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Jordi Savall & Armenia Music

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#1 man

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Posted 17 January 2014 - 11:57 PM

Spirit of Armenia: Jordi Savall in Italy 2014

 

When Cilicia was an Armenian kingdom and Catalonia an independent state, those two small countries had extensive commercial relations. Now Catalan musician artists are reaching to Armenia and Armenians by Music, if not by commerce, and the population of Armenians living in Catalonia is increasing. We see Montserrat Caballe visiting Artsakh and expressing her love for that country; we see Jordi Savall (the great Catalonian gamba player) incorporating traditional Armenian musicians in his Hespèrion XXI orchestra/group. And in September 2012 Savall published his album"The Spirit of Armenia". Now in January 2014 Savall with his Hespèrion XXI and the Armenian musicians started giving concerts in Italy, the first in Jan. 14 in Rome, then in Naples.

Armenian music can be lively, nostalgic, or spiritual but it is always engaging and exciting. It reflects the most sincere and profound spirit of a people from ancient history. Jordi Savall will guide you in a journey into a world of unknown and exciting music, accompanied by his group Hesperion XXI and renowned Armenian musicians. Enjoy a magical concert with the Early Music legend. Jordi Savall joins with a quartet of Armenian musicians to play melodies that are from the Armenian tradition but only in a few cases "traditional"; some have named composers from the 18th or 19th centuries, and many come from a large anthology of Armenian melodies that is itself an important part of the tradition. As usual with Savall, the 316-page booklet in seven languages (including Armenian) is a key part of the entire production; the multiple essays outline both the sources of the music and its relation to Armenia's long and tragic history. That history lends the music a distinctive melancholy tinge that will catch the ear even of those with no previous exposure; the reedy, voice-like duduk makes a fascinating counterpart to Savall's viols, and the whole takes on added significance as a memorial to Savall's longtime musical partner, Montserrat Figueras. As if in tribute to her, all the music is instrumental.

Savall said in 2012 about his Armenian work:
Armenia, one of the most ancient Eastern Christian civilizations, has miraculously survived a convulsive and peculiarly tragic history. Since its foundation, it has been surrounded politically and geographically by other great cultures with chiefly Eastern and Islamic beliefs, and has endured a cruel history punctuated by ruthless wars and massacres that have led to the disappearance of more than half its population, the exile of many others and the loss of major portions of its territory. Despite all this, throughout the centuries Armenia has preserved the essence of its national identity, first by the creation of its own alphabet (devised in 405 by the monk Mesrop Mashtots) and thanks to its rich architectural heritage, which is scattered beyond the country’s present-day borders. Although this tangible heritage is one of the most striking features of its nationhood, Armenia has also preserved a rich intangible heritage in the form of its music: a very rich and varied, albeit little known, repertory (except in the case of the duduk).

In all highly developed cultures, music – represented and embodied by certain instruments, as well as particular ways of singing and playing – is the most faithful spiritual reflection of a people’s soul and history. Of all the instruments used in its ancient musical traditions, Armenia has given special pride of place to a unique instrument, the duduk. It is no exaggeration to say that this instrument is the utmost expression of Armenia. As soon as we hear the sound of these instruments – they are usually played as a duo – the almost vocal quality and sweetness of their vibrations transport us to an extraordinary elegiac and poetic universe, introducing us to a dimension that is both intimate and profound. The music acts as a genuine balm, at once sensual and spiritual, which touches the human soul and gently heals all its wounds and sorrows.

