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Armenian Reporter - 4/19/2008 - arts and culture section

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  • Armenian Reporter - 4/19/2008 - arts and culture section

    ARMENIAN REPORTER

    PO Box 129
    Paramus, New Jersey 07652
    Tel: 1-201-226-1995
    Fax: 1-201-226-1660

    3191 Casitas Ave Ste 216
    Los Angeles CA 90039
    Tel: 1-323-671-1030
    Fax: 1-323-671-1033

    1 Yeghvard Hwy Fl 5
    Yerevan 0054 Armenia
    Tel: 374-10-367-195
    Fax: 374-10-367-195 fax

    Web: http://www.reporter.am
    Email: [email protected]

    March 22, 2007 -- From the Arts & Culture section

    To see the printed version of the newspaper, complete with photographs
    and additional content, visit www.reporter.am and download the pdf
    files. It's free.

    1. Music: Sofi Mkheyan: the balladeer who can also bop and hop (by
    Betty Panossian-Ter Sarkissian)

    2. Sling Media CEO Blake Krikorian revolutionizes television
    viewership (by Tenny Issakhanian Avanesian)

    8. Arts in brief
    * New Vahe Berberian exhibition to open in West Hollywood
    * Sylvie Vartan performs in Japan

    3. Music Video: Ara Soudjian is the whiz kid behind Wiz Khalifa's
    debut music video (by Adrineh Gregorian)

    4. Music: Dilijan delivers (by Armine Iknadossian)

    5. Poetry Matters: The poems in Roupen Sevag's pockets (by Lory Bedikian)

    6. Poetry in translation (by Yeghishe Charents; trans. Armine Grigoryan)

    7. A conversation with Ara Dinkjian (by Lola Koundakjian)

    ************************************ ***************************************

    1. Music: Sofi Mkheyan: the balladeer who can also bop and hop

    by Betty Panossian-Ter Sarkissian

    YEREVAN -- Sofi Mkheyan, the young and dynamic Armenian pop star, is
    one of the hits of today's Armenian music world. In the past year, she
    metamorphosed herself to become something the Armenian pop music
    industry lacked the most: a dynamic female artist who could be a crowd
    mover, a romantic balladeer, and, above all, a straightforward and
    spontaneous person.

    Within little more than two years, Sofi managed to climb to the top.
    At the National Music Awards held in January this year in Yerevan, she
    was recognized as the hit of the year. Her duet with Sirusho, Arzhani
    e (He Deserves It) only added to her growing popularity in Armenia.

    * She could sing even before she could speak

    As a child, Sofi would turn on the radio and sing along any given
    song. She inherited her good voice and sense of rhythm from her
    father, who encouraged her early steps in music. Young Sofi studied
    the piano at Sayat Nova Music School in Yerevan and attended the Do Re
    Mi children's music school and studio. As an adolescent, Sofi made a
    choice to go deeper into music and continued her studies at the
    Romanos Melikian Music College in Yerevan.

    However, it was only after joining the State Theater for Song that
    she began seriously considering the prospect of a career as a singer.
    "Until then it all was a hobby," Sofi recalls. "I simply learned how
    to sing English and Armenian popular songs, entertain people at
    concerts, and take part in song contests."

    It was young Sofi's love of all things beautiful and fluffy that
    showed her the way to the world of Armenian pop music. Back in 1999,
    she took part in a contest where the participants were asked to
    describe how they would like to spend Valentine's Day. "I wrote about
    how I had had the most wonderful time with my friends," Sofi says.
    "But I had added a short postscript, saying that it all was just
    wishful thinking." However, her entry won her a three-day trip to a
    resort at Dzaghgadzor, together with the whole team and starlets of
    the State Theater of Song.

    It was at that trip that Sofi was discovered by Arthur Grigoryan,
    the director of the State Theater of Song, who invited her to join the
    theater. Sofi went on to study at the institution from 2000 until
    2004, as a soloist.

    * Becoming Sofi

    In 2003, Sofi took a step forward in the State Theater of Song. She
    was included in a project titled "Hayuhiner," a concert held in the
    United States and featuring four young and promising female singers
    >From Armenia.

    By 2005, Sofi had already departed the State Theater of Song and
    headed off to launch her career with her first video clip for the song
    Im Unker (My Friend). Those first steps on her own were not exactly
    easy, as established songwriters would not trust their creations to
    the hands of a novice. "That song means so much to me," Sofi says. "I
    finally experienced what it was to have a song written especially for
    you."

    Soon her determination and hard work were rewarded. In December
    2005, the National Music Awards in Yerevan acknowledged Sofi Mkheyan
    as the Best Newcomer of the year. Two more video clips for the songs
    Ser (Love) and Nayir im Achkerin (Look into my Eyes) hit the Armenian
    silver screen in 2006. Nayir im Achkerin received the Best Video Clip
    award at the 2006 Armenian Music Awards in the United States.

    The year 2007 brought to the fore a long-awaited burst of yet
    another facet of her talent. Until then, Sofi had exposed her more
    emotional self through three romantic ballads and video clips. It was
    time to experiment.

    In summer 2007, Sofi shocked her audiences with her energetic
    rendition of an upbeat hit, Ore yev Nerkan (The Day and the Present).
    This dramatic change in style and image introduced her to new
    audiences, showed that she was more than a romantic balladeer with
    melodramatic moods.

    "I came to realize that I am young, can be very dynamic," she
    remembers. "I just wanted to express the fire in me." She explains
    that she gave way to the desire of her fans to see her perform
    livelier songs with quick beats.

    The next upbeat song and video clip came as a duet with Sirusho.
    Arzhani e is Sofi's first-ever duet and it became a quick hit in
    Armenia.

    That same year, Sofi also recorded Kyanke ko (Your Life), her first
    attempt at songwriting. This song was included in her debut album of
    the same title, released in 2007. "It was not all premeditated that I
    would write a song for my new album and name the album after it. It
    all just happened," she says.

