Name/Title
Udi Hrant, Tatiosun Huseyni Saz Semayisi in Two PartsDescription
Udi Hrant Kenkulian, born in 1901 in the vicinity of Adapazarı emerged as one of the most influential oud masters of the twentieth century. Declared blind just days after his birth, he faced the challenge of persistent blindness throughout his life despite undergoing multiple treatment attempts, including in Vienna. His early years were marked by hardship: during the period of the Armenian Genocide his family was displaced, and it was while living in Konya under dire circumstances that he first plucked at the oud, acquiring a battered instrument and teaching himself to perform local dance melodies despite his poverty and disability.
After relocating with his family to Istanbul (then Constantinople) following World War I, Kenkulian began working in coffee‑houses and nightclubs in the Beyoğlu district, studying formally with Armenian musicians including violinist‑vocalist Agopos Alyanakian, Dikran Katsakhian, and oudist‑vocalist Krikor Berberian.
By the early 1930s he was composing his own songs and recording taksims (instrumental improvisations) in Turkish classical and popular modes—his 1935 recordings of taksims in the Hijaz and Huzzam modes were quickly praised as masterpieces and circulated internationally, including in the United States.
While of Armenian descent and working in Turkey as an ethnic Armenian citizen, he wrote the bulk of his lyrics in Turkish and developed a large audience across linguistic and ethnic communities—including Armenian, Turkish and Greek speakers.
Musically, he was a pioneering figure: he introduced techniques to the oud such as double‑stops (playing two strings simultaneously), bidirectional plectrum strokes (using up‑stroke as well as down‑stroke), novel open tunings and octave‑paired strings, expanding the expressive potential of the instrument and influencing subsequent generations of oud players.
In 1950, a travel opportunity to the United States—initially conceived as a medical trip for his blindness—evolved into a concert tour through New York, Boston, Detroit, Los Angeles and Fresno. He performed both his Turkish‑language repertoire and Armenian‑language songs while abroad, and these visits raised his profile significantly back in Istanbul where he began to perform on radio as a soloist and eventually formed his own chorus.
In 1969 he formally bestowed the title “Udi” (master of the oud) on five younger Armenian‑American oud players—John Berberian, Chick Ganimian, Richard Hagopian, George Mgrdichian and Harry Minassian—thus cementing his mentorship and legacy among diaspora musicians.
His artistry was praised for its soulful spirit, deft improvisation (taksim), and seamless blending of Armenian melodic sensibility with Turkish‑classical forms. In later years he toured to Paris, Beirut, Greece and in 1966 visited Soviet Armenia, broadening his global reach.
Behind the virtuosity, his life bore traces of resilience: blind from early infancy, uprooted by genocide and displacement, making his survival through café work and night‑club gigs to international tours. He died on 29 August 1978 in Istanbul, after a final performance in April of that year while already suffering from cancer, and was laid to rest in the Şişli Armenian Cemetery.
These tracks are a remaking of Tatyos Effendi's Saz Semayisi by Udi Hrant.Audio Format
78 RPM RecordRecording Type
MusicAlbum Detail
Record Label
Istanbul RecordsRelease Date
circa 1940Place Recorded
* Untyped Place Recorded
IstanbulTrack Details
Title
Tatiosun Huseyni - Saz Semayisi Part 1Track Contributors
Contributor
Udi HrantRole
Oud playerTitle
Tatiosun Huseyni - Saz Semayisi Part 2Created By
garenkazanc@hotmail.comCreate Date
November 10, 2025Updated By
garenkazanc@hotmail.comUpdate Date
December 20, 2025