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History, Memory, Voice, Song

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  • History, Memory, Voice, Song

    HISTORY, MEMORY, VOICE, SONG
    By Mariam Matossian

    World Pulse
    http://www.worldpulsemagazine.com/voyages/20 0801/feature2.html
    Jan 22 2008
    OR

    I want to inspire people with my music, my storytelling. I love
    sharing my family's story and the history of my culture. I love to
    communicate that idea of hope. Both my grandmother and my grandfather
    survived the Armenian genocide, and somehow she still sang... I want
    to share that with as many people as possible.

    I was brought up in a household filled with music. The seeds were
    planted at a very young age, but music didn't become a part of my
    professional life until I visited Armenia for the second time. I had
    previously been there in 1998-the first in my family to step foot in
    the homeland since my grandparents were forcibly deported in 1915. In
    2002 I returned to Yerevan to spend three months working with very
    poor and orphaned children. When I returned from that second trip,
    I was overwhelmed with a need to raise awareness of the beauty of
    the Armenian culture and the pain that exists there.

    I distinctly remember when I realized the impact music can have on
    the world. I was working at a center for at-risk youth in Armenia,
    and we were having a party with the children. I took my demo CD of
    old Armenian folk songs with me and we were all dancing and singing.

    The children had these beautiful, innocent, spontaneous reactions to
    the music. That moment was so beautiful. I remember thinking, "Lord,
    I need to do something more with this." After I returned to Vancouver,
    I found a producer and began to seriously pursue my music.

    These children taught me some of the songs on my first album, Far
    >From Home. It was such a fantastic experience. Face to face with
    these beautiful, innocent children who have nothing but are filled
    with joy, I was struck with how much we take for granted. I wanted
    to tell their stories but I also wanted to somehow link it to my own
    family, to my grandmother's story.

    It came full circle for me. I knew I could use my music to share
    my grandmother's story and link it to these children's stories. My
    grandmother, also named Mariam, passed away long before I was born.

    Still, she has been a huge influence on my life and my music. She
    was among the many who were deported during the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

    After my great-grandfather died in the death march, my
    great-grandmother made the painstaking decision to place her two
    youngest children, my grandmother among them, in an orphanage to be
    educated while she worked. In Armenia, spending time with children
    who had been surrendered by their parents in much the same way,
    it came full circle for me. I knew I could use my music to share my
    grandmother's story and link it to these children's stories.

    "Narineh": Tradition Meets Action It is important to me to connect my
    music to my history-many of the songs I sing are those my grandmother
    taught to my mother, who then taught them to me. Now my mother and I
    have a partnership when it comes to choosing which songs to include
    on the albums.

    Much of Armenian folk music celebrates the beauty of the
    country. Far >>From Home is about missing the homeland-about our
    personal definitions of home. But for In the Light, I chose some of
    the Armenian love songs my grandmother sang. I recorded that album
    in the months leading up to my wedding, and I just loved the special
    connection I felt with my grandmother when I sang the songs that she
    sang, the songs I know she loved.

    "The children who inspired me, who taught me so much..."Now, as I am
    getting ready to be a mother, I find that expecting my first child
    has added so much to my music, to the words I'm singing. There's
    this new dimension, a new generation: my grandmother, my mother, me,
    and now, this new little baby. It's been so exciting and emotional;
    it definitely heightens in me the desire to spread awareness of our
    cultural history.

    There's this new dimension, a new generation: my grandmother, my
    mother, me, and now, this new little baby. I want to preserve the
    folk songs, to reintroduce this beautiful, traditional music to the
    world. But I also know that music is more than tradition. It is also
    a vehicle that I can use to raise awareness about violence happening
    all over the world.

    I wrote the song called "Narineh" about a young Armenian girl who went
    missing in Iraq-the niece of a dear family friend. I want people to
    know Narineh's story-I don't want her to be forgotten. In the song,
    a mother calls out to her daughter, longing for her to be found. I
    repeat Narineh's name as a way to remember her. I want audience
    members to know that children are still being victimized today. I
    want everyone to know in hopes that even one person listening will
    be compelled to act in some way.

    Visit Mission Armenia to learn how you can help women and children
    in Mariam's homeland.

    In the Light is available in Canadian stores now. You may also
    purchase it online at CDBaby.com. You'll find Mariam's first album,
    Far From Home, available there too.
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