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'For You, Armenia': Concert At Holy Cross To Benefit Relief Fund

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  • 'For You, Armenia': Concert At Holy Cross To Benefit Relief Fund

    'FOR YOU, ARMENIA': CONCERT AT HOLY CROSS TO BENEFIT RELIEF FUND
    By Richard Price

    Worcester Telegram
    http://www.telegram.com/article/20090415/ NEWS/904150404/1011
    April 14 2009

    WORCESTER -- This Sunday afternoon, the newly built Seelos Theatre
    at the College of the Holy Cross will host a concert of musicians
    playing instruments unfamiliar to most Americans to benefit a country
    most can't find on a map in remembrance of a genocide some historians
    consider forgotten.

    Creating awareness has been the mission of Holy Cross senior Ani
    Nalbandian, 22, since her freshman year. She is one of only 15
    Armenian-American students in the entire college so the learning
    curve is steep. "I'm hoping to generate a feeling of solidarity,"
    said Ms. Nalbandian, when asked about the goal of holding this concert.

    How? With expectations that the non Armenian-American audience will
    walk in expecting a new musical experience but walk out connecting
    with a little known culture that is centered around the 1915 Armenian
    genocide that wiped out over one million people during and after
    World War I.

    April is an important month to Armenians, Ms. Nalbandian said,
    because the 24th is also Genocide Remembrance Day, a memorial day
    for those wiped out as a war strategy by the Ottoman Empire to defeat
    the Russians.

    The show is titled "Pour Toi, Arménie (For You, Armenia)," and
    proceeds will go to the Fund for Armenian Relief, an organization
    that provides emergency help to the neediest of this small post-Soviet
    Union nation that borders Turkey.

    John Berberian, the concert's headline act, will provide the musical
    link between the two worlds. As he pulls out his Turkish-made oud
    (pronounced OOD), and runs his hands over the mahogany and spruce
    wood body, he talks about the similarities between the Middle Eastern
    music he has performed for 49 years and American jazz. "There is a
    lot of improvisation in our music," he said. "Just like jazz."

    The oud's body has a pregnant bulge similar to a mandolin. It has a
    bent neck at the top where the pegs that tighten the strings lie. When
    played it sounds similar to a Spanish acoustic guitar. Mr. Berberian
    and his ensemble will perform a blend of traditional Armenian dance and
    folk pieces. Mal Barsamian will accompany him on guitar and clarinet,
    with Harry Bedrosian on keyboard, and Bruce Gigarjian on Dumbeg,
    which is an hourglass-shaped drum, played like a tom tom.

    In a separate set, Ms. Nalbandian will perform on keyboard and
    accordion with her father, Untzag Nalbandian, who is an Armenian
    Orthodox priest as well as a pianist. They will be accompanied by
    fellow Holy Cross students Justin Rucci on drums, David Sheerin on
    piano, Michael Ferraguto on violin and Michael Simms on clarinet.

    The concert will be held on Sunday at 4 p.m. in the Seelos Theatre
    on the Holy Cross campus. There is a handful of tickets left for
    this event, which are $15 for adults and children older than 12,
    $10 for Holy Cross students and children younger than 12. For
    ticket information, contact Ms. Nalbandian at (203) 581-1443 or
    [email protected].

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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