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Lebanon's Guy Manoukian Tops The Charts

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  • Lebanon's Guy Manoukian Tops The Charts

    LEBANON'S GUY MANOUKIAN TOPS THE CHARTS

    The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/article/20090716/ART/70 7159984/-1/NEWS
    July 15 2009
    UAE

    The way Guy Manoukian sees it, he's contributing to making the world a
    smaller place. The singer, composer and performer combines a distinctly
    Arab sound with catchy pop loops to create borderless house hits,
    as popular with Arabic music fans as they are with clubgoers in Asia.

    "I arrange my melodies in a way that's classical, so they're rooted
    in the past, in the history of Arab people. But I do it in a way that
    people like in modern times," he explains, adding that he has been
    performing sold-out shows from Singapore to Armenia and has upcoming
    events in Bali, Australia and Malaysia, among other places. "Performing
    in those countries, when I go there I am bringing my home to their
    home. The world has really become a village. It's a new world, with
    a new culture. And I want to be part of this."

    In Dubai to promote the release of his latest album, Assouman, the
    33-year-old Lebanese performer is ebullient, discussing the fact that
    life has never been better. The new album has already gone gold in
    the Middle East, sitting at number one on the charts in Lebanon for
    the past two weeks.

    "The people were waiting; they haven't seen an album from me in a
    while. I was taking my time," he says. "The waiting and the hype
    built up the interest, which is why it hit the charts at number one
    in Lebanon."

    Before Assouman, Manoukian had released one studio album and another of
    live recordings. In the years since the last album, he worked with the
    Haitian-American hip-hop artist Wyclef Jean as well as the American
    rapper 50 Cent and the French rapper Diams. Collaborating with Jean
    marked a turning point in the way Manoukian produces his music.

    "It was like going to university, I learnt so much. And my whole
    standard of production changed," he says. "My production became more
    professional. Now I'm working in the best studios."

    The new album will be released in Europe under the title Vibes, but
    its Middle Eastern title, Assouman, is an Iranian word that means
    "clear skies", something Manoukian feels reflects the mood and
    mentality of Arab youth.

    "Arab youth are open-minded people, and this album is a real meeting
    of East and West. It's international, it's Arab and it's modern. It's
    like Dubai," he says. "I call it ethnic house. And I actually created
    it in 2001, it's a new sound."

    Modesty may not be part of Manoukian's public persona, but his energy
    and passion for what he does make him likeable regardless. Some people
    think you have to go out to the mountains to be inspired, he explains,
    laughing, adding that even the most mundane experience - a traffic
    jam, for example - can inspire him to create the stories he tells
    through his music. The full range of emotions in the human experience
    is what inspires him, he says. And the climax of the creative process
    is the performance.

    "It's the best feeling, to perform. I'm comfortable on stage. It makes
    me really feel alive. The energy I get from the people is fantastic."

    It's not surprising, considering Manoukian has been performing since
    he was 16. He began his musical career at the age of four and has
    been composing since he was eight. As a child, Manoukian studied and
    wrote classical music. Though it's a markedly different genre from
    the dance music he's making now, he maintains it was less a transition
    than a natural evolution and a conscious decision; he could have gone
    either way.

    "I grew up in the Eighties. I love pop music. It's melodic, it's
    fun. I do what makes me happy."

    Luckily for him, what he does makes other people happy as well. He is
    original, he says, and so is his music. Unlike some of the artists
    working in the same genre, Manoukian explains that he is not a DJ,
    he is a composer.

    "I don't do remixes. Everything I do is original. I compose my own
    music, that's the difference."

    Manoukian's downtime activities are also somewhat out of the
    ordinary. His family owns a construction company, in his spare time,
    he enjoys walking around the sites.

    While he can't deny the exciting trajectory of his music career, what
    changed Manoukian's life most significantly was the recent birth of
    his son, Gio, who, he says, is "50 days old".

    Manoukian is also currently composing the score to a musical that
    will be performed in India. "A Lebanese guy is doing the music to an
    Indian play that will be performed in Singapore. Ten, 15 years ago,
    people would laugh if you told them that. Not anymore. The whole
    world has opened up."
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