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APS: George Avakian Honored as APS 47th Annual Professional Of Year

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  • APS: George Avakian Honored as APS 47th Annual Professional Of Year

    PRESS RELEASE

    September 22, 2005
    ARMENIAN PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY
    CONTACT: Peggy Pailian
    Tel: 818-685-9946
    [email protected]


    GEORGE AVAKIAN HONORED AT ARMENIAN PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY'S
    47TH ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL OF THE YEAR AWARD
    & SCHOLARSHIP BANQUET

    Who is George Avakian?

    George Avakian can best be described as a passionate jazz enthusiast
    and 20th Century's greatest producer of jazz music. His credits
    include the all-time best-selling albums by Duke Ellington, Benny
    Goodman, Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis, Dave Brubeck, and Sonny
    Rollins. His million-seller singles are extraordinarily eclectic;
    they feature France's Edith Piaf, Mexico's Trio Los Panchos,
    Nashville's Everly Brothers, and polka king Frank Yankovic. At
    Columbia Records, he began as a part-time researcher and rose to the
    position of manager of the International and Popular Album
    Departments; he helped found Warner Brothers Records, and at RCA he
    was Director of Popular Artists & Repertoire. He remains the only
    person to have held top executive positions at all three of the
    largest American record companies. Mr. Avakian is a Founder and
    President-Emeritus of the National Academy of Recording Arts &
    Sciences.

    George Avakian was born in Armavir, Armenia in 1919. In 1923,
    following the Armenian Genocide, his family immigrated to the United
    States and settled on the East Coast. Young George spent a lot of
    time listening to music on the radio. As a young teenager he heard
    Benny Goodman's compositions and fell in love with jazz. He was
    fascinated with that unique, and at the time not so popular, brand of
    music. Later, as the editor of his high school's

    newsletter, he decided to interview Benny Goodman as a way to meet his
    idol. This life changing experience validated his devotion to jazz
    and the rest is jazz history.

    George Avakian's significant contributions to the jazz industry began
    in 1937 while he was attending Yale University and where he met
    Marshall Stearns, an early jazz scholar and collector of an extensive
    collection of early jazz albums. It is important to note that during
    this period the record industry was in its infancy and only a scant
    few jazz singles were available to the public. Avakian's vision was
    to compile these scattered singles into a collection. He proposed the
    idea to Decca Records and in 1939, he producedthe very first American
    jazz album called `Chicago Jazz'.

    While still a student at Yale, Decca's competitor, Columbia Records,
    which at the time was a very small company with a total staff of 16 in
    all departments, offered Mr. Avakian a part-time position researching
    Americanjazz artists and their compositions. This led to the
    reissuing of undocumentedmusic under the label of `Hot Jazz Classics,'
    making him the pre-eminent authority on the history of jazz.
    Concurrent with his work at Columbia, he wrote a weekly jazz column
    for Tempo Magazine, helping to set standards for jazz literacy and
    appreciation.

    After graduating from Yale, Avakian was drafted into the army and
    served at Pearl Harbor during WWII. After five years in the military,
    he returned home in 1946, needing to plan for the future. He had
    already received an offer by the president of Columbia Records; he
    also knew that he was expected to work in his family's oriental carpet
    business. His father, quite aware of his passion for music, offered
    him a little time off to `go and play' since he had `earned it' by
    fighting in the Big War. George did not hesitate, began at Columbia
    the following Monday, and later became Manager of the International
    and Popular Album Departments.

    In 1948, with postwar emerging technologies in communication and
    electronics, George Avakian played a pivotal role in the invention of
    the Long Playing (LP) record. The release of his first 100 LPs made
    the single record obsolete as the industry's major music medium, and
    elevated his division into the largest income-producing unit in the
    company.

    In addition to his contributions to jazz, Mr. Avakian also recorded
    every type of music, from rock & roll to Broadway shows and opera.
    His many talent discoveries include singer Johnny Mathis,
    arranger-conductor Michel Legrand, comedian Bob Newhart, and
    pianist-composer Keith Jarrett. He also brought international record
    stardom to, Erroll Garner and Mahalia Jackson.

    In 1961, Avakian was a key figure in establishing the first
    Soviet-American cultural exchange program; the following year, he
    recorded Benny Goodman's USSR tour. He is the only producer to have
    recorded American jazz musicians in the former Soviet Union. He also
    produced the first joint concert by American and Soviet musicians, in
    1990, at the Village Gate Theatre in New York. In 1990, he became the
    only American citizen ever to receive the Order of Lenin, the highest
    decoration in the Soviet Union.

    George Avakian's devotion to the researching, preservation and
    dissemination of American music has earned him a knighthood in the
    Knights of Malta (l984). His wife, violinist Anahid Ajemian, received
    the same honor in the same year. Among his many honors, the American
    Federation of Jazz Societies presented him with the 1998 Benny Carter
    Award, "in deep appreciation for his tremendous contribution to jazz."
    In 1999, he received Japan's `His Master's Voice' Award, and in 2000,
    he received Down Beat Magazine's Lifetime Achievement Award. Among
    countless worldwide radio and television interviews are the
    unprecedented eight-part BBC-Radio series, "George Avakian: The Myth
    Maker,' in which the veteran producer reminisced about his career. In
    2003, in an interview at WNYC Radio, Sara Fishko talked about
    Avakian's adventures in the early days of jazz recording and called
    him the `Ambassador of American Music'. In 2005, The Wall Street
    Journal declared that his pioneering work created the canon which
    enabled newcomers to jazz music to learn about, hear and appreciate
    the great performances in the early history of what was at thattime a
    virtually undocumented music. As author of the first series of
    annotations of jazz albums, he set standards for explanatory album
    notes that are still emulated. In recent years, more than half a
    century after discovering Louis Armstrong' s music in the archives of
    Columbia Records, Avakian continued to research original jazz
    compositions and came upon seven previously unknown Armstrong works at
    the Library of Congress, which he later produced on CD. Additionally,
    Avakian has been invited to work on Columbia's Golden Age reissuesof
    Jazz Classics of the 1950's.

    When asked what the essence of his job as a producer has been, Avakian
    responded, `the job of a producer is to present the artist in a
    waythat best serves the artist, the record company and the public.
    That is, to bring everybody together in the best possible
    circumstances and satisfy all three interests.'

    The Armenian Professional Society will be honoring music industry
    producer George Avakian with the Professional of the Year Award at its
    47th Annual Professional of the Year Banquet, Saturday, November 5,
    2005 at Los Angeles Music Center - Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. For
    information regarding the event, contact the APS (email:
    [email protected] or voicemail: 818-685-9946).

    APS is a non-profit organization established in 1958 for the purpose
    of fostering fellowship among Armenian professionals and providing
    annual grants and scholarships to universities in Armenia & Karabagh,
    and to graduate students in the United States. Each year APS
    recognizes an individual who has provided outstanding service to the
    Armenian community or an Armenian who has excelled in his or her field
    with the Professional of the Year Award. Past recipients include:
    George Deukmejian, Governor State of California; Armand Arabian,
    Supreme Court Justice State of California; Elizabeth Dole,
    PublicServant; Jerry Tarkanian, Basketball Coach; Mark J. & Paul J.
    Geragos, Attorneys.
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