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  • Skagit Symphony director to make debut

    Skagit Valley Herald,
    Oct 21 2004


    Skagit Symphony director to make debut
    By ISOLDE RAFTERY Staff Writer

    Roupen Shakarian, interim conductor of the Skagit Symphony, leads
    local concerts Saturday and Sunday.

    The first time he heard recordings of Mendelssohn and Bach on the
    radio, Roupen Shakarian was a 4-year-old boy living in Egypt. He
    later took piano lessons in Cairo, but pursuing Western music would
    have been in vain at the time because his family, which had no
    running water or phone, didn't have the money to finance that sort of
    education.

    But the Western classical music resonated with the son of Armenian
    parents, so much so that 15 years later, after his family had
    emigrated to the United States because of growing religious tension
    in his homeland, he abandoned his engineering courses at the
    University of Washington to follow the chord that touched him so long
    ago.

    He earned bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of
    Washington. Later, he traveled to London and Yale University to study
    conducting. Now he teaches every morning at North Seattle Community
    College, composes music, and serves as music director to Philharmonia
    Northwest.

    Shakarian is the interim music director of the Skagit Symphony. The
    public will have the opportunity to see him wield the baton this
    weekend at concerts in Mount Vernon and Anacortes.

    He replaces Kathleen Ash Barraclough, who was with the symphony for
    around a decade.

    Shakarian has tread slowly into the job. He refused, for example, to
    assume the title of full director until the members of the orchestra
    determined whether he was right for the job.

    "It's not just a board decision," he said. "They need to decide - I
    didn't feel it was a healthy thing, to have a director. They need an
    interim."
    Relaxed, often smiling broadly, Shakarian chose his words carefully
    while chatting about the symphony over tea at one of his favorite
    haunts, Skagit Valley Food Co-op.

    Music and his commitment to the symphony are foremost in his
    thoughts.

    "This is a family of like-minded souls," he said. "We're working on
    simple things, like a symphony roster that includes both the board
    members and the orchestra members."

    The orchestra is made up of volunteers, some of whom have full-time
    jobs in other fields, and others who are musicians with their own
    studios.

    Shakarian's gentle approach to the Skagit Symphony resembles his
    music philosophy, which comes from a twist on a bumper sticker adage:
    "Think locally, compose globally."

    Globally, because he has lived that way.

    He is Armenian, Egyptian - and a little bit Skagitonian, not solely
    because of the symphony, but because of his love for the area's
    scenic qualities and his longtime dream of relocating here with his
    wife Shirley.

    But he cannot commit to any one place. It would seem that the West
    Coast would be the place he calls home, given the time he has spent
    in the Pacific Northwest. He arrived in 1962, just as the Space
    Needle was being built in Seattle for the World's Fair. But despite
    his polar fleece vest and enterprising sense, Shakarian may not
    consider himself entirely American. He returns to what has been a
    constant theme with him since he was a small boy - classical music.

    "My roots are steeped in Western classical music tradition," he said.
    "There are no other connections quite so strong."

    http://www.skagitvalleyherald.com/articles/2004/10/21/applause/applause04.txt
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