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#1 shiner

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Posted 21 March 2001 - 11:15 PM

"Success in perfect harmony". The jazz pianist with the ringing Armenian name not only had success in perfect harmony with music, but also in the cigar world. His Avo cigars became top-selling in the US. They will now also be introduced in Europe.

Wherever the agreeable Uvezian appears, with his characteristic straw hat and white Brioni-suit, his cigar is always a part of him. As musician and witty communicator, Avo Uvezian is a show talent and effective public relations man for the cigar. Not only for his own ones. His cigars will also be available in Europe in fall 1998. Davidoff included the series Trio and Quartetto XO in their product range and they are produced by Hendrik Kelner, the Davidoff partner and cigar mentor of their Dominican joint venture Tabadom.

Uvezian started his cigar career in 1987 at Kelner's with several thousand cigars that were exclusively distributed and sold by Davidoff, at first in their own shops. In 1995, Davidoff supposedly bought the distributing rights of his brand at an estimated sum of 10 million dollars. The number of Avos exploded. Today more than 3 million cigars are sold annually, mainly in the US. The deal seems to have paid off.

Uvezian, born in 1926, originated from a Beirut musician family. His father was a composer and directed a symphony orchestra, his mother a talented singer, and the young Avo very soon dreamed about a great career as a musician. As a young pianist with his own jazz trio, he cruised the Middle East from one success to another.

The Shah Reza Pahlevi became interested in him and brought the 21-year-old to Teheran. However, he was soon drawn back to Beirut and, again with the aid of the Shah of Persia, the young Uvezian emigrated to New York in 1947 during the riots in Palestine. There he studied at the famous Juilliard School of Music and played with some of the best jazz pianists of that time, among them Teddy Wilson. He overcame business problems successfully, again in a bar at the piano. For a long time Uvezian was also successfully involved in the real-estate business. In the early eighties he moved to Puerto Rico and opened an Italian restaurant there, but then withdrew into the bar business again, addicted to his passion as a pianist.

In Puerto Rico he developed his affection for cigars, had his own cigars rolled there and sold them in his piano bar.

The enthusiasm of Americans for cigars was especially strong. One day a tourist came to him at the bar and asked for a cigar. His five-year-old daughter watched, shaking her head when Uvezian gave away a cigar for free. When the visitor was gone she said snappishly to her father: "Daddy, if the man likes your first cigar and asks for another one, then he should buy it". For Uvezian, this was an unforgettable statement, which set the direction for the future. Music and cigars have something in common. Uvezian is living in this sensuous symbiosis between musical joy and enjoying a fine cigar. Many lovers of his music also turn out to be aficionados themselves. Both for his and the public's pleasure, Uvezian let his own cigars produced. When looking for a suitable producer, he was
referred to Hendrik Kelner and between them a friendly and economic cooperation began. "He not only enjoys cigars, but all of life to the fullest", raved Henk Kelner of him. "In that he is very similar to the legendary Zino Davidoff, who also esteemed good life and a passion for the cigar."

Uvezian is modest and rather underestimating of himself: "There are people who speak of me as a cigar guru, but I am no guru. I am not a great man of the cigar like Zino Davidoff was. No one like him exists anymore." But he knows
that he is a convincing ambassador of the fine cigar, and is not using his image to his or Davidoff's disadvantage.

The cigars entered the US market in a XO series of the top range, and in a traditional line. The ones produced for Europe are connected to the XO-series by musically-inspired names, the Trio and Quartetto, seven formats in total. Compared to the American Avos, the "European" are spicier, more substantial and finer in aroma. The tobacco blends seem to be other than that of the American Avos.

The fillers consist of Cuban seed, grown in the Dominican Republic, the binder is from Dominican Olor tobacco of the Villa Gonzales region in the Cibao valley, the premium planting area - comparable with Pinar del Rio in Cuba -and the filler comes from Connecticut (Shade).

The spiciness and rich taste, especially of the Trio series, are probably coming from a higher proportion of Ligero tobacco which contributes to strength and fullness. The European Avo XO-series is mild to average in taste, very fine in aroma, spicy, substantial and rich taste, experienced as mild but full-bodied without coming across as grassy, as the taste of Dominican cigars often does.

