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The World Global Hits: Armenian Lullabies by Hasmik Harutyunyan

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  • The World Global Hits: Armenian Lullabies by Hasmik Harutyunyan

    BBC Global Hits
    April 22, 2004
    Armenian Lullabies by Hasmik Harutyunyan


    Armenia has been an independent state for little more than 12
    years. But its culture and traditions are said to go back 7000
    years. The folk band Shoghaken Ensemble plays the music of Armenia.

    As a former member of the Soviet Union, Armenia had to re-invent a lot
    of things when it became an independent nation in 1991. Harold
    Hagopian is the Shoghaken Ensemble's record producer. He says that to
    revive Armenia's authentic folk-dance music the ensemble have had to
    undo 70 years of Soviet influence.

    Harold Hagopian: A lot of the music had been choreographed and taught
    at the conservatories. And though these musicians attended those
    Soviet conservatories, since the fall of the Soviet in 1991, they've
    tried to see how the music might have been played outside of this
    rigid structure and so they spent a lot of time with actual villagers
    and people who came to Armenia in 1915 and survived the genocide and
    fled from Turkey.

    89 years ago Turkish nationalists were killing ethnic Armenians in an
    attempt to form a homogenous Turkish state.

    Today The Shoghaken Ensemble are giving Armenian culture a global
    audience. In 2002, cellist Yo Yo Ma invited one of the players to join
    his Silk Road ensemble. And that same year, Shoghaken collaborated on
    the score of the film "Ararat" about the Armenian genocide. One track
    from the film is performed on an oboe-like instrument called the
    duduk. The New York Times' critic Jon Pareles has written: "there may
    be no instrument that can sound as richly inconsolable."

    This month, the ensemble is releasing 2 new albums. One of
    traditional dances as well as a collection of songs. Harold Hagopian
    says singer Hasmik Harutyunyan has memorized quite a repertoire of
    traditional songs.


    Harold Hagopian: The singer of the group specializes in Armenian
    lullabies and she knows over 200 lullabies from all of the regions of
    Armenia.

    The Shoghaken ensemble are currently on a US tour. They will be
    performing in Cambridge, Massachussets, this Saturday, the anniversary
    of the 1915 genocide.


    Shoghaken Ensemble US Tour Dates:

    April 22: Washington DC (Smithsonian Museum)
    April 24: Cambridge, MA (Harvard University)
    April 30: Hanover, NH (Dartmouth College)
    May 2: New York, NY (Symphony Space)
    May 4: Ithaca, NY (Cornell University)
    May 8: Philadelphia, PA (Annenberg Center)

    Audio Report:
    http://www.theworld.org/content/04222004.wma
    http://www.theworld.org/globalhits/index.shtml

    Artist: Hasmik Harutyunyan
    Title: Armenian Lullabies
    Label: Traditional Crossroads
    Country: Armenia
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