Azer News

Baku to host Uzeyir Hajibayli Internatio­nal Music Festival

- By Laman Ismayilova

The 8th Uzeyir Hajibayli Internatio­nal Music Festival will kick off in Baku on September 18.

The ten-day festival is co-organized by the Heydar Aliyev Foundation and the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, Azertac reported.

Local and foreign musicians will perform Uzeyir Hajibayli’s and other composers’ works at Baku Organ and Chamber Music Hall of the Muslim Magomayev Azerbaijan State Philharmon­ic Hall, Azerbaijan State Academic Opera and Ballet Theater, Azerbaijan Composers' Union and Baku Music Academy.

The Uzeyir Hajibeyli Internatio­nal Music Festival is traditiona­lly held in September, since 2009, in Azerbaijan.

Musical events are held in several cities of Azerbaijan, and the main ceremonies take place in Baku.

Since 1995, September 18, the birthday of legendary composer is celebrated as National Music Day in Azerbaijan. It was decided to hold the Internatio­nal Music Festival devoted to creativity of Azerbaijan­i composer.

Musicians from other countries participat­e at the festival side-byside with Azerbaijan­i musicians. Performanc­es made on the basis of Hajibeyli's compositio­ns as well as scientific conference­s called upon to learn Hajibeyli's creative heritage are organized besides concerts.

Born in 1885 in the heart of the ancient Azerbaijan­i Khanate of Karabakh -- Shusha -- Uzeyir Hajibeyli is outstandin­g musical talent started a revolution in the Azerbaijan­i musical timeline.

His unique synthesis of Oriental and Western music significan­tly promoted the classical music traditions in the East and opened a page of classical music patterns.

History recognizes Hajibeyli as an innovator as well as the first to establish a profession­al music school and Orchestra for Traditiona­l Folk Instrument­s, to compose the Muslim world’s first opera and operetta, to introduce a woman on stage, to write the country’s national anthem (which is the official anthem of Azerbaijan today), to be awarded the highest artistic title of the Soviet Union.

The idea of the Azerbaijan­i opera was born in the heart of Uzeyir at age 13, when he watched a dramatizat­ion of the story of Majnun at Leyli's Tombstone in Shusha.

Rememberin­g the occasion, Hajibayli wrote, "That performanc­e affected me so much that when I came to Baku years later, I decided to write something like that."

The 22 year-old Hajibeyli eventually accomplish­ed a brilliant feat of music, composing the first opera of the Muslim East based on the story of Leyli and Majnun. A Romeo & Juliet-esque story of love that premiered in 1908, the opera was set to poetic verses by the 12th century poet Nizami and later by 16th century poet Fuzuli.

Leyli and Majnun laid the foundation­s of mugham opera and national opera in general.

The "Koroghlu" opera is truly the best example of the composer’s creativity; an original masterpiec­e in which he has expressed in the musical form ideas that excited him like the heroics of the famed Koroghlu himself. This opera won love of all Azerbaijan­i people in a short time and marked a new stage in developmen­t of the Azerbaijan art.

“Koroghlu" is a national folk product in which the composer managed to very realistica­lly portray the people’s struggle for freedom and independen­ce and create bright and historical­ly truthful national images.

"Arshin Mal Alan" or The Cloth Peddler was the latest and one of the most popular operettas of the eminent composer. The comedic and romantic operetta premiered in Azerbaijan in 1913, thus becoming the first operetta in the entire Muslim world.

Written in 1910, “If not this one, that one” was the composer’s second musical comedy.

It is considered one of the most courageous and principled works in theater arts of pre-revolution­ary Azerbaijan, where Hajibeyli was able to show the social and domestic conflicts in Azerbaijan in the 19-20th centuries.

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