#2 shiner

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Posted 21 March 2001 - 11:23 PM

If you are a complete outsider to the cigar world you probably never heard of Avo, but in the industry he is a titan. All cigar aficionados are familiar with the brand of AVO, and most regard it as a uniquely delicious cigar.

Another Armenian in the cigar industry is Paul Garmirian. His brand which carries his name PAUL GARMIRIAN (PG) is not as renowed as AVO, but is still relatively well known.

#3 MosJan

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Posted 22 March 2001 - 08:26 PM

this was nice , Thanks
Btec - Another Armenian in the cigar industry is - GARO -

#4 Boghos

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Posted 05 July 2001 - 01:02 PM

I just smoked that Avo 75th Anniversary Churchill. I found it to be excellent. Having smoked mostly Cuban cigars for the past ten years or so, it is nice to find such a nice Churchill. ON PG my favourite size is robusto.

#5 Anahid Takouhi

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Posted 05 July 2001 - 03:50 PM

Please tell Mr. Uvezian to change his surname immmediatly...
euff! how disgusting it sounds... something like non-stop duzz-duzz

#6 Ashot

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Posted 29 January 2008 - 01:34 AM

Armenian Cigar Maker in the Dominican Republic.

"There are people who call me a cigar guru, but I'm no guru. I'm not a great man in the cigar world, as Zino Davidoff was. There is no longer anyone like him."
Avo Uvezian loves understatement and leans back with an AVO cigar between his forefinger and middle finger.
Nevertheless, Avo Uvezian and Zino Davidoff are similar in many respects...

Avo Uvezian was born in 1926, the son of a family of musicians in Beirut.
His father was a composer and conductor of a symphony orchestra, his mother a gifted singer.
The talented young pianist's dream was a great career as a musician. Talent and commitment, which still distinguish him today, soon brought him success.
After he had travelled the Near East as a teenager with his jazz trio "Lebanon Boys", he also had great success in the Middle East. The contacts which he made there led the young jazz pianist to the USA in 1947.

In New York Avo studied classical piano and composition at the famous Julliard School of Music. During his studies Uvezian played in various bands with great success. The Korean war interrupted his career, as he served with the US Army as a musician until 1953.
After that Avo played with the great jazz musicians of the 50s and 60s. Avo Uvezian's dream had come true - he had established his career as a musician.
The polyglot businessman and jazz musician went to Puerto Rico and in the early 80s opened a restaurant and piano bar.
In Puerto Rico Avo discovered his love for cigars – they were to become his great passion.
As a perfectionist par excellence he very soon had his own AVO brand rolled and gave this away to his guests, who increasingly demanded his cigars. The road from connoisseur to cigar composer was but a short one.

So the musician and composer set out to look for a virtuoso of the cigar who could bring his creations to life in the form of cigars. In about 1982 he met the master cigar producer Hendrik Kelner in the Dominican Republic and by 1988 the first AVO had been sold in New York. Two passionate aficionados had found each other and the synthesis could have only one result: cigars in perfect harmony.
Hendrik Kelner and Avo Uvezian had started with 100,000 cigars in the first year, and in the third the number had already risen to 750,000. Today each year three million cigars bearing the name of the jazz pianist are enjoyed by aficionados all over the world.
Also in his second career, the world of premium cigars, his striving for perfect harmony has brought him great success.

www.avo.com

#7 MosJan

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Posted 29 January 2008 - 12:43 PM

also see http://www.smokeshop.../1203/manuf.htm

smile.gif his my Doctor smile.gif Garo Bouldoukyan


#8 Boghos

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Posted 29 January 2008 - 05:29 PM

Paul Garmirian
http://www.pgcigars.com/


#9 Ashot

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Posted 29 January 2008 - 05:42 PM

Mos lav bzhishk unes, tents mi erku hat unenam sagh or@ cigar pti ts@xem!!!

#10 MosJan

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Posted 29 January 2008 - 07:33 PM

Ash imijiylots lav deghabuyserov bujumnera anum, + shat hoyakap Ceroppractera, petq lini asa aper

#11 MosJan

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Posted 29 January 2008 - 07:33 PM

isk Cigar - tsavoq srty el chem karroghanum tsxel kam tekuz hot@ tanel, sarsapeli vatanum em - gites Tikon inchqana sirum, bayts te hents hot@ arnem sirt@s xarrnuma



#12 HyeFedayis

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Posted 29 January 2008 - 09:32 PM

Great job! he definitely contributed to the world positively. mellow.gif

#13 Ashot

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Posted 29 January 2008 - 10:06 PM

Aper de asa Tikon petqa sksi cigaret ghulap tal eli... bayts che avel lava ira cigarnerin mna!!!

