Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

TBILISI: Sending A Message Of Peace To The World

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • TBILISI: Sending A Message Of Peace To The World

    SENDING A MESSAGE OF PEACE TO THE WORLD
    By Nino Gvalia

    Messenger.ge, Georgia
    Friday, September 22, 2006, #180 (1200)

    The Caucasian Chamber Orchestra is on tour

    Art crosses all borders, and dares people to live in harmony and
    love. It must come as pleasant news that last year the German
    conductor composer and pianist Uwe Berkemer founded the Caucasian
    Chamber Orchestra.

    The orchestra, under the patronage of the first lady of Georgia Sandra
    Roelofs, features musicians from Georgia, Armenia and Russia. As
    Berkemer told The Messenger musicians are working in peace and
    agreement.

    "Music is the universal language and can bring people together,"
    said the conductor, adding that the main purpose of the orchestra
    is to send a message of peace to the world and show that Caucasian
    people can work with each other without fighting, in harmony. "We
    also want to popularize music by Caucasian composers, because people
    internationally know very little about them," admitted Berkemer.

    When asked why he worries about this region so much, the German
    musician replied that he has an intense relationship with Caucasian
    people, as since 2000 he is married to a Georgian violinist. "This
    region is close to my heart," said Berkemer smiling.

    At present the Caucasian Chamber Orchestra is on tour, they played
    a concert in Vienna, then in Brussels and, from September 23rd, the
    Caucasian musicians will participate in a festival in the south of
    France. The orchestra has also various interesting plans after coming
    back home. The line up looks busy: performing at the Shostakovich
    Jubilee in Tbilisi on September 29th, concerts in Shida Kartli, the
    North Caucasus including Vladikavkaz and Beslan, Iran and finally,
    maybe even in Sokhumi, to prove once again that music can make people
    forget about ethnic or political conflicts.
Working...
X