Aram Khachaturian was not only a composer but an architect of sound, a master who gave Armenian music a voice that resonates far beyond its homeland. His ballets, concertos and symphonies opened new horizons where folk melodies intertwined with universal rhythms of the world stage. The fiery "Sabre Dance", the dramatic "Spartacus" and his concertos for piano and violin became music that no orchestra can ignore. Khachaturian also wrote for the screen, leaving unforgettable scores for films such as "Zangezur" and "Pepo".
In 1978, his house in Yerevan was turned into a museum, where manuscripts, letters and personal belongings reveal not the legend, but the living man behind the legend. The halls preserve the very air in which melodies were born and today they echo again through concerts, festivals and meetings that bring the museum to life. A conductor's baton, a handwritten score, even a faded photograph–every object speaks with its own voice, adding to the portrait of a restless creator.
Visiting this house is less about looking at relics than about entering a space where Khachaturian's music still breathes, reminding every visitor that inspiration has no age.
Admission:
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4.05 USD
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per person
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Guide fee:
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1-15
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persons
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10.80 USD
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16-30
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persons
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21.61 USD
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31-50
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persons
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32.41 USD
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