    Recently, Sofi is seen dancing a lot, both in her video clips and
    live on stage. She says that she has always been a good dancer, and
    with a little help from her friends at the Amaras Dance Troupe, she
    choreographed her rhythmic songs and improved her dance skills.

    Sofi says becoming a star has not changed her in essence. "It only
    made me become more serious about my life and career," she notes.

    At present, this young singer has plenty of upcoming projects. Sofi
    is busy preparing a clip for another of her upbeat songs. She is also
    recording a couple of new songs which will mark her comeback to ballad
    singing.

    The only disadvantages that her booming career bring along are
    physical exhaustion and the lack of spare time to do anything else.
    "My activities and being busy have been doubled since 2007," Sofi
    says. "I try to be at the center of events in Armenian pop music and
    try my best to have something new for my audience. Sometimes I don't
    even know how the day is gone, as I run from one studio to another
    photo shoot. At the end of the day, I always try to find some time to
    be with my friends and the people I love."

    ************************************* **************************************

    2. Sling Media CEO Blake Krikorian revolutionizes television viewership

    by Tenny Issakhanian Avanesian

    FOSTER CITY, Calif. -- As I walk down the bright red corridors of the
    Sling Media corporate offices here, I sense a certain energy and hip
    factor that is unique to the hustle and bustle of young Internet
    companies in the still-thriving Silicon Valley. I walk past a photo
    shoot and realize that it involves the subject of my interview, the
    co-founder and CEO of Sling Media himself, Blake Krikorian. He has a
    very casual and pleasant air about him, I suspect, as I await my turn
    to speak with him.

    Those suspicions are confirmed a few minutes later when we meet in a
    conference room appropriately called "The Oval Office." This is just
    another ordinary day for Blake, who is interviewed by various
    reporters almost daily. Why is he in such demand? Well, allow me to
    answer that question with a question.

    What do you do when you want to watch your favorite shows at the
    time of broadcast -- no later -- but can't get yourself in front of
    your TV in time to do so? You sling, of course. You sling your
    television content onto your laptop computer, cell phone, or nearby
    television screen. That is the basic concept behind Sling Media, Inc.,
    a company that was founded in 2004 by brothers Blake and Jason
    Krikorian out of sheer necessity: theirs.

    * For the love of the game

    In 2002, when the San Francisco Giants were on their way to the World
    Series, Blake and Jason were running their consulting company in the
    Bay area, traveling for work, and reluctantly missing the games of
    their home team. One day, they went online to watch the game. They
    thought they had found an Internet service that offered the games, but
    there was a catch: only $19.95 a month. "And I thought to myself, 'OK,
    here we go again.' Subscription fatigue," Blake explains. "Like most
    consumers, I was already paying all these other subscriptions, home
    TV, cell phone, and everything else."

    But beggars can't be choosers. He desperately wanted to watch the
    game, so he gave in and paid. But the game failed to appear. "What the
    heck was going on?," he recalls. "I went to read the fine print and at
    the bottom it said that you get all the games except for your local
    team, which they black out." And it did not end there. The subscriber
    would not have access to his local team's game even if it was
    nationally televised, which was the case for the Giants that year.

    Blake and Jason realized how unaccommodating this was for consumers
    who, these days, spend more time in front of various display screens,
    not just a television. "At the end of the day, we shouldn't have to
    try to figure out which display has what content. I love my
    living-room TV, I love my TiVo, I love my DVR. That's the content I
    want, and I want to be able to see that wherever I am and on any
    display," says Blake, the consumer. "All the content is there on our
    home TV. There has to be some way that I can have some magical
    binoculars so that I can reach into my house, get the content onto any
    screen, and control it," says Blake, the innovator. And so, tried and
    true necessity became the mother of invention. The Slingbox was born.
    "I've not had a problem catching a Giants game since." He quips, "Now
    if I only had time to watch the game."

    * Life before slinging

    Born and raised in Mountain View, California, Krikorian was the oldest
    of three boys to a child-psychologist father and stay-at-home mother.
    He earned his undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering from UCLA
    and then taught himself computer science. "I can write in code once in
    a while," he adds.

    With no familial attachment to engineering, he attributes his
    interest to two factors: where he grew up and his affinity for toys.
    "Growing up in Mountain View, it was the birth of Apple computers, so
    there was a lot of influence there." The infectious buzz of
    technology-centered Silicon Valley aside, Krikorian always enjoyed
    toys and gadgets. "I loved technology and video games, so it was fun
    to actually make some of them." And to this day, this kid at heart
    approaches his work more as play. "There's nothing better than not
    having a J-O-B," he says.

    * Convergence and coexistence

    When the Slingbox first came onto the scene, television networks were
    worried about losing viewership and control. "They thought, 'Wait a
    minute, you're moving our signal away,'" Krikorian explains. "We
    thought, 'Let's open up the dialogue with folks to help educate them...'
    We turned that corner about two years ago when many of the networks,
    the vast majority of them, now realize that we are actually increasing
    their viewership." The Slingbox has done this by increasing the reach
    and frequency with which a television network can be viewed and
    connected to a user.

    Sling Media has also bridged the gap between network programming and
    their supplemental content online, including deleted scenes,
    directors' cuts, and commentaries. "Slingbox is the first real true
    convergence product because it takes those two things, marrying
    television with the richness of the Web," he explains. "For 20 years,
    people have been talking about bringing interactivity or the Web to
    television."

    Now, as a result of Sling Media's efforts, television and Internet
    content can be viewed and consumed concurrently. Drawing from personal
    preferences, Krikorian offers an example. Using the Slingbox, "I can
    watch the game on NBC, but then have the stats alongside the game --
    that's really a webfeed right alongside it."