#14 MosJan

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Posted 25 February 2008 - 12:38 AM

qich araj Avo Uvezyani masin HAghordum kar H1 TV 'ov - H@rashagorts mard e na !!!

also - Avo is the original composer of. Stranger in the Night song apricot.gif
inch lav e che Hye Linel@


#15 Ashot

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Posted 25 February 2008 - 02:17 AM

Ay et mek@ chey imanum... bravo Avo jan!!!

Strangers in the night - amena shat lsvogh yev sirvats yerqerits mekna!!!

#16 Z'areh

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Posted 26 February 2008 - 10:38 PM

QUOTE (Ashot @ Feb 25 2008, 02:17 AM)
Ay et mek@ chey imanum... bravo Avo jan!!!

Strangers in the night - amena shat lsvogh yev sirvats yerqerits mekna!!!


Not to be outdone!
Paul Garmirian is a top-notch cigar maker too!

Paul, Garo, Avo our pride and national treasures!!! (Azeris can suck on eggs) tongue.gif

If you want to see Paul in silhouette click on my usename! biggrin.gif

As for Avo, Ah he's my hero!!

http://www.cigarenvy...rs-as-in-music/

The prolific, 78-year-old composer, who was the genius behind the marvelous 1960s ballad “Strangers in the Night” created his cigar brand in 1987. Now known as Avo Classic, the reddish-brown-wrapped original was, in fact, gentle with a marvelous spiciness on the finish. The brand, distributed by Davidoff of Geneva, quickly became a favorite during the Cigar Boom of the 1990s.

Like The Griffin’s brand before, Davidoff acquired total distribution of the brand in 1995 and now has a complete “hand-full” of brands under the Avo banner:
> Avo Classic, introduced in 1987
> Avo XO, in 1994
> Domaine Avo, in 1998
> Avo Maduro, in 2000
> Avo Signature, in 2001

Edited by Z'areh, 26 February 2008 - 10:45 PM.


#17 Zartonk

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Posted 26 February 2008 - 11:24 PM

Avo Uvezian wrote "Strangers in the Night"?! Cool!

#18 Yervant1

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Posted 30 December 2015 - 08:37 AM

A MANHATTAN THEFT ROOTED IN A TALE OF SONGWRITING, SINATRA AND CIGARS

The New York Times
December 28, 2015 Monday

By MICHAEL WILSON

The story of the thief who walked out of an expensive Manhattan cigar
store with four boxes of medium-blend Dominicans last month actually
begins decades earlier, before he was born. It starts in the 1960s,
with an encounter between two men that would change both their lives.

One of those men was Avo Uvezian, an Armenian jazz musician living
in New York City. The other was also a musician, from New Jersey,
named Frank Sinatra.

Mr. Uvezian was born in 1926 in Beirut. He became an accomplished
musician who traveled the Middle East, speaking multiple languages
along the way.

"I usually count in Armenian in my head," he told Cigar Journal in an
interview this year. "I find the best language to swear in is Turkish,
and when dreaming of pretty women, French is the best language."

Playing piano, he led a jazz combo that performed in Lebanon, Iraq and
Iran, where he became the personal entertainer of the shah. In 1947,
he moved to New York and entered the Juilliard School.

By the 1960s, he had written his own music. One melody stood out.

"The song itself is a very simple song," Mr. Uvezian, 89, said this
month by telephone from his home in Orlando, Fla. "You take the
thing and you repeat it. 'Dah-dah-dah-dah-daaaah.' It's the same line
repeated throughout."

He had a friend who knew Sinatra. The friend set up a meeting and told
Mr. Uvezian to bring along his music. Someone else had put lyrics to
the melody, and called it "Broken Guitar."

Sinatra gave it a listen.

"He said, 'I love the melody, but change the lyrics,"' Mr. Uvezian
recalled. The task was given to studio songwriters, and they came
back with new words. Sinatra, legend has it, hated it. "I don't want
to sing this," he said when he first saw the sheet music, according
to James Kaplan's new book, "Sinatra: The Chairman." Nonetheless,
with his last No. 1 single several years behind him, he was persuaded
to record the song in 1966.

