Uzeyir Hajibeyov was born in
Agjabadi in the
Elisabethpol Governorate of the
Russian Empire, which is now part of
Azerbaijan. His father, Abdul Huseyn Hajibeyov, was the secretary to
Khurshidbanu Natavan for many years, and his mother, Shirin, grew up in the Natavan household. Growing up, Hajibeyov was strongly influenced by Natavan's work.
Shusha, often dubbed as the cradle of Azerbaijani music and culture, had a reputation for its musical heritage. The town was also referred to as "the Music Conservatory of the Caucasus" because of its many talented musicians and singers. And the fact that Hajibeyov grew up in Shusha explains how at 22, in
1908, with very little formal musical education, he was capable of writing a full-length opera.
Hajibeyov received his early education in a religious school (
madrasah), where he perfected his
Arabic and
Persian. Later he studied at a two-year Russian-Azerbaijani school. Here, with the help of his favourite teacher
Mirza Mehdi Hasanzadeh, he familiarized himself with the heritage of the famous classic writers of the East and the West. The richness of the musical performance tradition of Shusha greatly influenced the musical education of Uzeyir Hajibeyov. He would later reflect on his experiences: "The first musical education I got as a child in Shusha came from best singers and
saz-players. At that time I sang
mughams and tasnifs. The singers liked my voice. They would make me sing and taught me at the same time." Uzeyir Hajibeyov's first teacher was his uncle
Agalar Aliverdibeyov, an excellent connoisseur of Azeri folk music. In
1897–1898, when Azerbaijani playwright
Abdurrahim Hagverdiyev and singer
Jabbar Garyagdyoglu staged the episode
Majnun on Leyli's grave from
Leyli and Majnun, 13-year old Uzeyir sang in the choir.
From
1899 to
1904 Uzeyir Hajibeyov studied at the
Gori Pedagogical Seminary. There, along with general education, he also acquired music. In this school Hajibeyov learned to play the
violin, the
violoncello and the
brass instrument. After his graduation from the Pedagogical Seminary, Uzeyir Hajibeyov was appointed a teacher to the village of
Hadrut in
Upper Karabakh. Having worked there for a year, Hajibeyov permanently settled in
Baku, where he carried on his career in teaching
mathematics, geography, history, Azeri and
Russian languages, and
music. He wrote the
Turkic-Russian and Russian-Turkic Dictionary of Political, Legal, Economic and Military Terms, Used in Press in
1907 and the textbook
Arithmetic Problems in
1908, and had them published by the Orujov Brothers Publishing House in
Baku.
Hajibeyov was no stranger to the tragic chaos of war; he lived through the Revolutions of
1905 and
1917, the fall of the
Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan in
1920, and both World Wars. The political repercussions of these military conquests often manifested in other forms of chaos. For example between
1920 and
1940, the alphabet systems for writing Azeri were changed three times — from Arabic to Latin, and from Latin to Cyrillic — a process which greatly hindered and interrupted the educational and cultural process and may well have been one of the factors influencing Uzeyir Hajibeyov to present his ideas verbally on the musical stage.