    In the process, television networks continue to get the credit,
    Nielsen's ratings or otherwise, for their consumed content. The
    signals transmitted from a television cable box or satellite to
    Nielsen's are sent and measured normally while the Slingbox simply
    redirects the displayed images to the users' designated platform
    display screen. As a result, Sling Media and the television networks
    are not competitors, but rather allies.

    * Emmy and EchoStar

    Blake Krikorian's innovations have already received national and
    worldwide acclaim and attention. Without an aggressive television
    marketing strategy -- it is primarily word of mouth with limited
    sports talk-radio ads, sponsorships, and print ads overseas -- Sling
    Media has been able to sell upward of 500,000 units worldwide. Sales
    are quickly approaching the million unit mark.

    Further, in January 2007, at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in
    Las Vegas, the Slingbox earned Sling Media the 2005-2006 Technology
    and Engineering Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Advanced
    Media Technology for the Non-Synchronous Enhancement of Original
    Television Content.

    Although they were considering going public later this year, Sling
    Media opted to be acquired instead -- the right decision, given the
    current economy, Krikorian reflects. They closed the deal with
    EchoStar five months ago. Krikorian is hopeful about the prospects.
    "We've still been growing like gangbusters, which has been terrific,"
    he says. "We're going to find ourselves accelerated quite a bit now
    that we have a lot more resources as well as the ability to work with
    our sister company, which is the Dish Network."

    Brian Jaquet, public relations director at Sling Media, adds, "This
    gives us a tremendous amount of opportunity to start to integrate the
    technology that's in this box [the Slingbox] into other set-top
    boxes." He continues, "Integrating this kind of technology into the
    set-top box can help us reach new customers that maybe we haven't
    reached before."

    * There's more where that came from

    Sling Media is now at a turning point, although its key goal remains
    constant: making its users' home television content as portable and
    immediate as possible. "We connect consumers to the content they love,
    regardless of the location they're in, regardless of the display,
    regardless of the source of that content, and regardless of that
    format," Krikorian asserts. "The consumer is king."

    Slingboxes can currently connect to any Mac, PC, Palm, and various
    Nokia and Sony Ericsson phones. Many other exciting innovations are in
    the works, including the Projector, Pro HD Slingbox, and Clip+Sling.

    Through Sling Media, Blake Krikorian may have single-handedly
    revolutionized the way people consume television content. In the
    process, he has won over key television executives, including CBS
    President Leslie Moonves. "When he first heard about our products, he
    was very concerned," remembers Krikorian. "But he was open enough to
    learn about it and listen and say, 'Hey, what are some new things we
    can be doing together?'"

    Krikorian is hopeful about the power of technology so long as
    consumers and the television industry continue to embrace it. And if
    they do, then everyone, whether they have a good pitcher's arm or not,
    can do some slinging of their own. And that is something that Blake
    Krikorian, the baseball fan, can appreciate.

    connect:
    slingmedia.com

    ************ ************************************************** *************

    3. Music Video: Ara Soudjian is the whiz kid behind Wiz Khalifa's
    debut music video

    by Adrineh Gregorian

    ARLETA, Calif. -- It was an unusually warm day here, on December 14,
    2007. As I drove up to Laurel Canyon Stages, the scenery was tranquil
    and very suburban and I anticipated the sound stage I was about to
    enter would stand in direct contrast to the docile surroundings.

    My destination was the music-video shoot for newcomer hip-hop artist
    Wiz Khalifa's debut single, "Say Yeah," directed by Los Angeles-based
    filmmaker Ara Soudjian.

    The first thing I noticed was the row of fancy cars parked outside
    and right then I knew I was in the right place. As I walked in, I was
    equal parts excited and intimidated. Given the usual perception of the
    hip-hop world as a mosaic of luxury cars, scantily clad women, flutes
    overflowing with champagne, and money falling from the sky, I wondered
    where I would fit in.

    On set I wandered through the hallways, passing through Brazilian
    Mardi Gras dancers to my right and mariachi musicians to my left, and
    continued to feel like a fish out of water. That said, it didn't take
    more than ten seconds for a familiar face to appear, and then another,
    then another, then another...

    What I expected to be a glamorous, blinged-out music-video shoot was
    all that and then some. Ara had recruited his talented friends and
    family to join forces in making this a community collaboration and an
    AYF camp reunion, all in one.

    * Making the director

    Ever since Ara was a kid, he knew he wanted to be a filmmaker. Being
    the son of an Armenian father and a Mexican mother, he was exposed to
    an international flare from a young age. Names like Pedro Almodovar,
    Federico Fellini, and Robert Rodriguez were commonplace in
    conversations at the Soudjian household.

    "My mom was in several theater productions and plays," Ara says. "My
    siblings and I would go to rehearsals with her and go to every show. I
    guess I loved watching make-believe and I also loved to draw and
    illustrate."

    Ara's mom would take him and his younger sister and brother,
    Mariette and Armen, to the movies every weekend. "It was a form of
    escapism for me," he recalls.

    Like most prospective auteurs, he got hold of a handheld camera and
    made short films starring his high school classmates. He dabbled in
    animation and eventually attended California State
    University-Northridge's notable film school.

    After graduating with a film degree, he climbed the
    entertainment-business ladder, starting out as a production assistant
    then progressing to art-department assistant, art director, assistant
    director, editor, and illustrator. He learned the tricks of the trade
    and even managed to play basketball with George Clooney on the set of
    the Coen brothers' Intolerable Cruelty, on which he worked as a
    production assistant.

    "A couple of years ago, I decided to stop taking these jobs and
    focus on directing full time," Ara says. "It was a big gamble, I
    guess, but something I've envisioned myself to be at a young age."