The title was new, too. "Broken Guitar" was out. The new name was
"Strangers in the Night."

In Mr. Uvezian's telling, what should have been a monumental triumph
and breakthrough turned out to be a source of great grief. He did not
receive credit for the song. Before Sinatra ever heard the music, Mr.

Uvezian, a novice, had sent it to a friend, Bert Kaempfert, an
established German composer, to be published there, he said. Mr.

Kaempfert is credited with the composition, a snatch of which was
first heard buried within the title song of a James Garner film called
"A Man Could Get Killed."

Mr. Kaempfert, who died in 1980, did not seem to hesitate in listing
the song as among his highest achievements, but Mr. Uvezian said
that Mr. Kaempfert had given him credit for its creation many times,
including in a written letter.

A reporter ran this version of the events behind "Strangers in the
Night" past the New York City radio personality Jonathan Schwartz, an
authority on Sinatra. "I haven't heard it before, but I wouldn't doubt
it," Mr. Schwartz said in a recent interview. "It sounds authentic
to me." Mr. Kaplan, in his book, credits Mr. Kaempfert as the composer.

The experience soured Mr. Uvezian on the music business and on New
York City, he said. "It's a painful thing for me. I want to forget it,"
he said. "I have a hell of a lot of better music."

He moved to Puerto Rico and started over. He played piano at a resort.

He had smoked a pipe in the past, but he was introduced to good cigars
on the occasion of his daughter's christening in 1982, he said. A
friend ordered him one, and Mr. Uvezian could not believe what it
cost when the bill came. He saw an opportunity that would lead to a
flourishing second career.

He traveled to the Dominican Republic and visited a cigar
manufacturer. He met a master blender named Hendrik Kelner. "He made
10 or 12 different blends," Mr. Uvezian said. Mr. Uvezian sampled
them over a month or so, and came back with his favorite. It would
become a brand called the Avo Classic.

"The beginner or longtime smoker, he could find satisfaction in that
Classic," Mr. Uvezian said.

The musician handed out his cigars from his piano bench at gigs.

People came back for more. He sent samples to Davidoff of Geneva,
a worldwide distributor. Davidoff bought the Avo line of cigars in
1995 and now sells some two million a year, said Scott Kolesaire,
the brand manager.

"The construction, balance and palate stimulation were just top notch,"
Mr. Kolesaire said of the Avo Classic.

Another blend, stronger in taste, was created, the Avo XO. The Davidoff
store on Avenue of the Americas just below Central Park, which contains
a smoking lounge, keeps its Avo line in the climate-controlled,
walk-in humidor it installed in January. It was into this humidor
that an unidentified man in his 30s walked, alone and unnoticed, on
Nov. 23 at 4:20 p.m. He scooped four boxes of cigars into a big Bed
Bath & Beyond bag and left. They were Avo XOs, each box worth $261.22.

Mr. Uvezian, informed of the theft by a reporter's call, was unfazed.

He's had bigger headaches than 80 of his two million cigars going
missing. "It can happen," he said.

A salesman at the store, Rafael de los Reyes, pulled a similar box
off the shelf in mid-December and pointed to the name on the cover.

"This guy," he said, "wrote 'Strangers in the Night.' "

Follow The New York Times's Metro coverage on Facebook and Twitter,
and sign up for the New York Today newsletter.

URL:
http://www.nytimes.c...and-cigars.html

 


#19 Yervant1

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Posted 25 August 2016 - 09:24 AM

90-year-old Avo Uvezian wishes to visit Armenia

 
pngzZEybFNJVo.png

18:20 24/08/2016 ARMENIA

Avo Uvezian, one of the symbols of American music and the author of «Strangers in the Night” hit as we as a the creator of the Avo line of premium cigars confessed that for a complete happiness he needs to visit his fatherland and see Ararat Mountain.

He is proud to be Armenian. Uvezian has made numerous accomplishments and gained international recognition in a life full of hardships, yet he has a dream unfulfilled - to be in Armenia.
 
“I will undoubtedly visit Armenia,” Uvezipn recently said at the ceremony of receiving a medal on the occasion of his birthday anniversary on behalf of Armenia’s prime minister

Singer Arman Hovhannisyan has posted footage from the award ceremony on his Facebook page.

