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Armenian Youth: Ready to Rock?

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  • Armenian Youth: Ready to Rock?

    Armenian Youth: Ready to Rock?

    Hetq Online, October 17, 2005

    On September 2, 2005, Yerevan staged its first international rock
    festival, Rock 'n People, in the capital's central Republic Square. In
    a country where most "live" pop music concerts - a music genre much
    preferred over rock - are lip-synched, there are many obstacles to
    overcome. However, the organizers of the festival were convinced that
    audiences in Armenia would prefer to hear music being played live.

    Sound checks, a relatively new phenomenon in the country, can prove
    problematic. During the middle of a sound check by Empyray, a band
    typified by heavy bass and drum rhythms as well as searing guitar
    solos, an official from the nearby Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    requested that preparations for the concert be put on hold for half
    an hour while an important diplomatic meeting took place.

    The number of police, including Ministry of Interior troops deployed
    as security for the event, also surprised many. Although the festival
    would only attract a few thousand people, hundreds of police assembled
    in front of the stage. "Perhaps they think we'll start a riot," said
    one young rock fan, arriving early to watch the main stage being set
    up. "Maybe they like rock music," joked another.

    The location, flanked on all sides by government buildings, a luxury
    hotel and the National Art Gallery, might not seem the most appropriate
    of venues to stage a rock concert, but with sponsors such as Radio
    Van and Viva Cell involved, permission was granted. Viva Cell, the
    long awaited competitor to ArmenTel, has been consistent in targeting
    its advertising and promotional campaigns towards youth.

    Yerevan hasn't seen a rock festival in such a high profile location
    since the end of the Communist era. Even today, many consider the last
    years of the Soviet Union to be the heyday of Armenian rock. Bands
    such as Asbarez had huge followings and others even had a role to
    play as ethnic conflict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis erupted
    over the predominantly ethnically Armenian populated territory of
    Nagorno Karabakh.

    In 1989, for instance, Vostan Hayots took their set based on the 1915
    Armenian genocide by Ottoman Turkey throughout the country and even
    performed in Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno Karabakh. The next
    day, Soviet troops confiscated their equipment.

    "We soon earned the reputation for arriving somewhere just before
    trouble broke out," remembers Hovhannes Kourghinyan, Vostan Hayot's
    vocalist. "When we went to Agarak [in Southern Armenia] there were
    clashes between Armenians and Azerbaijanis and the same happened
    in Kapan. We even brought information from Meghri to the Karabakh
    Committee. A few people knew what was going to happen and were getting
    ready by arming themselves. We were involved in that."

    Gradually, as tensions with Azerbaijan over Karabakh turned into
    full-scale war, rock music became less and less popular in Armenia. In
    particular, military conscription put an end to the careers of many
    young and promising rock musicians. The electricity crisis of the
    early nineties also forced many others to find work abroad. "Without
    electricity you really can't play rock music," says Kourghinyan,
    "It's as simple as that."

    Other musicians were more fortunate, however. Hripsime Jangiryan,
    wife of Eduard Abrahamyan, lead singer with Manic Depressive Psychosis
    (MDP), remembers how the band assembled a hundred fans in Yerevan's
    Agricultural College in 1993 when the capital was otherwise deprived
    of electricity. At the time, Abrahamyan worked as an electrician at
    the college, one of the few buildings supplied with power.

    A bottle of cognac convinced the college's elderly security guard to
    leave, and the premises became MDP's to use.

    But, even with electricity supplies now constant and Armenia's
    economy well on the mend, there are few people who listen to rock
    music in the Republic. Instead, contemporary singers and musicians
    are reliant on the support of government-connected businessmen rather
    than CD sales to sustain their careers.

    Even among those young Armenians that do like rock, however, many say
    they instead prefer foreign bands. "In the nineties there were maybe
    20 or 30 rock groups in Armenia," says MDP's Abrahamyan. "However,
    after those difficult years, many left for England, the United States
    and Russia. As a result, the market is under-developed and when the
    quality of rock music deteriorated, the audience instead turned to
    Western groups."

    Attracting listeners is also an ongoing obstacle, especially as rock
    music is starved of exposure in the mainstream media. Live concerts
    are also out because many young rock fans find it difficult to pay
    the 1,000-1,500 drams [$2-$3] entrance fee to Yerevan's two rock
    clubs. Pricing tickets higher - over $15 - can lead to inadequate
    sales and cancellations, as one three-day-event planned this August
    near Lake Sevan showed.

    Armenia's large Diaspora, a potential market for Armenian music, is
    also off-limits to local rock bands because ethnic Armenians living
    abroad instead prefer to listen to music that serves a nostalgic or
    nationalistic purpose. Even Bambir, a charismatic young band from
    Gyumri that is fast earning a reputation with its eccentric live
    performances in Yerevan, has so far been unable to find an audience
    outside of Armenia.

    Narek Barseghyan, Bambir's 21-year-old guitarist, says that young
    Armenians want something different, but a monopoly on the music
    industry prevents rock bands from being shown on television or played
    on the radio. He also says that when compared to other former Soviet
    republics, Armenians are more conservative in their mentality. "In
    Georgia, it's different," he says. "Here, if you have long hair,
    people call you a gypsy."

    Despite the problems, however, Artyom Ayvazyan, president of the
    Antennae non-governmental organization (NGO) and the main organizer of
    the rock festival, is optimistic. In the past, national rock festivals
    in Yerevan have attracted audiences of around 500. The free festival
    staged on 2 September, however, attracted at least 2,000 people as
    well as rock bands from neighboring Georgia.

    "It's true that rock music doesn't attract a large audience in
    Armenia," he admits. "However, there are many people who want to listen
    to something different, even if they don't yet know what. Although
    very few rock groups are played on the radio, there was almost
    nothing before."

    Marieke Kitzen, a Dutch volunteer working with the Bem Youth
    Progressive Action Center, a local NGO that considers the development
    of youth culture key to involving young Armenians in the country's
    socio-political life, agrees. "I thought the rock concert was a great
    success, although at the beginning, when there were more police than
    spectators, I had my doubts if rock in Armenia would ever work,"
    she says.

    Text and Photos by Onnik Krikorian

    --- http://www.hetq.am/eng/culture/0510-rock.html
    From: Baghdasarian
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