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  • [criticsforumarchive] Critics' Forum Article, 10.14.06

    Critics' Forum
    Music
    Elements of a Universal Alphabet
    By Sam Ekizian

    The musical forms known as folk-fusion and folk revival have often
    served as the vehicles of creative expression for performers seeking
    to adapt, translate, and modernize traditional musical styles. The
    new folk-fusion scene draws inspiration from widespread and
    multicultural sources, a process that often entails the
    popularization of previously non-mainstream music, the adaptation of
    folk styles to pop and rock structures, and the introduction of new
    instruments.

    Within the Armenian music community, performers such as Arto
    Tuncboyaciyan, Gor Mkhitarian, and Armen Chakmakian have already led
    critically acclaimed forays into the folk-fusion scene. With the
    recent debut of its full-length album, "Yev O Phe," Element has
    navigated into this emerging but still somewhat forbidden genre.
    The band includes Ara Dabandjian (keyboard, guitar, accordion), Saro
    Koujakian (vocals and guitar), Gars Sherbetdjian (vocals), Shant
    Mahserejian (violin), and Jeremy Millado (bass). Dabandjian is
    also the band's arranger as well as creative and musical director.

    Element performs traditional Armenian folk songs as well as more
    contemporary compositions laced with its own sensibilities, some of
    them distinctly non-Armenian. The band's members are aligned in
    their determination to elevate their cultural heritage through
    music, while paying homage to South American and Mediterranean
    traditions - the band's stylings are variously embossed with the
    sounds of Flamenco, Tango, Rembetika, as well as more contemporary
    influences.


    This commingling of cultures has been the source of much debate.
    After all, it tests the bounds of Armenian cultural identity and
    seems to present a considerable obstacle to the adaptation of
    traditional Armenian music. Therefore, precisely because fusion
    presents fertile ground for artistic exploration, it may find itself
    bound by a number of powerful cultural constraints, including
    anxieties about assimilation. As a result, the growing influence of
    fusion may be viewed by some as the dilution of an otherwise pure
    sound and a deep-seated cultural memory.

    But that view conveniently ignores the fact that much of Armenian
    music has developed precisely as a result of its interaction with
    outside elements and its rich fusion of disparate influences. After
    all, Gomidas Vartabed himself, an ordained monk and
    ethnomusicologist, spent the early 1900s initiating a renaissance of
    traditional Armenian folk music by visiting far-flung provinces and
    villages to take record of the varied traditions of native songs and
    dances found there.

    Gomidas's quest clearly suggests that Armenian music is an
    undeniably fecund source of musical expression and adaptation. The
    characteristic palette of this expression, both musically and
    lyrically, manifests itself in rural songs of yearning, spiritual
    songs of remembrance, and other traditional expressions of longing,
    lament, and rebirth. The recent popularity of folk-fusion and folk
    revival reminds us that these musical styles, like traditional
    Armenian music itself, succeed when they manage to remain true to
    the intrinsic features and inherent values of the various musical
    influences they bring together.


    "Yev O Phe" delivers Element's unique expression of folk-fusion by
    seamlessly incorporating deft instrumentation, lush vocal harmonies,
    and rich multi-ethnic musical styles. And nowhere in the album does
    the band impose embellishments otherwise foreign to its core musical
    material. The songs are not weighted down by deliberate rock
    inflections or plodding digital treatments. The album also manages
    to retain the purity of the folk elements and various instruments it
    brings together. And throughout, the sound somehow remains
    undeniably Armenian.

    "Yev O Phe" is elevated by Dabandjian's hypnotic arrangements and
    his superb command of several different instruments, as well as
    Koujakian's deeply soulful vocals. In fact, the most alluring
    tracks on the album are those featuring this combination's
    performances. Dabandjian's talents are on full display on the
    album's fifth track, "Yar Ko Parag Boyin Mernem," which manages to
    make a powerful emotional impact while retaining an understated
    delicacy. Koujakian's masculine yet smooth vocals take center stage
    on "Mardigi Yerke" and "Anoush Hayrenik," without overpowering the
    songs. All in all, "Yev O Phe" represents a powerful fusion of
    fervent rhythms and infectious melodies, rippled through with multi-
    layered and multi-ethnic influences.


    It is worth mentioning that Element is an accomplished live act.
    There is an immediacy and improvisational aspect to the band's live
    performances that lend themselves well to its particular adaptation
    and re-imagination of the fusion genre. During a recent show at the
    Ford Amphitheatre, Element's soulful performance enveloped the
    audience and drew it inescapably into the music being performed on
    stage. This captivating quality of Element's music is due in no
    small part to the band's repertoire, at once intimately familiar and
    distinctly different, allowing listeners to celebrate their own
    cultural heritage while embracing a more universal perspective.

    Element has already acquired a diverse and loyal fan base. But it is
    too early to declare whether the band has brought Armenian folk
    music back into our collective consciousness or successfully bridged
    geographic, linguistic, and multi-cultural divides. What is
    undeniable, however, is that Element has cast aside deep-seated
    cultural constraints and adopted a more progressive musical register.


    In the current era of globalization, music has become the
    indispensable mode of communication and integration, a modern and
    universal vernacular. Fusion provides opportunities to use varying
    elements of this vernacular to stretch creative boundaries and to
    spread indigenous music to wider audiences, a crucial stage in the
    evolution of the world music scene and of Armenian music itself.
    Element's rendering of folk music is nothing more than an extension
    of this evolution, the adoption of a genuinely universal alphabet.


    All Rights Reserved: Critics Forum, 2006

    Sam Ekizian has been involved with the Armenian cultural and music
    scene for over two decades and has helped introduce artists to West
    Coast audiences.

    You can reach him or any of the other contributors to Critics' Forum
    at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
    in this series are available online at www.criticsforum.org. To
    sign up for a weekly electronic version of new articles, go to
    www.criticsforum.org/join. Critics' Forum is a group created to
    discuss issues relating to Armenian art and culture in the Diaspora.
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