Avo Uvezian was born in 1926, the son of a family of musicians in Beirut, after the family survived the mass slaughters of the Armenians in Turkey.

Uvezian’s success in business activity was as noticeable as in music. Recommended by his friend Jacque Melqonyan, who has experience in cigar production and marketing, Uvezian initiated his cigar business under Avo brand, which translated into Armenian as “good new”.

According to reports, Fidel Castro personally used to call Uvezian to ask for several boxes of “Avo” cigars. George W. Bush reportedly approached Uvezian in a hotel to get acquainted with the producer of his favorite cigars.

http://www.panorama....Uvezian/1631105


#20 Yervant1

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Posted 25 March 2017 - 08:31 AM

Avo Uvezian, Legendary Armenian-American Jazz Pianist and Cigar Manufacturer, Dies at 91

 

ORLANDO, Fla. (Cigar Aficionado)—Legendary Armenian-American jazz pianist and cigar manufacturer Avo Uvezian passed away on March 24, two days after his 91st birthday.

avo-uvezian-cigar-piano-open-front-1024x

Avo Uvezian (Photo: Cigar Journal)

Known in the cigar industry for his Avo brands and his sharp sense of style, Uvezian was long a vivacious part of the cigar industry, touring in support of his cigars even at 90 years old. A showman and cigar lover, it wasn’t uncommon to see Uvezian play piano at a cigar event while puffing on one of his cigars and waxing poetic about the joys of smoking.

Uvezian first came into cigar prominence when the Avo line was born in 1987, but his cigar story started long before that.

Born in 1926 in Beirut, Lebanon, Uvezian formed a musical group called the Liban Boys in 1945 right after the end of World War II. They managed to get a contract playing in a hotel in Baghdad, where the group lasted a year before moving on to a hotel in Tehran. Uvezian quickly made a name for himself as a pianist and eventually received an invitation from Shah Reza Pahlevi, at the time the leader of Iran, to play at his palace. Uvezian stayed in Tehran for a year, and made such an impression on the Shah that he recommended that Uvezian go to America, and personally paid for his trip.

Uvezian arrived in New York City in 1947, playing in various bands while studying at Juilliard. After two years in the U.S. Army, he eventually found himself in Puerto Rico in the jewelry business. But music called him back, and by 1974 he was playing piano at the Palmas del Mar resort. During this time, he made a crucial observation: people not only came to hear his music, but they also liked smoking cigars. Uvezian would purchase a few local cigars each night and place them on top of the piano for anyone who wanted to smoke.

“Customers and friends used to write me and ask me for the cigars,” Uvezian told Cigar Aficionado in an interview. “That’s when I said to myself that I better look at getting serious about this.”

Uvezian was introduced to Davidoff’s cigarmaker Hendrik “Henke” Kelner, and in 1987, his first cigars from Kelner were sold under the Bolero label in San Juan. Shortly after, he changed the cigar name to Avo and debuted them in New York City. The brand was created exclusively for the Davidoff shop.

Uvezian launched Avo across the U.S. in 1988, and in 1995, Davidoff purchased the distribution rights for the brand. In 10 years, Uvezian saw his brand grow from about 5,000 cigars in 1987 to about 3.2 million in 1997.

“He’s like family,” said Jeff Borysiewicz of Corona Cigar in Orlando. “He was family. He’s the godfather of my kids. He brought charisma and charm to the industry and people were attracted to him. He had the kind of magnetism I’d never seen. Avo spoke so many languages and had such an international life. He was incredible.”

Since the early-2000s, Uvezian has celebrated his birthday with a special, limited-edition cigar and a cigar party as well as a national tour. Though tour dates decreased as he got a little older, he usually made time for New York. Last year, Uvezian made an appearance in Manhattan for his 90th birthday.

“People always ask me, ‘Avo, what’s your secret?’ ” Uvezian said at the time. “And I tell them that every time you smoke cigars, you have given yourself another day of life. I think I’m going to be doing this until I’m 99 years old. That way, when I get to 99, I’ll say, ‘Well, I might as well go to 100.’ ”

He almost made it.

Avo Uvezian is survived by his wife, Nivia, his sons Robert, Jeffrey and Ronnie, and his daughter Karyn.

http://armenianweekl...rer-dies-at-91/






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