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L.A.'s spotlight lands on a group that wants the world's ear.

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  • L.A.'s spotlight lands on a group that wants the world's ear.

    Los Angeles Times
    calendarlive.com
    May 19, 2005

    Armenians' turn on the red carpet
    L.A.'s spotlight lands on a group that wants the world's ear.
    By Geoff Boucher
    Times Staff Writer

    http://www.calendarlive.com/cl-wk-armenian19may19,0,6388810.story
    When it comes to red carpet, no one can go wall to wall like L.A.
    Commercials call them once-in-a-lifetime awards galas, but here it's really
    more like a biweekly ritual that keeps limousine fleets in the black and
    UPN's airwaves occupied. Tonight's entry on the trophy schedule? The
    Armenian Music Awards at the Hollywood Palladium, which will bounce off
    satellites to the far corners of the globe.

    If it sounds like a big show for a small scene, well, that's the beauty of
    L.A. - the super-sized populace and unequaled cultural quilt have enough
    juice to put footlights in front of just about everybody. This year the show
    has an intriguing subplot in the man slated to host: Mark Geragos, the
    attorney fresh from the Michael Jackson trial.

    "We don't have anything in writing, but he agreed to do it and we shook on
    it," said Peter Bahlawanian, who founded the event seven years ago. "I asked
    Geragos if we could write something up and the look he gave me - like, 'You
    think a contract will do any good?' We're very excited to have him. It will
    catch people's attention."

    Bahlawanian is 34 and, with hip clothes, a slight build and soulful eyes,
    has a vague resemblance to Moby. He is Canadian-born but, as with everyone
    who identifies him- or herself as Armenian, map boundaries are flimsy in a
    nomadic heritage.

    His father had a music retail business that provided the seed for
    Bahlawanian's L.A. arrival in 1994. From there, he operated a record label,
    a wedding magazine and a world-music publication. The show hit its zenith a
    few years ago with a live cablecast that bounced into space and back down to
    a potential audience of 42 million (actual viewership was nowhere near
    that).

    The show was most popular in the community hubs in Australia, France,
    California, but it was not only an in-house affair. Armenian contemporary
    music is popular enough, but the most potent crossover remains the sound of
    the duduk, the wind instrument that many casual music fans might know best
    from the soundtrack to "The Last Temptation of Christ."

    "That is a CD," Bahlawanian said with some reverence, "that you will find in
    every Armenian family's house."

    Bahlawanian spoke while sitting in an outdoor dining area at Mandaloun, a
    popular restaurant in Glendale that's nothing less than a global capital for
    Armenians. Between courses, he smoked from a hookah fitted with an apple
    packed with tobacco and small, sausage-shaped heating bricks. He got
    particularly animated when discussing System of a Down, the crazed Los
    Angeles rock band of Armenian heritage. "They have done so much for music.
    And also for the cause - the recognition of the genocide."

    Much of the binding for the Armenian community is spun from that horrendous
    historical chapter. "It is part of who we are now and who we were long ago,"
    Bahlawanian said. The community fights for formal declaration by world
    governments that the Armenian people suffered a campaign of genocide at the
    hands of the Turks between 1915 and 1923.

    Another cause with mixed results is the awards show, which Bahlawanian has
    presented with fairly slick production values and some poignant moments. The
    Armenian identity is so varied that early editions were like truce
    negotiations. Bahlawanian was a stern force, demanding that the ceremony be
    in English.

    The Oscars it's not, although show biz still conjures magic and ego. The
    worst moment, Bahlawanian said, was the music debut a noted poet made on the
    show a few years ago. "She wouldn't come off, she kept adding more and more
    to the song. She waved off the host. I couldn't believe it . you never know
    what will happen to a person when they get the microphone and have the world
    watching."
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