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George Avakian
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George Mesrop Avakian (1919-2017) was an American music producer, artist manager, writer, and educator best known for his work with artists such as Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, John Cage, Alan Hovhaness, Keith Jarrett, Sonny Rollins, his wife Anahid Ajemian, and many other musicians and composers.

Avakian was born in Armavir, Armenia, the oldest of three children of Mesrop and Manoushak Avakian. His brother was the film director, editor, and photographer Aram Avakian (1926-1987). The Bolshevik revolution forced his family to immigrate to the United States in 1923, and they settled in New York City, where Mesrop Avakian established the U.S. branch of Avakian Brothers, a Persian rug business.

Avakian attended the Horace Mann School for Boys in Riverdale, the Bronx, and entered Yale University in 1937 to pursue an English degree. He had become a jazz fan as a teenager, and, in New Haven, he joined a local group of jazz enthusiasts centered around Marshall Stearns, a jazz writer and collector who later founded the Institute of Jazz Studies. Stearns also arranged for Avakian to take over his regular column in Tempo magazine, which was Avakian's first professional writing assignment. Avakian soon became an expert on recorded jazz in an era when very little information about the music was published.

Aware that much of the recorded jazz of the 1920s and early 1930s was no longer available for purchase and study, Avakian envisioned a new way of recording and releasing the music on record using the same "album" format used for classical recordings in the 78-rpm era: multi-disc sets with extensive, well-researched annotations to supply the listener with information about the musicians and the music's historical context. After writing letters to several record companies outlining the idea, he was invited by Decca Records in 1939 to produce Chicago Jazz, a set of new recordings of Chicago musicians led by Eddie Condon, Jimmy McPartland, and George Wettling.

Inspired by the Decca release, the producer John Hammond suggested in 1940 to Columbia Records that it hire Avakian (who was still attending Yale) to do the same for them. He was assigned to search the company's warehouse in Bridgeport, Connecticut, for deleted and never-released masters and create reissue packages for them, resulting in Columbia Hot Jazz Classics, the first jazz reissue series. The first issue, King Louis, contained several previously-unreleased Louis Armstrong recordings.

In 1941, Avakian was drafted into the U.S. Army. After receiving basic training at Fort Benning, Georgia, Avakian served in New Guinea before being recalled stateside to receive specialized European language training at Harvard University. By the time he completed the training, the focus of the war effort had shifted to the Pacific, and Avakian was assigned to the Philippines in 1944. He saw combat there and also served in the occupation forces in Japan before being recalled to San Francisco prior to his discharge in 1946. In Japan, he visited the city of Hiroshima several days after the first atomic bomb was dropped, and wrote an essay, never published, about the experience.

Avakian continued his jazz writing and producing career during his military service. While stationed in Boston, he produced a jazz radio broadcast for the Office of War Information, and in the Pacific he wrote articles on jazz published by Down Beat, Jazz magazine, Hot Jazz Booklets, Jazz Notes and Blue Rhythm (a New Zealand fan publication), and Mademoiselle. After the war, Avakian continued to write for magazines, and he expanded into teaching in 1948 when he taught one of the first academic jazz history courses at New York University. That same year, Avakian collaborated with Walter Schaap on New Hot Discography, an English translation and expansion of Charles Delaunay's Hot Discography, the first significant catalog of existing jazz records.

Following his discharge, Avakian returned to Columbia, where he resumed production of the Hot Jazz Classics series, as well as the Special Editions and Archives series, and began producing new recordings as well. Within a few years, his mandate and opportunities became almost unlimited. In 1948, he was appointed head of the International department, overseeing the production of new foreign recordings, as well as the domestic issue of recordings by foreign subsidiaries. It was through this position that he met and produced the French vocalist Edith Piaf.

Also in 1948, Avakian played a key role in Columbia's development and adoption of the the new technology of the 33 1/3-rpm long-playing record. He issued the first 100 popular albums in the format, making Columbia the leader in firmly establishing the microgroove record as a primary vehicle for music retailing for the next four decades.

In 1952, he was appointed the first director of the newly-formed Popular LP department, in addition to his International department duties. This department produced jazz artists as well as popular singers and Broadway cast recordings. Among the many artists Avakian signed and produced at Columbia during the 1950s were Dave Brubeck, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Ravi Shankar, Johnny Mathis, J.J. Johnson, Rita Reys, Erroll Garner, and Buck Clayton.

Avakian was innovative in other ways as well: he made Columbia the first major company to record live jazz and popular music, releasing Benny Goodman's 1938 concert at Carnegie Hall, and recording Lionel Hampton, Harry James, and Louis Armstrong live. From 1956 until 1963, Avakian produced several cornerstone albums recorded live at the Newport Jazz Festival, including Ellington At Newport (1956) and the companion album to the film Jazz On A Summer's Day (1958). He was also one of the first producers of popular music to fully embrace multi-track recording and tape editing techniques, overdubbing Louis Armstrong in 1955 on the hit single "Mack the Knife," and overdubbing and editing the Miles Davis album Miles Ahead in 1957.

Avakian was one of the co-founders of the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS, now known as the Recording Academy) in 1957. He later served as president of the association from 1966 to 1967.

In March 1958, Avakian left Columbia to became vice president in charge of New York operations for the independent World Pacific Records. He remained only a few months before departing to co-found Warner Brothers Records. While there, Avakian discovered the comedian Bob Newhart, signing him and producing his Grammy-winning album, The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart. He also signed and produced the Everly Brothers and Bill Haley and the Comets for the label.

Avakian moved to RCA Records in 1960, where he produced Sonny Rollins, Benny Goodman, Paul Desmond, Gary Burton, and Lambert, Hendricks, and Bavan, among others. He initiated and accompanied Goodman on his tour of the Soviet Union in 1962, the first tour of the country by an American jazz band, and produced the first jazz album ever recorded there, Benny Goodman In Moscow.

