Michael Omartian
Michael Omartian |
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.”
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.
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.
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.