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Music: Berkshire Jazz: Armen Donelian's New CD Takes Jazz Artist Bac

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  • Music: Berkshire Jazz: Armen Donelian's New CD Takes Jazz Artist Bac

    BERKSHIRE JAZZ: ARMEN DONELIAN'S NEW CD TAKES JAZZ ARTIST BACK TO HIS ROOTS

    The Berkshire Eagle (Pittsfield, Massachusetts)
    April 25, 2014 Friday

    By Richard Houdek, Special to The Eagle,

    GREAT BARRINGTON -- In live performances and a multi-faceted
    discography, Armen Donelian, the much admired pianist and composer,
    has fused a solid foundation in the music of the classical masters
    with his pursuit of the jazz genre.

    And he has embarked on a fresh recording adventure close to his heart
    -- and to his roots.

    "Sayat-Nova: Songs of My Ancestors" was released this month on the
    Sunnyside label. "You might be hard pressed to categorize this music
    because it's so deeply influenced by classical, jazz and Armen's
    Armenian folk heritage," observed Edward Bride, chairman of Berkshire
    Jazz, Inc., "so the safest category is probably improvisational music."

    Indicative of Bride's esteem for Donelian, Berkshire Jazz is presenting
    a recording release party at 4 p.m. Sunday in Castle Street Cafe's
    Celestial Bar, where the Armen Donelian Trio -- Donelian, David Clark,
    bass, and George Schuller, drums -- will offer three sets of music
    to celebrate the occasion as part of National Jazz Appreciation Month.

    Born in 1712 in a small northern Armenia village, Sayat-Nova was a
    notable troubadour eventually summoned as an entertainer to the royal
    court of Georgian King Irakli II.

    "He was a self-taught musician, and a great poet, as well as a singer,"
    explained Donelian in a phone conversation earlier this week from
    his home and studio in Hudson, N.Y. "His poetry is amazing in its
    complexity and beauty. He wrote hundreds of love songs and odes."

    Donelian who suggests in liner annotations that Sayat-Nova's verses
    often are compared to Shakespeare and the beauty of his melodies rank
    with those of the greatest European composers.

    Donelian, whose ancestors migrated to this country after escaping the
    brutal Turkish genocide in 1915, obviously was influenced by Armenian
    culture. But his early, stronger influences involved his father's
    record collection of classical music -- Beethoven, Bach and Mozart --
    and of the giants of jazz.

    He remembers first playing by ear on what he calls "a derelict
    upright piano," which led to lessons from a local teacher, followed by
    enrollment at the Westchester Conservatory in White Plains, N.Y., where
    an Austrian Jew named Michael Pollon, who was trained in Berlin and
    escaped the Holocaust in 1939, provided a strong classical background.

    "Thanks to him, when I was 17, in 1968, upon graduation from high
    school, I gave a recital of works by Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Debussy
    and Prokofiev," Donelian said.

    A major factor in Donelian's life was his study with the great
    jazz pianist Richie Beirich, "whose formidable grasp of classical
    and 20th-century music and their application to jazz improvisation
    expanded my sonic horizons," said Donelian. Thereafter, he performed
    with such luminaries as Sonny Rollins, Chet Baker and Paquito D'Rivera
    before forming his own ensembles and initiating his successful series
    of recordings.

    Donelian, who confessed being confounded earlier by the odd
    rhythms and the modes of Middle Eastern music, said he was drawn
    to it beginning in his 30s, performing with a number of Armenian
    musicians and groups, which led to a defining journey to Armenia for
    performances. While there, a colleague recommended a rare 1946 Soviet
    volume of Sayat-Nova's unabridged poems, which served as a basis for
    his selections on "Sayat-Nova: Songs of My Ancestors."

    The recording has two parts, the first devoted to piano solos, Disk 2,
    with the Trio. "The process for arranging happened very organically,
    over quite a bit of time," Donelian explained. "I strove to preserve
    both the content and the character of the original melodies, imbuing
    them with my jazz sensibilities, my jazz harmonies and rhythms.

    "There were those that just naturally felt they needed treatment by
    the trio; others felt more personal and reflective. The music just
    decided it for me."

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