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Visiting Armenian Musicians Shine With Baboians And Company Summer C

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  • Visiting Armenian Musicians Shine With Baboians And Company Summer C

    VISITING ARMENIAN MUSICIANS SHINE WITH BABOIANS AND COMPANY SUMMER CONCERT
    By Andy Turpin

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/08/19/ visiting-armenian-musicians-shine-with-baboians-an d-company-summer-concert/
    August 19, 2009

    BELMONT, Mass. (A.W.)-On Aug. 17, Berklee School of Music guitar
    professor John Baboian, his son guitarist Alex Baboian, drummer
    Karen Kocharyan, and visiting bass guitarist Artyom Manukyan and
    saxophonist Artur Grigoryan presented a summer jazz concert at the
    First Armenian Church.

    Beginning with Cole Porter's "Night and Day," the band opened with
    smooth base, perfectly timed drums, and lead Nuevo-Spanish guitar by
    the elder Baboian that cut through the molasses of the summer heat
    with ease.

    Alex Baboian rifted together with his father, not like dueling banjos
    but like a symbiotic marmalade of Jobim tonal bliss.

    But whenever Grigoryan's sax cut into the set for another solo, the
    audience applauded to be swayed in his dazzling notes again like a
    woman giddy on champagne.

    Between sets, John Baboian recounted how he met Grigoryan and
    Manukyan. "Last June, Armenia sent a delegation to the U.S. to learn
    how to raise awareness for the arts in Armenia and it was then that
    Berklee and Armenian organizations started talking about sending over
    musicians to Boston."

    The band continued with "All the Things You Are." Grigoryan bleated
    his notes with the beatnik romance and cheeky nonchalance of a Bukowski
    Cuba Libre with a Tom Collins chaser, which led deftly into R. Silver's
    "For My Father," where Alex Baboian's solo notes fell like billowed
    raindrops on a starry Route 66 drive to unforgettable.

    Manukyan, with brooding jive, ended the set with a thoughtful and
    bad boy solo that, combined with Grigoryan's sax, teased a desert
    rose over the audience's ears before its crescendo.

    The evening concluded with "Yervanti," resounding in Grigoryan's
    solo like the ending to an Armenian fable that doesn't end happily,
    but justly and with a wry toast.

    Here's wishing Grigoryan and Manukyan a safe journey back to Yerevan
    this week, with the hope that they'll return to charm jazz audiences
    in Boston again soon.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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