. 130-138. A

transposition of the theme a half step below, mm. 139-143, maintains this same octatonic

63
mode. A third transposition, mm. 144-147, moves the mode up one-half step (C-D-Eb-F-

Gb-Ab-A-B-C). Yet a third non-thematic transposition to the third octatonic

transposition , mm. 148-151, overlaps with a “fughetta” starting in m. 150 (C-C#-D#-E-

F#-G-A-Bb-C). This four-voice “fughetta” begins in the piano, mm. 150-151, and is

continued stretto-style by the violin, cello, and again the piano, mm. 150-158. This fugal

passage is not strictly octatonic, in that the opening octave of each statement of the theme

(as in the primary theme) generally lies outside the octatonic collection. The initial

pitches of this “fughetta” are D, B, D, G, although each statement differs intervallically,

as one might expect in a development section. Nine measures (4 + 5) of non-contrapuntal

restatements of the main motive, first on D, then on B, lead to another octatonic passage

(C-D-Eb-F-Gb-Ab-A-B-C), mm. 168-171, that prepares the second section.

The second section, mm. 172-194, starts with the partial statement of the

secondary theme in Bb Major, played by the cello, which is then interrupted by the

primary theme stated by the violin, mm. 172-176. This passage is sequenced in mm. 177-

179. The derivation of the secondary theme as stated in the closing section (mm. 118-

121) is restated in mm. 181-194, divided into three phrases (4 + 4 + 6.) Clarification of

the key of A minor through the use of its augmented-sixth chord in mm. 181-183) is

followed by a minor third cycle (Ab-B -D-F) and an eventual resettling on the

augmented-sixth chord in a minor. This leads to a V7 chord in A minor that serves as the

beginning of the retransition. The V7 chord in turn serves as the augmented-sixth chord

of G# minor, in which this retransition is mostly set. The retransition gradually brings the

5/8 back with the return of the primary theme in the piano part. In measures 211-214,

Babajanian once again uses the octatonic mode (with G#: D-E-F-G-G#-A#-B-C#-D). The

64
piano part plays the D octatonic ascending scale under the constant repetition of the

primary theme's first measure by the strings which leads back to the recapitulation in F#

minor.

Recapitulation

The unusually brief recapitulation states only the primary and Introduction

themes. However, here the treatment is more aggressive, as befits the final statement.

Beginning in F# minor, Babajanian restates mm. 1-5; then while maintaining the structure

of the main motives, mm. 220-223, he establishes the key of Db Major, mm. 224-227,

with repetitions of the main motive. The aggressive treatment of the primary theme from

mm. 42-56 is here repeated, somewhat shortened and with variations. While the bass

insistently repeats the C-G of the prior section, the theme now is presented as though it

were in Bb minor, with particular emphasis on the Db. A tonic-dominant alternation is in

effect in each measure, with the final tonic chord C-G-F-B-Db in m. 239. The C-G bass is

continued sporadically even as the introduction theme is reintroduced, mm. 246-249, still

over this C-G bass initially, with the theme in double minor thirds in the strings,

beginning on pitches E-G-Bb. The cello plays the theme in Bb, and violin in E and G

with double stops. This is accompanied by stubborn and accented tonic and dominant

unisons in piano part. The second statement starts with another chord, only this time it is

a tonic triad (Eb-G-Bb), divided among the three instruments, mm. 250-253, and ends

with the often-used half-step cadence, DM-C#M (m. 253). The third statement of the

Introduction theme (mm. 254-257) is identical to sections in the first movement (mm. 12-

15 and 144-147).

65
Coda

Babajanian, as in the first movement, once again uses the Coda section, mm. 258-

279, to establish the final key of the piece. The last chord of the introduction section of

the recapitulation (m. 259) is a German augmented-sixth chord in D Major which

prepares the return of the F# minor (3rd degree of D Major). The whole section is based

on the primary theme, which is stated in two forms, the augmented-fourth version as at

the beginning and the minor-third version on the pitches C#-B-A#-B-D. The first eight

measures, mm. 258-265, are devoted to the original version, at the end of which an

augmented-sixth interval D-B# resolves to the dominant C#, which accompanies the

second version. This C# serves mostly as a dominant pedal for the next twelve measures,

punctuated by ascending octaves C#-D-E, harmonized by the harmonies A#-G-A. The

final appearance of this triadic progression is continued with G-A#-B, harmonized by G-

A#-G triads and ending on A#, with C# in the bass (m. 272). This triad clearly serves the

function of a substitute dominant, since it contains both the dominant pitch and the

leading tone, and the third note, A#, is a half-step away from the characteristic minor

third of the F# minor triad. In the final two measures, a sudden G octave is followed by

an A# triad, and final octaves Bb-A-G are followed by the final half-step cadence, G

minor-F# minor. The resulting chord in m. 278, the penultimate measure, sounds like an

altered augmented-sixth chord (the “Till” chord, famous from R. Strauss’s use of it in his

tone poem “Till Eulenspiegel”), and as in Strauss, three of the four notes are one half step

away from their resolving pitches, with the C# as the common tone. So a combination of

Romantic and twentieth-century harmonies ends the Trio, representing in miniature the

66
combination of the traditional and newer “functional” chords in Babajanian’s unique

harmonic language.

67
CHAPTER 6

CONCLUSION

Babajanian's Piano Trio in F-Sharp Minor is an excellent example of the

composer's unique and distinctive compositional voice. Despite his admiration for and

imitation of other Russian and Soviet-era composers earlier in his career, such as Sergey

Rachmaninov, Dmitri Shostakovich, and especially Aram Khachaturian, Babajanian’s

own compositional style developed and matured in his professional life and he left a

small but significant collection of works that contribute to the rich legacy of Armenian

classical music. Babajanian achieved his unique compositional language through a

combination of filtering his own musical ideas through the traditions of other composers

and incorporating the traditions of Armenian Folk music.

By following in the footsteps of Komitas, Alexander Spendiarian and Aram

Khachaturian in developing a distinctly Armenian national musical voice, and by leaning

on the achievements of influential Western and Soviet Classical composers such as

Sergey Rachmaninov and Dmirti Shostakovich, Babajanian created in his Piano Trio an

organic synthesis between all these traditions in a work that appeals to both Armenian

folk and classical music appreciators.

There are many reasons why Babajanian’s Piano Trio remains relatively unknown

and therefore unappreciated to this day, especially in the United States. The political and

cultural restrictions between the United States and Soviet Armenia during the Cold War

certainly contributed. Another factor may be the geographic location and the size of

Armenia. The tremendous popularity of Aram Khachaturian’s music possibly

overshadowed Babajanian's compositional career abroad as well. Finally, most research

68
of Babajanian's life and career is written in either Armenian or Russian. The only existing

English research is mainly about his works for piano and does not including the Piano

Trio. Despite these reasons, the Piano Trio deserves a place in the standard canon of

piano trios, both for the richness of its uniquely Armenian voice as well as the rewarding

technical and musical challenges for the performers.

69
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72

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