    Ara got into music videos when a producer friend, Berj Beramian,
    recruited him to direct a music video for Gor Mkhitarian. They shot a
    low budget video for Gor, which eventually won them an Armenian Music
    Award. "I'm also proud of two other videos, for XO and Vokee," Ara
    says. "Both had little or no budget, with a crew of about two to three
    people. One of my idols is director Robert Rodriguez, who shoots,
    directs, produces, and edits his own movies. I basically took his rule
    of a one-man crew and implemented it in my projects."

    "Music videos are basically films on crack," Ara says as he comments
    about the difference between music videos and traditional films. "It's
    a highly accelerated process. You have one week to prep, a day to
    shoot, and two weeks to deliver. It's crazy, stressful, but hella
    fun!"

    Music videos also give a filmmaker the opportunity to make what is
    in essence a short film and showcase it to a wide audience. "Ara tries
    to create a visual representation of the song that really features the
    artist, and that's very different than making any other film genre,"
    says producer Garin Hussenjian. Garin has collaborated with Ara on and
    off since 2000. They met when Ara joined the crew of the feature film
    After Freedom, directed by Vahe Babaian.

    * Making "Say Yeah"

    Recently Ara and Garin worked together on the video for Serj Tankian's
    "Money," a track from his solo debut, Elect the Dead. George Tonikian
    >From Serjical Strike Records gave Ara the opportunity to direct
    "Money" and Garin joined in as a producer. When Warner Bros., Serjical
    Strike's parent company, viewed all 12 videos that accompanied the
    album, Ara's "Money" stood out. Impressed by his ability to make a
    small-budget video look like it was made with top dollars prompted
    Warner to ask Ara for a treatment to make the "Say Yeah" video and the
    official video for "Sky Is Over," another song off Elect the Dead.

    "There were a lot of hurdles prior to getting the Wiz job," Garin
    says. Although there were a lot of directors vying for the job, "Ara
    delivered to them something above and beyond what they expected, which
    they were very surprised by," Garin adds.

    Because this is Wiz's first big music video under the Warner Bros.
    label, Ara's main goal was to debut Wiz as a really hot hip-hop
    artist.

    "It's the first video that's going to set the tone for who he is as
    a hip-hop artist," Garin says. "In this case Ara really took into
    consideration and worked closely with the manager and label in order
    to get exactly what it is they wanted to present to the world when
    they watch a Wiz music video."

    Warner Bros. A&R rep Craig Aaronson came up with the concept of Wiz
    traveling around the world with his entourage. Then it was up to Ara
    to conceptualize the entire video. "I love being alone in my head
    coming up with ideas," Ara says. "This is the one place where it's you
    alone, no collaboration, no dealing with managers, etc. It's the root
    of your project and the most exciting."

    Ara took the idea of jet-setting around the world and made it into a
    computer-generated imaginarium. "We were working with pennies," Ara
    recalls. "So I decided to shoot on green screen, and get my very
    talented designer friend Sako Shahinian and effects supervisor Garo
    Hussenjian [Garin's husband] to generate the backgrounds."

    It starts off with Wiz waking up in his bedroom, then boarding a
    plane that would take him and his friends on a wild tour across the
    globe, during which they stop off in different countries to party, of
    course. The "Say Yeah" video is a colorful explosion that has dancers
    representing a flurry of cultures and dance genres moving to the same
    beat.

    Once the filming commenced, the graphics and composite work kicked
    in. For weeks Ara, Garin, Sako, and Garo spent hours on end digitally
    creating this magical world.

    "Working with Wiz and his management was great," Ara says. "Wiz
    would take direction really well, and his manager, Benjy Grinberg, and
    I would bounce off ideas from each other, and so on and so forth. The
    team at Warner was great as well -- especially Craig, who took a major
    chance on me with both 'Sky Is Over' and the Wiz video."

    "He's given the song a new life," says Garin of the "Say Yeah"
    video's pop feel. "Ara chose to give [the song] a fun, colorful video
    that a lot of people that may not listen to hip-hop or could care less
    about rap might watch because it's interesting."

    "I actually wanted to send the Wiz off to Armenia, but my producer
    fought me on that," Ara says. "I got an Armenian subtitle in there.
    That was cool."

    Speaking of Armenia, the majority of the crew was Armenian -- all
    talented professionals in their respective fields, most of whom Ara
    and Garin have met on the sets of other jobs.

    "Working with Armenians is like working with family," Ara says. "Oh
    wait, they were all my family"! Ara's fiancée, Garinee Akmakjian,
    served as the craft-service hostess. His brother, Armen, was the
    assistant director. His brother's girlfriend, Salpi Ovayan, was the
    production manager. Garin, his "adopted older sister," ran the show as
    producer. Make-up artist Helen Kalognomos went to school with Ara.
    Dancer Michelle Papayans and Ara met in Armenia almost ten years ago.
    They say Armenians are separated by one degree, and Ara could have
    gone on and on linking a common past with each and everyone on the
    set, including me (Ara and I went to camp together in the early
    1990s).

    "To be honest, I was very stressed that day," Ara says. "It was my
    first big-label video and to have my friends and family be there
    brought everything into perspective. I was literally thanking God and
    pinching myself every minute I got."

    "Working on this music video was amazing," Garin adds. "It was a
    real rush. You're working so hard, but there's so much excitement and
    enthusiasm and it's just a thrill. It's something that all of us want
    again and again."

    The level of excitement was palpable with every person who walked
    onto that sound stage during the 17-hour shoot. With this video, Ara
    got the opportunity of a lifetime and in turn presented opportunities
    to the people who have supported him all along. "It felt like a big
    family working hard on something," Garin notes. "We were lucky to have
    that chance to pool all our resources together for this."

    "Working on a music was something I have wanted to do since I
    started dancing," says Michelle Papayans, who has been dancing since
    she was four years old. "Being Armenian and then getting to work with
    an Armenian director/producer and a mostly Armenian cast and crew
    really made me feel lucky since this was my first music video."

