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Arts & Entertainment: Armenian Fest To Feature Rising Jazz Star In M

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  • Arts & Entertainment: Armenian Fest To Feature Rising Jazz Star In M

    ARMENIAN FEST TO FEATURE RISING JAZZ STAR

    Times and Transcript
    Sept 23 2011
    Canada

    Fourth Moncton Armenian Festival takes place Oct. 27 to Nov. 6

    Twenty years after the country regained independence following the fall
    of the Soviet Union, Armenian culture will once again be celebrated
    in Metro Moncton next month.

    Events for the fourth Moncton Armenian Festival were unveiled at
    Moncton City Hall yesterday, including an array of music, film,
    art exhibitions and other events running from Oct. 27 to Nov. 6.

    Although she says Moncton's Armenian community is limited to a handful
    of established families, organizer Sylvia Kasparian says the wider
    Metro population has become increasingly a part of the festival.

    "Every year more people are attending and now they know it's a very
    high level," she says.

    "Multicultural festivals are growing, because I think people like
    that, they want something different, but they never have been exposed
    to this."

    The festival is held every two years, with the inaugural edition
    coming in 2005 to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the Ottoman
    massacre of about 1.5 million Armenians - an act Canada has recognized
    as a genocide.

    This year's event begins with a keynote concert from Armenian
    pianist Tigran Hamasyan. At just 24, he has already captured several
    high-profile awards and a recording contract with Verve Records,
    arguably the genre's premier label.

    His music is based on Armenian traditions and folklore, but with
    modern influences like rock, jazz and even heavy metal.

    "He has been described as being in a class all his own," Kasparian
    says of the young virtuoso.

    Hamasyan will play at Dieppe's Arts and Culture Centre the evening of
    Oct. 27, after hosting a free discussion of his work, technique and
    personal journey at the Faculty of Arts at l'Universite de Moncton
    that morning.

    The festival will also include an exhibition by visual artist and
    filmmaker Serguei Parajanov, as well as medieval and sacred music
    from the Oshakan Vocal Quartet and other musicians. Litergical and
    sacred songs are important in Armenian culture, Kasparian says, as
    the country was the first to officially adopt Christianity in 301 AD.

    "It's such an old civilization and culture and it's important that
    people know about history and old cultures. Here, everything is new
    and people don't know what the roots are," she says.

    * For more information and a complete schedule of events, visit
    festivalarmenien.com

    http://timestranscript.canadaeast.com/news/article/1442417

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