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Glendale: Armenian Ensemble, Dancers Dazzle

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  • Glendale: Armenian Ensemble, Dancers Dazzle

    ARMENIAN ENSEMBLE, DANCERS DAZZLE
    By Fred Ortega

    Glendale News Press, CA
    Sept 19 2005

    Glendale Community Concerts kicks off its season with a crowdpleasing
    show of folk music and dance.

    EAST GLENDALE -- In the late 19th century, an Armenian priest by the
    name of Komitas Vardapet traveled his native land, collecting folk
    songs that for centuries had been passed on orally from generation
    to generation.

    If not for Vardapet's work, melodies that make up the very fabric
    of Armenian culture might have been lost for eternity. But thanks
    to that work, more than 800 people gathered at the Glendale High
    School Auditorium Sunday were able to enjoy hauntingly beautiful
    renditions of "Akh Im Anoush Yar" ("Oh, Sweet Love of Mine") and
    "Eem Chinaree Yaruh" ("My Love Is Like a Tall Tree) as part of the
    Glendale Community Concerts Assn.'s 2005-06 season premiere.

    These and many other Armenian folk melodies, both ancient and modern,
    were performed by the Chookasian Armenian Concert Ensemble, a Fresno
    and Los Angeles-based group comprised mostly of Armenian musicians
    displaced by the great Armenian earthquake of 1990. Also performing
    in the event was the Zvartnots Dance Ensemble.

    Zvartnots opened the show, with performances ranging from a melancholy
    solo dance of "Elegia," by renowned Armenian folk music composer
    Kachatur Avetisyan, to a high-powered rendition of folk dance
    melodies set to an electronic beat. The latter featured costumed men
    in thigh-high boots linking arms and high-stepping around women in
    traditional ankle-length dresses.

    The Chookasian ensemble captivated the audience, playing
    thousand-year-old instruments such as the kanun lap harp, the oboe-like
    duduk and the tarr, a double-bodied lute, the sound of which resembles
    the famed Russian balalaika.

    Among the guests of honor at the concert was state Sen. Charles
    Poochigian (R-Fresno), who characterized the event as a learning
    experience combined with entertainment.

    "The best part was being exposed to these unique, ancient instruments,"
    Poochigian said. "It is like a history lesson in addition to a
    musical performance. If you are a music lover, you can't help but
    appreciate it."

    All folk music seems to share some common themes, ensemble director
    John Chookasian said.

    "In every ethnic music there are crossovers of certain musical phrases,
    and in our case some are common to Middle- and Near-Eastern formats,"
    said Chookasian, a U.S. native whose wife, Barbara, also sings with
    the group. "But there are also forms that are unique to each genre
    which are discernible to students of music."

    The concert was amazing in that it brought Armenian music and culture
    to an audience that was mostly non-Armenian, said Appo Jabarian,
    a marketing director for USA-Armenian Life Magazine.

    "Today's event is really a celebration of the great American value
    that encourages many cultures to flourish, that makes up the symphony
    of cultures that is America," Jabarian said.

    For more information on future Glendale Community Concerts Assn.

    events, visit www.glendalecommunity concerts.com.
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