    "Garin and Ara worked so hard that I know that Warner Bros. got way
    more than their money's worth," Michelle says. "What most
    non-Armenians don't know is, when you hire an Armenian that is
    passionate about what they do, you will always get 110%. On top of
    that it even becomes a community thing, like friends and family
    bringing any contribution they can to make things even better and
    support their friends' project."

    Working with her family on the set made for her favorite moments.
    "My cousin Helen was in charge of make-up and wardrobe, which made me
    very proud," she says. "As well as getting to perform with my cousin
    Alex, who made an entire set crack up laughing while filming."

    For Helen Kalognomos, "Working on a music video is fast-paced and
    fun." Helen headed three departments: Hair, Make-up, and Wardrobe. "It
    means a lot of prep work so you can be ready to nail it in one very
    long day," she explains.

    "At the end of the day, no matter what your cultural background is,
    it's important that you're at the top of your game, and everyone was,"
    says Helen, referring to the crew. She evidently also witnessed Ara
    being crowned Prom King at Rose and Alex Pilibos School. "It's a great
    feeling to look back and think, 'We had no idea we'd be working
    together one day.' But here we are, and how awesome is it!"

    Just days after wrapping "Say Yeah," Ara began working on the "Sky
    Is Over" music video with co-director Tony Petrossian. In it Serj
    walks through an abandoned city and begins to erase the sky in a
    single long shot. Both videos are up for Music Video Production
    Association (MVPA) Awards.

    In fact, Ara isn't the only Armenian being recognized for exemplary
    work. There are three other Armenians up for nominations at the MVPA
    Awards: Tony Petrossian for Best Director, Best Rock Video, and Best
    Special Effects; Sevag Vrej for Best Rock Video and Best Video
    produced under $25,000; and Vem for Best Hip-Hop Video. In addition,
    Sako Shahinian and Garo Hussenjian's work on "Say Yeah" is up for Best
    Computer Effects.

    "I would love to direct music videos and commercials for a couple of
    years," Ara says. "But my dream is to direct a feature, which is
    etched in stone in my five-year plan."

    "Say Yeah" is now on rotation on MTV Jams and "Sky Is Over" has
    become a staple on MTV Hits.

    connect:
    tosfilms.com

    ******************** ************************************************** *****

    4. Music: Dilijan delivers

    by Armine Iknadossian

    LOS ANGELES -- If you read the Los Angeles Times Calendar section, you
    must know about the Dilijan Chamber Music Series. Since April 2007,
    the Times has reviewed all five concerts performed at the Zipper
    Auditorium downtown, and all five received favorable reviews, to say
    the least. The last concert of this season will take place on April 27
    and will be a Genocide commemoration. With music by Gurdjieff,
    Komitas, Bach and Shostakovich, Movses Pogossian, Dilijan's artistic
    director and a prize-winning violinist, assesses that it will carry
    with it a "life-affirming, eternal feel" and not at all a somber one.

    The Dilijan Chamber Music Series is dedicated to showcasing
    traditional pieces of Western classical chamber music, as well as
    selections from archives of Armenian chamber works. Founded by members
    of the Lark Musical Society, under the guidance of Executive Director
    Vatsche Barsoumian, Dilijan's mission is to present to the public a
    variety of distinguished instrumentalists of an international caliber.
    Moreover, Dilijan strives to present world premieres of chamber music
    commissioned by contemporary Armenian composers.

    Pogossian, who resides in Glendale with his wife, Los Angeles
    Philharmonic violinist Varty Manouelian, and their three young
    children, is winner of the 1986 Tchaikovsky International Competition,
    and the youngest ever First Prize winner of the 1985 USSR National
    Violin Competition. When he performed Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto
    with the Boston Pops in 1990, his debut performance in the states, R.
    Dyer of the Boston Globe called his playing "fiery, centered" which
    sounds like somewhat of an oxymoron. But that is what Pogossion is
    like in person as well.

    When contemplating the predicament of presenting audiences with
    compositions by living Armenian composers who have not yet taken their
    seats in the classical music canon, Pogossian challenges, "What is
    progressive is not always accepted. But what is the alternative? To
    not do it? To continue to play the Sabre Dance over and over with
    different instruments?" It is pertinent to point out that the series
    is currently finishing up its third season; it is not only thriving,
    but gaining momentum, attracting more and more people to the Zipper
    and accumulating accolades from reviewers, patrons and local musicians
    alike. "L.A. is very unusual. ....you see a lot of young people at the
    concerts. That's why I like playing here. For example, today at the
    concert we will be playing six pieces, four of them by living
    composers, the fifth just died three years ago. One of them, Tigran
    Mansourian, will be present. Two live in Armenia, one in Hungary. I
    could pick up the phone and talk to them. It's incredibly inspiring!"
    His face lights up at this prospect.

    This is what he does, propagating new music. According to his bio on
    the Dilijan website, Pogossian has premiered over 30 works and worked
    closely with composers such as G. Kurtag, A. R. Thomas, A. Arutunian,
    T. Mansurian, D. Felder, and V. Sharafyan. His latest releases include
    G. Kurtag's monumental "Kafka Fragments" for soprano and violin on
    Bridge label, and a solo violin CD of World Premiere recordings on the
    Albany label.

    If you paid attention, not all those names end in "-ian", a
    strategic move on Pogossian's part as well as proof that good music is
    the aim, not simply national pride. "Since our prime goal is quality,
    we really prefer to play the best music with the best possible
    performers. We don't practice affirmative action, where we need to
    play only Armenian music....We ought to promote Armenian music, but by
    putting it together with Western music, it's one way of expansion or
    advertising our achievements because then they go to their colleagues
    and say this is great Armenian music."

