Tjeknavorian was born on 13 October 1937 in
Boroujerd, Iran, to an
Armenian‑immigrant family. Tjeknavorian's early life was succinctly chronicled in the London magazine
Gramophone in 1976: "His father came from
Eastern Armenia and his mother had fled from
Western Armenia during the 1915
Armenian genocide... Influenced by three cultures, Armenian, Iranian and Western, he benefited from a cosmopolitan upbringing. His grandfather, a doctor, liked to play the violin and as a boy Loris enjoyed listening to professional string-players (Russian, Armenian or Polish immigrants) in local cafés. Although not themselves musical, his parents wanted all three children (one boy, two girls) to play musical instruments. Eight-year-old Loris was given a violin. Despite the lack of a teacher, the boy began to study in earnest; before long he had composed a number of piano pieces, with no formal instruction whatsoever. At 16 he formed a four-part choir and organized and conducted his own orchestra in Teheran. A year later he was ready to leave for the Vienna Academy of Music as a violin and composition student. (Gramophone, November 1976) While a student there, he wrote a concerto for violin and string orchestra. It was written “in a short time frame in a state of intoxication” in 1956. His violin teacher, Hans-Joachim Drevo, was so impressed by it that he was the soloist for the work's première. Tjeknavorian graduated with honours and shortly thereafter, the Austrian music publisher Doblinger published four of his piano compositions as well as his
Ballet Fantastique for three pianos, celeste and percussion in Vienna. Following this fruitful period of education, Tjeknavorian went back to Iran in 1961, where he taught music theory at the Tehran Conservatory of Music. At the same time, he was appointed director of Tehran's Music Archives and put in charge of collecting and researching traditional and modern Iranian folk music and instruments. He mounted the first Archives exhibition to great success, and began work on an
opera based on the epic poem of
Rostam and Sohrab. Tjeknavorian returned to Austria in 1963 to further his studies in Salzburg at the
Mozarteum. There, he met the renowned composer
Carl Orff, who was to become the young musician's mentor and enthusiastic supporter. On hearing Tjeknavorian play sections of his opera
Rostam and Sohrab, Orff offered him a full one-year scholarship to stay in Salzburg to complete the first draft of the opera. In addition, Orff commissioned Tjeknavorian to compose piano music based on
Armenian music for the
Schulwerk, Orff's system for teaching music. Tjeknavorian composed over 130 short pieces for beginning to advanced students. These are collected in two volumes called
Kaleidoscope for Piano, portions of which were also published by
Schott as
Bilder Aus Armenia (Pictures from Armenia). Tjeknavorian moved to the United States in 1965, where he began to study conducting at the
University of Michigan. From 1966 to 1967 he was appointed composer-in-residence at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, and from 1966 to 1970 head of the instrumental and opera departments at Moorhead University in Minnesota. ==Back in Iran (1970–1975)==