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ANKARA: Sibil's Strains Echo Across City As Turkish TV Airs First Ar

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  • ANKARA: Sibil's Strains Echo Across City As Turkish TV Airs First Ar

    SIBIL'S STRAINS ECHO ACROSS CITY AS TURKISH TV AIRS FIRST ARMENIAN MUSIC VIDEO

    Hurriyet
    May 26 2011
    Turkey

    The first Armenian music video is airing on Turkey's leading music
    channels and the state-run TRT. Well-known artists provided support
    for artist Sibil Pektorosoglu's album, which was released a few months
    ago on the Ossi Music label. The Istanbul-born Armenian singer says
    it was a dream to release her album and broadcast her music video on
    Turkish TV

    'Namag' (Letter) by Sibil Pektorosoglu, an Istanbul Armenian, has
    been gaining mainstream popularity.

    Turkey's leading private music TV channels as well as the country's
    state-run broadcaster have broken new ground in airing the first
    Armenian music video on popular stations in the nation's history.

    "Namag" (Letter) by Sibil Pektorosoglu, an Istanbul Armenian, has been
    gaining mainstream popularity and can now be heard echoing from shops
    along the city's iconic Ä°stiklal Avenue. The lyrics were written by
    master Armenian poet Hovhannes Å~^iraz while the singer's music video
    was produced by one of Turkey's most famous directors in the field,
    Ozkan Aksular.

    Pektorosoglu said it was like a dream to release her album and
    broadcast her music video on Turkish television. "When I hear my
    songs on Ä°stiklal Avenue, I cry," she recently told the Hurriyet
    Daily News & Economic Review.

    "Music is universal, it is above all identities. I can't breathe
    without singing; this is why this album is loved that much by my
    listeners," she said.

    The song was the result of collaboration between Armenian and Turkish
    artists, including Mercan Dede, an international star famous for mixing
    Sufi music and ambient electronica, as well as Göksel Baktagir, a
    master of the "kanun," a zither-like stringed instrument. Released
    on the Ossi Music label, the Pektorosoglu's album was arranged by
    Cenk TaÅ~_kan, an important figure on the Turkish pop music scene
    for more than 40 years.

    "I made the most of my 40-year experience for this album and it has
    reached its goal," TaÅ~_kan, who recently returned to Turkey on a
    visit from his current home in Canada, told the Daily News. "I am
    very pleased to be a part of this first-time work in Turkey, too."

    The works of TaÅ~_kan, who was one of the leading names in the revival
    of Western-style Turkish pop music at the end of the 1960s and the
    beginning of 1970s, have represented Turkey at the Eurovision Song
    Contest many times.

    Istanbul is inescapable

    Even though he moved to Canada during the difficult aftermath of the
    1980 coup, TaÅ~_kan said he often came to Istanbul and continued
    working with Turkish artists, adding that he had created many new
    grounds for the country's pop music.

    "Istanbul is my life, my everything; I can't imagine a life without
    it. I have even composed a song titled 'Istanbul Istanbul,'"
    TaÅ~_kan said.

    Also an Istanbul Armenian, TaÅ~_kan's real name is Majak ToÅ~_ikyan;
    asked why he chose to use a Turkish name rather than his birth name,
    he said: "Turkish artists, as well as many foreign artists, do not
    use their own name. Changing my name does not mean that I have changed
    my soul."

    Referring to events between the Turkish and Armenian people in the
    past, TaÅ~_kan said: "We have lived together for thousands of years. As
    a life philosophy, I'm interested in the future; it can remove the
    traces of the past. It is necessary to open a new page. Otherwise,
    even in 3050, people will still be talking about the same things."

    Addressing the arguments between Turkish and Armenian people as
    to the artistic ownership of a number of Anatolian songs that are
    now sung by both nations, TaÅ~_kan said: "We have been the people
    of Anatolia for thousands of years. No nation has its own music;
    instead the land has its own music."

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