    Pogossian has performed with orchestras around the world and was
    recently appointed to UCLA's full time faculty. "I've always studied
    chamber music...it's more intimate...basically a conversation between a
    few people. Every player has it's own part, so they don't lose their
    personality." Chamber music is written for a small group of
    instruments which traditionally could be accommodated in a palace
    chamber. With generous support from patrons like Chairman Nazareth
    Darakjian, an ardent fan of chamber music, Pogossian is honored to
    commission works by Armenian composers who, "for various reasons ... are
    not played in Armenia. They live in horrible conditions, get paid $10
    an hour. I don't know why, but your own greats are not
    acknowledged....It is important to know that at Brahms time, most of the
    composers being played were living composers, but today they are not."

    Dilijan have achieved a wide acceptance by the Armenian community
    and don't have to fight for recognition. It's something to brag about
    because LA is a big city. One unique aspect of the series is the fact
    that some of the pieces don't have recordings because they are being
    performed for the first time. "It's like being a part of history,"
    Pogossian insists, amazing even himself with this statement. During
    the first season, at the last concert, Dilijan performed Komitas and
    Mansourian, and in the second half, Messiaen's "Quartet For the End of
    Time". But usually, Pogossian tries to include a big Brahms piece or a
    big Schubert piece to lure the audience into the newer, lesser known
    ones. "It's like a dinner course where we don't want to scare people
    away with something unusual right away."

    Pogossian has big dreams for Dilijan, one being to take the series
    to its namesake, the resort town in Armenia located in the Tavush
    region. Called "Little Switzerland" by the locals it has served as a
    retreat for Armenian composers since the mid-1960s as well as giants
    of 20th century music such as Shostakovich and Britten.

    connect:
    http://dilijan.larkmusicalsocie ty.com/home.php
    [email protected]
    818 572-5438
    April 27, 2008, 3 p.m.
    Genocide commemoration concert
    Music by Gurdjieff and Komitas
    Bach - Trio Sonata
    Shostakovich - Piano Quintet
    Performed by: Ensemble Resonance, Movses Pogossian, Varty Manouelian,
    Paul Coletti,
    Ron Leonard , Joanne Pearce Martin
    All concerts performed at:
    Zipper Hall , Colburn School of Performing Arts,
    200 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, California

    ************************************** *************************************

    5. Poetry Matters: The poems in Roupen's pockets

    by Lory Bedikian

    If history is a map, then the history of many poets is a small island
    far in the middle of an oceanic mass, visible yet mostly uncharted
    territory. I knew that for the columns this month, I not only had to
    read the poems of the poets who perished during the Genocide, but it
    was also necessary and essential that I find out as much as I can
    about their backgrounds, biographies, the details of their private
    lives or the letters quoted which were signed with their names.

    But the more I researched and read, the more I realized that I would
    never find out what I truly wanted to know. I surprised myself of what
    interested me - odd details and questions that could never be
    answered. Yes, of course, few but important facts of their lives are
    available. But not the details that one would find in a memoir or in
    the unopened diary of a loved one.

    For instance, the more I read about Roupen Sevag - the little that
    there is documented - the more I wondered things such as: what was the
    song this man hummed to himself in the face of fear, and ultimately,
    when he died, what could have been found in the pockets of his coat?
    Would one find an unfinished poem, or merely a stamp never used, never
    mailed out to a friend a continent away?

    Roupen Sevag - the pen name of Roupen Chilingirian - was born in
    1885 in Silivri and was arrested in April of 1915 and killed in August
    of that same year. He was a poet, writer and physician. An eyewitness
    account retells the horrific torture and deaths of Roupen Sevag along
    with Daniel Varoujan and others.

    Just as I imagine what would have been found in Sevag's pockets, I
    speculate about what types of poems he may have written if he had
    lived. One of his poems, "Whisper of Love" translated by Berge
    Turabian was featured on the Armenian Poetry Project last year and is
    exemplary of a young poet writing on love during the beginning of the
    twentieth century.

    Whisper Of Love

    They sailed away, loaded with mystery and secrets,
    The ships of my love sailed away from my gaze,
    Their prows high, facing dark and distant shores,
    And their sails drunken with the warm sunset breeze.
    And I saw how, like ancient and beautiful goddesses,
    In their immaculate sanctity, pure as snow,
    Wings high, like pilgrims to unknown lands,
    The swans of my love silently glided away.
    It is evening. I am watching the immense flow,
    The sea-breeze is quietly recounting the happy memories
    And the boundless waters are rising with an ineffable mystery.
    In front of me, gravel and foam are kissing on the shore,
    I am looking at the distant horizon beyond which
    The ships of my love and the swans of my dreams have silently glided away.
    They sailed away, loaded with mystery and secrets...

    Sevag writes with many familiar symbols such as shores, sunset,
    swans, or the horizon. They are metaphors that have reoccurred in
    poetry and poems often. The unique or more refreshing elements in the
    poem seem to be those, which are less traditional and predictable,
    such as the sudden shorter line and turn in "It is evening." Also, in
    the line "In front of me, gravel and foam are kissing on the shore"
    Sevag personifies gravel and foam as lovers. These moments help to
    take us away from the ship that sails off into the sunset and closer
    to the speaker's world where the elements of nature take on a life of
    their own at the close of day.

    Who knows what would have become of Roupen Sevag if his life had
    lasted long after those brief 30 years. Perhaps his poems would have
    continued to lament on the shores of love or, depending on his
    experiences, the verse could have suddenly featured crows instead of
    swans or lightning storms instead of sunsets. After all, we'll never
    know what filled his pockets - if there were poems that were lost.
    There could have been the beginnings of odes to his sweetheart or
    small lyrics about how his life was saved one night as the sand
    shifted below his feet.

    * * *

    "Whisper of Love," translated by Berge Turabian, from the Armenian
    Poetry Project, July 9, 2007. Reprinted with permission.

