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AGBU Montevideo Choir Performs for Gomidas Vartabed's Anniversary

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  • AGBU Montevideo Choir Performs for Gomidas Vartabed's Anniversary

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    Thursday, April 29, 2010

    AGBU Montevideo Choir Performs for Gomidas Vartabed's Anniversary and
    Major Multicultural Festival

    AGBU Montevideo's polyphonic choir group, Grung, performed at two
    moving concerts in November. The first concert, held on November 12,
    honored the 140th birthday of Gomidas Vartabed. A priest and genocide
    survivor, Gomidas Vartabed was a renowned musicologist who saved
    several thousand Armenian folk songs from extinction and composed
    music that reflected the deep feelings of the Armenian people. The
    Montevideo concert took place at the Sodre "Nelly Goitiño" Auditorium,
    with the Grung Choir performing under the direction of Maestro Alvaro
    Hagopian.

    Conductor Daniel Magarian opened the show with a thoughtful
    introduction in Armenian. He spoke about the choir's roots and
    emphasized the value of Armenian singing and composing as a means of
    preserving the ancient culture. Accompanying the 33-member choir were
    flutist Ester Kouyoumdjian and Austrian-trained pianist Alejandro
    Sarkissian.

    The musicians played pieces ranging in style from popular to religious
    and nationalist, along with a set composed by Gomidas Vartabed. A
    group of a cappella singers also performed, and there were solos by
    soprano Stella Capote Kordjian and tenor Diego Krikorian of songs "Lur
    Knatz" and "Hairení Tashderum." As the concert came to a close, Grung
    paid tribute to another legendary Armenian, poet Hovannes Tumanian,
    who, like Gomidas Vartabed, was born in 1869.

    On the heels of this successful evening, Grung participated in the
    Annual Festival of Choirs of Communities on November 22 at the Clara
    Jackson de Heber College. With the intention of presenting an eclectic
    mix of cultures, the festival included performances by choral groups
    belonging to several ethnic communities living in Montevideo,
    including those with Armenian, English, German, French, Spanish,
    Italian, Israeli, Russian, Belarusian, Brazilian and Uruguayan
    roots. The Grung choir impressed non-Armenian audience members, who
    seemed to enjoy the immersion in Armenian music and culture.

    Today, amid a busy schedule, Montevideo's choir group's biggest
    ambition is to reach Armenia and finally perform in their motherland.

    Established in 1906, AGBU (www.agbu.org) is the world's largest
    non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
    preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
    educational, cultural and humanitarian program, annually touching the
    lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.
    For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please
    visit www.agbu.org.
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