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  • The Armenian Navy Band sets sail for America

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Calendar Live
    Aug 9 2008



    The Armenian Navy Band sets sail for America

    The Armenian Navy Band may have a jokey name, but its music is
    seriously alluring.

    By Agustin Gurza, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer


    When music promoter Debbie Ohanian calls from her home in Miami Beach
    to tip me to some great new band, I always listen. In the past decade,
    she was one of the pioneers in bringing cutting-edge Cuban bands to
    the U.S., sometimes at personal risk, as when she staged the first
    concert in Miami for Los Van Van, despite violent protests.

    With the Cuban scene fading, I hadn't heard from Ohanian in a while --
    until she called to rave about something that was totally foreign to
    me. She hadn't been so excited about music since those Cuban bands had
    rocked her world.

    She was talking about the Armenian Navy Band, a 12-piece folk-fusion
    ensemble she had heard live for the first time in 2006 during a visit
    to her family's ancient homeland, a country with its own language and
    alphabet and a culture that predates the birth of Christ. "It was one
    of those life-changing moments," says Ohanian of the concert she
    attended in Yerevan. "I thought to myself, 'I feel sorry for anybody
    who's not sitting here tonight.' "

    L.A. audiences won't have to travel 7,000 miles to share in Ohanian's
    epiphany. Next week, the Armenian Navy Band makes its U.S. debut at
    Disney Hall in a benefit concert sponsored by Artists for Kids, a
    Glendale-based nonprofit advancing the arts among youth. The band is
    relatively unknown on these shores, though it's been around for a
    decade and has accumulated accolades throughout Europe.

    It's led by songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Arto Tunçboyaciyan,
    who was born in Turkey but who has lived in this country for more than
    a quarter-century. Arto, as he is known, dubs his sound "avant-garde
    folk," a blend of traditional Armenian styles and modern elements,
    including touches of jazz improvisation.

    The music has that plaintive quality you also hear in flamenco or the
    blues that comes from people surviving centuries of repression,
    rejection and exile. Armenians carry in their collective DNA the
    memory of what they consider a genocide by the Turks in the early 20th
    century.

    Arto's voice sounds warbly, wounded and nasally. Yet it carries such
    stunning power and spirituality it seems to rise right from the slopes
    of Mt. Ararat, the dramatic snow-covered peak where Noah's Ark is
    believed to have come to rest and which overlooks Armenia with a
    mystical presence.

    The music features beautiful, alluring melodies as well as entrancing
    percussion, thrilling brass and gentle strings. Come to think of it,
    the sound has all the elements of Afro-Cuban music, though its
    instrumentation is unique, including the traditional duduk, zurna and
    kamancha. Anahit Artushyan, the only woman in the band, plays the
    kanun, an ancient Middle Eastern string instrument. American listeners
    may hear strains of Russian or Middle Eastern music in this Armenian
    mix, not unexpected for a country that borders Turkey, Iran and
    Georgia.

    The band's name is satirical, since Armenia is land-locked. Arto is
    fond of explaining the moniker metaphorically. "Armenia has no seas,"
    he says in heavily accented English, "so how are you going to move a
    boat without water? If you are honest and respectful in your ideology,
    you can move because, when people receive us in their heart, they are
    becoming our sea."

    Arto has lived mostly in New York and New Jersey, where he keeps a
    home with his wife, Delia, who is half Colombian, half Greek, and
    travels frequently to Armenia. I met him at his second-floor apartment
    in Burbank, where he's staying while planning a permanent move to Los
    Angeles. He was preceded here by his grown children -- Valantin, a USC
    communication student, and Seto, an aspiring rapper who has recorded
    with his father.

    As we approach his modest building, Ohanian (here for the show) looks
    for other Armenian names -- characterized by "yan" and "ian" endings
    -- on the directory. She spots one, and mentions it later to Arto
    during a discussion of the Armenian diaspora, which led to large exile
    communities in Argentina, Venezuela and California, especially
    Glendale. But any Armenian who expects to hear uncritical cultural
    cheers in Arto's music would be disappointed. In one CD, "How Much Is
    Yours?" from 2005, he raises pointed questions meant to challenge what
    he perceives as the errors of his people's ways.

    In person, his critiques are less delicate. He criticizes fellow
    Armenians for materialism and corruption. He labels as wannabes the
    Armenian teenagers who speed around in souped-up black BMWs in a
    reckless drive to quickly attain and flaunt the American dream. But
    perhaps most pointedly, he slams his countrymen for exploiting the
    public's sympathy for the genocide, saying mockingly, "If I cry a
    little bit more, maybe they give me more money."

    He has some advice for the young Armenians and Latinos who have at
    times had violent confrontations considered ethnically
    motivated. "It's really sad because in reality they both are coming
    from the same type of life," he says. "Their anger is because somebody
    else overpowers them. Instead of fighting with each other, they should
    come together and create positive art."

    Arto says he doesn't feel close to the local Armenian community. In
    fact, he has invented his own country, "Artostan," the title of a solo
    CD from 2005, which reflects the idea that he marches to his own
    drummer.

    "I am a mirror everywhere, and some people don't like to see
    themselves," he says with a knowing smile.

    Of course, the music is as much celebratory as satirical. There's the
    sheer joy in melody and rhythm, highlighted by his show-stopping
    performance with just a Coke bottle and a tambourine. But he also
    writes songs extolling respect for nature, the joy of cooking with
    family and the need to respect all the world's cultures.

    With a stocky build and a baseball cap covering his bald head, Arto
    doesn't have the look of a star. But his hands have the mark of a real
    musician. His thick, knobby fingers show the ravage of constant
    percussion practice, which brought complaints from downstairs
    neighbors. Arto now beats on a slab of granite he set up on a
    chair. The pain of smacking stone with his bare hands is the price he
    pays to preserve the peace, love and respect he promotes as his core
    values.

    "Look, I left my body to represent everybody," he says. "Meaning, I am
    not living life as an Armenian. I am living life as a human being,
    like everybody else."

    http://www.calendarlive.com/music/cl- et-culture9-2008aug09,0,5057642.story

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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