    * * *

    Lory Bedikian received her MFA in Poetry from the University of
    Oregon. Her collection of poetry has been selected as a finalist in
    both the Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Open Competition and the Crab
    Orchard Series in Poetry First Book Award Competition.

    ************************************ ***************************************

    6. Poetry in translation

    by Yeghishe Charents; trans. Armine Grigoryan

    Of my motherland Armenia, its sun-soaked word I adore,
    Of our old, mourning saz, the deep, moving string I adore,
    The radiant scent of blood-red roses and sun-dipped flowers I adore,
    And the humble, graceful dance of women of Nairi I adore.

    I love our sky -- deep blue and high, the waters -- clear, and the lucent lake,
    The sun in summer, and the winter's ferocious frost outbreak,
    The black, dreary walls of the old huts -- drowned in the dark,
    And the thousand-year-old, tattered stones of the ancient cities I adore.

    Never will I ever forget the mournful tunes of our songs,
    Will not forget the iron-script books that have become prayers long,
    However deep my heart is hurt by our blood-drained wounds of fate,
    Still, time and again, though orphaned, weak, but my Armenia I adore.

    For my homesick, yearning soul there is no better tale told,
    Than Narekatsi's and Kuchak's, there are no brighter shining thoughts.
    Cross-pass the world, yet Ararat is the whitest peak to be sought,
    As an everlasting walk to fame, my Mount Masis I adore!

    * * *

    Armine Grigoryan lives and works in Yerevan.

    **************************************** ***********************************

    7. A conversation with Ara Dinkjian

    by Lola Koundakjian

    NEW YORK -- Ara Dinkjian -- composer, performer, oud player
    extraordinaire, and founder of Night Ark -- recently made a rare
    appearance on a New York City stage. Much sought-after by
    international performers such as Eleftheria Arvanitaki of Greece, he
    is a household name in Greece, Turkey, and elsewhere in the Middle
    East.

    In 2005 Dinkjian performed a concert titled "An Armenian in America"
    at the Jerusalem International Oud Festival. He was also a participant
    at the first International Oud Meeting, held in Thessaloniki, Greece,
    in 2002.

    Lola Koundakjian caught up with Dinkjian at his home in New Jersey.

    LK: What are your earliest recollections of music? Tell us about
    your family's involvement with the performing arts.

    Dinkjian: With a father like Onnik Dinkjian, it was inevitable that
    I would be raised in a very musical environment. As an infant, I heard
    music at church, at the dances, concerts, picnics, and weddings my
    father sang at, on my precious record and tape players, and at house
    parties.

    LK: When did you first pick up the oud to study? Who was your first teacher?

    Dinkjian: When I was a young child, there was an oud in my parents'
    bedroom. I was forbidden to go in there for fear that I would break
    it. Of course this only made it more desirable. I would sneak into the
    bedroom and practice while my father was at work. One day he came home
    early to find me playing his oud in his bedroom. He was torn between
    being angry for disobeying him and being impressed that I could play
    the oud.

    My father played the oud a bit, so he was the first oud player I
    heard. The only oud lessons I ever had were the few I took with John
    Berberian in the 1970s. However, I think I learned quite a bit more by
    being on the stage for years with John, my father, and all the others
    and just watching, and listening. Ultimately, my real teachers, who I
    continue to learn from, are the old masters. I am a passionate
    collector of the old 78 rpm records made from 1900 to 1950. I continue
    to be inspired and humbled by those old records.

    LK: How old were you when you first performed on stage?

    Dinkjian: In 1963, when I was five years old, I performed in front
    of an audience of thousands at the New York World's Fair. I had
    performed on stage before, but this was my first substantial
    appearance. I played the dumbeg [hand drum], accompanying the Ani
    Dance Group, a folk dance group led by Sosy Krikorian Kadian. I also
    performed at that festival with a group consisting of George
    Mgrdichian, John Berberian, Jack Chalikian, Robert Marashlian, John
    Vartan, etc.

    LK: At what point did you think to yourself, "I want to do this for a career?"

    Dinkjian: I never made the conscious decision to make a career out
    of music. It's as if that decision was made for me at birth. Frankly,
    I have never considered doing anything else with my life. I believe
    that one of the greatest gifts one can have is a sense of one's
    identity. That being the case, I have always felt blessed knowing that
    I am Armenian, and I am a student and lover of music.

    LK: You studied at the prestigious Hartt College of Music, in
    Connecticut and were the first to earn a degree in oud performance.
    Tell us about it.

    Dinkjian: Although my parents were concerned about what I could do
    with a degree in music, they supported my dream of going to music
    school. I auditioned on piano at Hartt College of Music. During the
    audition, it became clear to the jury that I was not a particularly
    gifted classical pianist. I had my oud with me (miraculously), and
    when they asked me about it, I played for them. Although the school
    offered no ethnic music courses, they were intrigued. I then played
    the piano for them again, but this time I played Armenian music --
    some of my compositions and improvisations. It was an extremely
    unusual audition, especially for a formal classical conservatory.
    Well, a few weeks after the audition I received not only a letter of
    acceptance, but also a scholarship. The compromise I agreed to with my
    parents was that I would major in music education, so that I would
    have a way of making a living upon graduation. However, after my first
    semester as a music education major, which I hated (I wanted to learn,
    play, and compose, not teach), I told the dean of the college that I
    wanted to quit. The dean told me that they had taken a big chance with
    me and did not want to give up yet. At their suggestion, I wrote up my
    own four-year program, including much independent study and courses
    >From other colleges, which they accepted. They entered this new major
    onto their computer system, and I became the first (and only?) oud
    major in the United States.

    LK: When did Night Ark come about and how did you find the musicians?

    Dinkjian: I continued to write more and more of my own music, until
    I, like any composer, wanted to actually hear it! I met percussionist
    Arto Tuncboyaciyan at a rehearsal and with him I knew I had a solid
    foundation for a group. I auditioned some other musicians until the
    quartet was complete.