Montserrat Figueras felt a deep affinity and enormous fascination for these Armenian instruments, especially the duduk and the kamancha, as well as a great admiration for the extraordinary musical qualities of our musician friends from Armenia. After her death (in 2011), I found great consolation in listening to these wonderful Laments for two duduks and kamancha, and that is why I asked our Armenian friends to take part in the farewell ceremonies that we held for our beloved Montserrat. Their musical performances filled the venues with otherworldly sounds of overwhelming beauty and spirituality. It was after moments of such great emotion, and prompted by the deeply consoling effects of their music, that I had the idea of dedicating this unique project to the memory of Montserrat Figueras, at the same time paying a personal homage to the Armenian people, who have suffered so much throughout their history (a suffering that has yet to be fully recognized) and who, in spite of so much pain, have inspired music that is so full of love and conveys such peace and harmony. It is also a sincere homage to the wonderful musicians who devote their lives to keeping the memory of this ancient culture alive. By a great stroke of luck, back in 2004 our very dear friend, the outstanding kamancha player Gaguik Mouradian, had given me several collections of Armenian music, including the fabulous “THESAURUS” of Armenian melodies, published at Yerevan in 1982 by the musicologist Nigoghos Tahmizian, in which I have found some extremely beautiful examples of this repertory. To these we have added the pieces for kamancha, as well as those for two duduks, suggested by our Armenian friends. Together with another extraordinary musician and very dear friend, the duduk player Haïg Sarikouyoumdjian, I spent several months studying and deciphering the secrets of these ancient and beautiful melodies, listening to old recordings and discovering the “hidden” keys to the style and character of each piece. Over the last several months, not a single night has passed without my spending a few precious hours studying and playing these powerfully seductive melodies.

We finally managed to set aside the time to work on these pieces together, and between the end of March and the beginning of April, 2012,  we gathered at the wonderful Collegiate Church of Cardona to record all the pieces we had selected to form part of this personal and collective tribute to the bewitching, elegiac Spirit of Armenia. Immediately afterwards, together with Lise Nazarian, another great Armenian friend, we set about researching and studying material to accompany the music in the CD booklet: books on Armenian art and history, of which we found an abundance thanks to Armen Samuelian et Alice Aslanian, the curators and driving force behind the amazing bookshop “Librairie Orientale” on rue Monsieur-Le-Prince in Paris, and also to the orientalist Jean-Pierre Mahé for his essential overview of the art and history of Armenia. Finally, we are grateful to Manuel Forcano for his texts on the Memory of the Genocide and the nation’s historical timeline: a history that we hope through our own modest contribution to keep alive through the emotion of the music featured in this recording. Without Emotion there is no Memory, without Memory there is no Justice, without Justice there is no Civilization and without Civilization human beings have no future.

Highlights from his album is in this YouTube video:


Listen in this link short sample of the 18 tracks:
http://www.allmusic....ie-mw0002408246


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#2 man

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Posted 18 January 2014 - 12:03 AM

Georgi Minassyan, Haïg Sarikouyoumdjian, Gaguik Mouradian & Armen Badalyan with Hespèrion XXI of Jordi Savall

This album is a tribute to Armenia and to the Armenian musicians who played alongside Jordi Savall and his wife Montserrat Figueras over the years. The repertoire consists alternately of very lively pieces and more contemplative ones, all of them beautifully played on traditional instruments, including the ‘duduk’, a flute with a deeply moving sound originating from a time before times.

Jordi Savall unveils this music with his faultless musical flair and an endless curiosity, as testified in the lavishly documented and illustrated booklet.

“This is a beguiling, mesmeric sequence of instrumental music from Armenia, in which Hesperion XXI are joined by a group of that country’s finest musicians...[The duduk's] beautiful, musky sound seductively reflects the predominantly nostalgic, lamenting, soulful mood of the pieces heard here.” “Haunting and tragic, this CD is a double-lament — for Jordi Savall’s late wife, the singer Montserrat Figueras, who loved Armenian music, and for Armenia, with its long history of foreign subjugation and massacre...It is hypnotic and exquisitely melancholic.”



#3 man

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Posted 18 January 2014 - 12:05 AM



#4 man

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Posted 18 January 2014 - 12:07 AM


Jordi Savall & Hesperion XXI - Hayastan yerkir (Ode a la patrie)



#5 man

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Posted 18 January 2014 - 12:11 AM

The Armenian Soul by Jordi Savall & Friends


http://www.youtube.c...f armenia&sm=12
 



#6 man

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Posted 20 January 2014 - 05:55 PM

I forgot to say that the performances he is doing in Italy are: The Spirit of Armenia.

"Now in January 2014 Savall with his Hespèrion XXI and the Armenian musicians started giving concerts in Italy, the first in Jan. 14 in Rome, then in Naples"






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