Avakian left full-time employment at RCA in late 1962 and went to work for Avakian Brothers, but maintained music production work in his spare time, and he expanded into artist management as well. His clients included Orchestra U.S.A. (co-led by John Lewis and Gunther Schuller), the singer/songwriter Bob Morrison, and the saxophonist Charles Lloyd, for whom he arranged a deal with Atlantic Records, and booked and managed domestic and foreign tours from 1965 to 1969. Avakian also arranged for the Lloyd quartet to make the first performance by a small American jazz group in the Soviet Union, in 1967, and recorded the group there as well. It was through Lloyd that Avakian met the group's pianist, Keith Jarrett. He managed Jarrett from 1967 to 1972, launching his performance and recording career on the Columbia, Atlantic, Impulse, and ECM labels.

In addition to his production of many Broadway cast recordings, Avakian involved himself in two notable theater projects. In 1947, he arranged for a group of musicians under the leadership of the saxophonist Eddie Barefield to perform incidental music for the play A Streetcar Named Desire during its Philadelphia and Broadway runs. In 1965, he was an associate producer of the first Off-Broadway revival of Marc Blitzstein's The Cradle Will Rock, and personally financed the recording of the cast album.

Avakian worked hard to foster intercultural exchange between the United States and the Soviet Union. In addition to the landmark Benny Goodman and Charles Lloyd tours, he was the first to record Soviet and American artists together (Pavel Lisitsian of the Bolshoi Opera and pianist Maro Ajemian, for New York Records in 1960). In 1960, he attempted to arrange a performance in Moscow by Maro Ajemian of Aram Khachaturian's music, conducted by the composer. In 1971 and 1972, he assisted the Duke Ellington and the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis orchestras in planning their Soviet visits, and he befriended many Russian musicians, composers, and writers, such as Leonid Pereverzev, Oleg Lundstrem, and Valery Ponomarev. Avakian also sponsored the first performance by Soviet jazz musicians in the United States (at the Village Gate, in 1988), and arranged in 1990 for the Branford Marsalis Quartet to play at the Moscow International Jazz Festival, the debut of American performers at that event. For his life-long efforts, the Soviet Composers Union successfully pushed for him to receive the Order of Lenin, the former Soviet Union's highest honor, in 1990.

Avakian's other honors included the Knight of Malta (1984); the Down Beat Lifetime Achievement Award (2000); the prestigious French jazz award, the Django d'Or (2006); the French rank of Commandeur des Arts et Lettres (2008); the Trustees Award from the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences for contributions to the music industry worldwide (2009); and the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master award (2010).

In his retirement, Avakian continued to involve himself in independent recording productions for various artists, and, in the 1980s, managed two vocalists: Helen Merrill and Datevik Hovenasian. In the 1990s and 2000s, Sony Legacy consulted him for the reissues of several Miles Davis and Louis Armstrong albums. He also remained active in jazz research and writing, and discovered several previously-unknown Louis Armstrong compositions at the Library of Congress. In 1997, he produced performances and a recording of them by trumpeter Randy Sandke and other musicians.

Avakian met his wife, the violinist Anahid Marguerite Ajemian (1924-2016), in 1946, and the couple married in 1948. Ajemian's parents, like the Avakians, were Armenian expatriates who had moved to New York City in 1922. Ajemian's sister, Maro (1921-1978), was a pianist. Both sisters studied at the Institute of Musical Art (later the Juilliard School), launched their careers with recitals at Town Hall (in 1940 and 1946), and were interested in contemporary composers. Maro Ajemian performed the U.S. premiere of Aram Khachaturian's Piano Concerto in Db major, Op. 38, while she was still a student at Juilliard. In the early 1940s, she met the composer Alan Hovhaness, who was unknown at that time, and started performing his music. Through Hovhaness, the Ajemians met John Cage, Henry Cowell, Ernst Krenek, Lou Harrison, Wallingford Reigger, Carlos Surinach, and Ben Weber, several of whom wrote works for the duo. The Ajemians produced the first recordings of some of these compositions as well, and continued to collaborate until Maro Ajemian's death in 1978.

George Avakian personally financed and produced the first three albums by Hovhaness and Cage (unrelated to his jobs at Columbia) and, in 1958, presented The 25-Year Retrospective Concert of the Music of John Cage at Town Hall, an event he also recorded and sold independently. The year before, Avakian and Ajemian produced a three-concert series at Town Hall titled "Music For Moderns," featuring jazz musicians and modern composers on the same bill, a very unusual venture for its time. The concerts featured Anahid Ajemian, Dimitri Mitropoulos, the Duke Ellington Orchestra, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Mahalia Jackson, Chico Hamilton, the composers Virgil Thomson and Carlos Surinach, pianist William Masselos, violist Walter Trampler, and opera baritone Martial Singher, among others.

In the mid-1960s, at the request of Gunther Schuller, Ajemian and violinist Matthew Raimondi formed the Composers String Quartet (CSQ), with the goal of featuring new music by American composers. The group rapidly became renowned and, sponsored by the U.S. State Department, toured the world in the late 1960s and 1970s, including countries such as China, India, and Sierra Leone, where no string quartet had ever performed before. It was the first group to record and regularly perform the string quartets of Elliott Carter, one of which was commissioned for the quartet. In 1975, the CSQ began a two-decade-long residency at Columbia University. It disbanded in 1999, and Anahid Ajemian continued to perform and teach at Columbia and the Juilliard School into the early 2000s.

Anahid Ajemian died in 2016, shortly before The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts opened an exhibition about her and her husband, and George Avakian died the following year at the age of 98.



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