Michael Omartian

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Michael Omartian |

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Five-year-old Michael Omartian with an accordion |
He soon found himself writing scores for full orchestra in spare time. Winning a prize as the “Illinois percussionist of the year” led Michael to play in the Chicago Symphony orchestra summer program. His early influences — mainly jazz — included Oscar Peterson, Art Tatum, Count Basie, Dizzy Gillespie and Buddy Rich, followed by the British Invasion of the 1960s: “The Beatles became a huge influence in my life as a 19 year old,” says Omartian. “This opened the world of pop music to me…I noticed that all of these albums, which I studied in minute detail, were recorded in Los Angeles, New York, Nashville and different parts of England...As very little commercial recording was done in Chicago, I boarded a plane for Los Angeles as a 20-year-old, with $3,000 in savings, no prospects of any kind and just the idealistic enthusiasm of youth.”

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Michael Omartian’s high school graduation picture, 1963 |
He spoke Armenian to his relatives and English to his friends, but like many others in America he lost the language as he grew up.

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Michael’s grandmother Cairn Keyishian Hajian (front row, left) with Michael standing behind her |
“While I don’t know how my grandmother survived, I have to speculate that there were some sympathetic Turkish Muslims who did not agree with what was happening and who helped her to get out of Turkey,” says Michael.

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Left to right: Michael’s uncle Richard, aunt Rose and mother Sophie |
Caironi had a total of seven heart attacks in her lifetime, but she managed to bounce back from each one: “Her will to live and love us was truly powerful,” Michael says in awe.