    LK: Tell us about the famous demo tape session.

    Dinkjian: I wanted to record these new pieces with this group, just
    to have as a document of what I had composed. I had saved about
    $2,000, which meant that I could afford only about four hours in the
    recording studio. The recording engineer, who, unbeknownst to me, was
    the renowned jazz engineer David Baker, went crazy when he heard my
    music with the unusual instruments, time signatures, modal systems,
    etc. He made some extra copies of the tape and sent one to Steve
    Backer, a famous producer at RCA Records. Backer telephoned me, asking
    me the name of my group. "What group?" I said, not knowing that he had
    a copy of my demo tape. To make a long story short, I came up with the
    group name Night Ark, and RCA Records signed me to my first recording
    contract.

    LK: Your music has been featured by the famous German choreographer
    Pina Bausch. Who else?

    Dinkjian: In 1988, choreographer Linda Mensch and her modern dance
    troupe, Menschwerks, presented an evening of my compositions set to
    modern dance at the Good Shepherd Church in New York City.

    LK: You've played at international jazz festivals throughout the
    world. How is your music received today versus 25 years ago?

    Dinkjian: My music has always been enthusiastically received
    throughout Europe and Asia, as opposed to the United States, where
    there has been little interest. I have been asked to present a
    [different] concert every year at the Jerusalem International Oud
    Festival. In 2005 I presented "An Armenian in America." In 2006 I
    presented "Voice of Armenians," featuring my father, Onnik. In 2007 I
    presented "Peace on Earth." I am currently developing the theme for
    the 2008 festival and have been given carte blanche.

    LK: Is the popularity of the oud greater or lesser today than at the
    start of your career?

    Dinkjian: The oud is the king of instruments in many parts of the
    world. Even though Western culture has encroached on most parts of the
    world, the oud has had a resurgence due to the Internet. There are
    many oud sites, and oud players around the world share their playing,
    questions, enthusiasm, recordings, and information. If your question
    was meant to suggest that my oud playing has made the oud more
    popular, I would have to disagree. My contribution and influence lie
    more in some of the more obscure instruments I have played, such as
    the cumbus, as well as the fact that I have combined Eastern and
    Western musical elements.

    LK: Tell us about the oud players and composers who have influenced you.

    Dinkjian: The two oud players that I admire most are the blind
    Armenian Udi Hrant [Kenkulian] and the Greek Udi Yorgo Bacanos, both
    >From Istanbul. They had two completely different styles. Hrant played
    very emotional, lyrical taksims [a modal improvised form] and wrote
    some highly revered sarkis [a vocal song form]. Yorgo was a true
    virtuoso, whose brilliance remains unsurpassed.

    LK: How about some top Armenian and international oud players that
    we should know about?

    Dinkjian: With so much easy access to information and recordings,
    today's oud players around the world have in general reached a very
    high level. What seems to be more difficult to achieve is a personal
    sound and musical identity. Some that have achieved this include Haig
    Yazdjian [Greece via Syria], Yurdal Tokcan [Turkey], and Simon Shaheen
    [USA via Palestine]. Of course there are dozens more.

    LK: You are now 50 years young, with over 25 years of professional
    musical experience. What are your short-term and long-term plans?

    Dinkjian: Actually, I'm still 49, with over 40 years of professional
    musical experience. Anyway, my plans have never changed. I want to
    compose, perform, and record as much as I can.

    connect:
    aradinkjian.com
    International Oud Meeting:
    medimuses.gr/meet/oud/oud_meet.html
    Jerus alem International Oud Festival:
    confederationhouse.org/english/festivals /oud

    ******************************************** *******************************

    8. Arts in brief

    * New Vahe Berberian exhibition to open in West Hollywood

    LOS ANGELES -- A solo exhibition of new paintings by Vahe Berberian,
    titled "Four Months in Heaven," will open on May 3 (6:00 to 10:00
    p.m.) at the Ambrogi Castanier Gallery in West Hollywood.

    The show will come on the heels of the successful run of Baron
    Garbis, a play written and directed by Berberian and staged in front
    of sold out audiences in Los Angeles (currently being staged at the
    AGBU Theatre in Pasadena, Baron Garbis will end its run on April 20).

    Featuring a new series of minimalist, abstract paintings, "Four
    Months in Heaven" "employs the idea of revisiting simplicity; that a
    painter spends time in isolation, in an almost monk-like state of
    solitude, and the desire to express is manifested through the paint,"
    according to the artist's statement.

    "Four Months in Heaven" will remain open until May 24.

    Ambrogi Castanier Gallery is located at 300 N. Robertson Blvd., West
    Hollywood, Calif. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 10
    a.m.-6:30 p.m., Saturday and -Sunday noon-5 p.m.

    connect:
    ambrogicastaniergallery.com
    vaheber berian.com
    barongarbis.com

    * Sylvie Vartan performs in Japan

    TOKYO -- French-Armenian pop icon Sylvie Vartan gave a series of
    concerts in late March in Japan, as part of her "Nouvelle Vague Tour
    2008." During her appearances at Tokyo's Orchard Hall, Vartan
    showcased songs from her latest album, Nouvelle Vague, which includes
    French-language covers of 60s and 70s hits such as Bob Dylan's Blowin'
    in the Wind and the Beatles' Drive My Car.

    "I wanted to recreate the atmosphere of the era when music was
    cheery -- the kind of music that makes you smile and brings back good
    memories," Vartan said.

    In Tokyo Vartan sang many of her own past hits, among them the
    Vietnam War-era protest song Les hommes qui n'ont plus rien a perdre.
    A World Health Organization Goodwill Ambassador since 2005, Vartan is
    actively involved in international humanitarian projects.

    *************************************** ************************************

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    (c) 2008 Armenian Reporter LLC. All Rights Reserved
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