MosJan Posted December 13, 2001 Report Share Posted December 13, 2001 HArout jan mi hat portsy ports@ portsanq chi ap heto menq kasenq te sluxov e te voch Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Boghos Posted December 14, 2001 Report Share Posted December 14, 2001 Mos Jan, Do you know of any Armenian duduk master lost in Brazil ? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted December 14, 2001 Report Share Posted December 14, 2001 Boghos do you need a master who play's duduk or do you need a master who makes duduk ?i do not know any one in Brazil, but i will keep it in mind, just in case i get some info I'll let you know. you have some of the best wood that can be used for duduk in brazil, Brazilian rosewood, i have one that has been made for Vache Hovsepyan in 1972, the sound is totally different, it has something different, like it adds totally different dimension to our traditional Armenian duduk. Boghos Saro Danyelyan is next to you, in Argentina. he is one of the best Duduk players. MOvses Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SAS Posted December 14, 2001 Report Share Posted December 14, 2001 quote:Originally posted by Harut:yes karnei ksovorei, bayts akhr shat anslukh em. Harut,pzdik vaxt@d xo glxid chen zarge, ap jan, or s@luxd korcrel es? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted December 14, 2001 Report Share Posted December 14, 2001 Boghos jan if you need a Pro-Duduk no problem. i have the best duduks MKS or SAM, if you like one, e-mail me or send me a PM. MOvses Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Harut Posted December 15, 2001 Report Share Posted December 15, 2001 quote:Originally posted by SAS:Harut,pzdik vaxt@d xo glxid chen zarge, ap jan, or s@luxd korcrel es? glxus che zargel, bayts gluxs shat em paterun zargel. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Boghos Posted December 15, 2001 Report Share Posted December 15, 2001 quote:Originally posted by MosJan:Boghos do you need a master who play's duduk or do you need a master who makes duduk ?i do not know any one in Brazil, but i will keep it in mind, just in case i get some info I'll let you know. you have some of the best wood that can be used for duduk in brazil, Brazilian rosewood, i have one that has been made for Vache Hovsepyan in 1972, the sound is totally different, it has something different, like it adds totally different dimension to our traditional Armenian duduk. Boghos Saro Danyelyan is next to you, in Argentina. he is one of the best Duduk players.MOvsesSaro Danyelian, good Lord, I didn't know...Actually I need btha nw pro duduk and a teacher .Thanks, Movses. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted July 7, 2002 Report Share Posted July 7, 2002 quote:Originally posted by Boghos: quote:Originally posted by MosJan:Boghos do you need a master who play's duduk or do you need a master who makes duduk ?i do not know any one in Brazil, but i will keep it in mind, just in case i get some info I'll let you know. you have some of the best wood that can be used for duduk in brazil, Brazilian rosewood, i have one that has been made for Vache Hovsepyan in 1972, the sound is totally different, it has something different, like it adds totally different dimension to our traditional Armenian duduk. Boghos Saro Danyelyan is next to you, in Argentina. he is one of the best Duduk players. MOvsesSaro Danyelian, good Lord, I didn't know...Actually I need btha nw pro duduk and a teacher smilies/frown.gif.Thanks, Movses.Boghos jan good friend of mine Daryl Finley is moving to BRAZIL this year - his a good jazz artist and a good Duduk player - if you like i will lat you know when has in Brazil MOvses Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arpa Posted November 15, 2006 Report Share Posted November 15, 2006 http://www.calendarlive.com/music/cl-wk-up...y?coll=cl-music MUSIC It's enough to make you cry The duduk, with its mournful tones, is a rising Hollywood star. By Litty Mathew Special to The Times October 5, 2006 If red is the color of passion and chocolate the food of love, then the duduk has surreptitiously become the sound of sadness. Most of us can't name the instrument, but we've heard it so often that if we were paying attention, it might almost border on cliché. Almost. The duduk (pronounced doo-dook), is an ancient instrument from the Caucasus that looks a bit like a recorder. No longer than a forearm and with a range of just an octave, it sounds like a voice crying or wind howling across a mountaintop, its tone fleshy and pulpy, deep and haunting. Anyone who has watched a tear-jerker has probably heard the duduk's mournful echoes. Peter Gabriel's score in "The Last Temptation of Christ" introduced us to it almost 20 years ago — music on which Djivan Gasparian, the duduk's best-known ambassador, played. FOR THE RECORD: Duduk player: An article about the duduk in the Oct. 5 Calendar Weekend said Djivan Gasparian had played the instrument on the soundtrack to the film "The Last Temptation of Christ." The duduk soloist in that film was Vatche Hovsepian. — Like a Hollywood star, the instrument then took a sabbatical, showing up only in an occasional film or a pilot that never made it. In the last 10 years, however, it has made a very steady showing and is now an expected guest at all the right parties. Its evocative sound surfaces again Friday night when the new season of Sci Fi Channel's "Battlestar Galactica" begins, featuring a soundtrack adorned with what its composer, Bear McCreary, calls "a simple wooden pipe [that] emotes generations of sadness." A duduk solo, with text sung in Armenian, is featured in a McCreary song that follows the first episode's main title Friday. The duduk's rising star owes a debt to the half-million Armenians that call Los Angeles home. This large Armenian community — the largest in the world outside of Armenia — has provided a steady base of musicians, teachers, instrument makers and, not least of all, fans that helped the duduk transition from ethnic enclave to mainstream culture. On a trip to Los Angeles to visit his two daughters and their families — as well as to record the scores for "Syriana" and "The Da Vinci Code" — Gasparian, now 76, still seemed surprised by his fame as a master of a once-obscure instrument. "Many years ago, a Russian journalist asked me if I had made the duduk famous or if the duduk had made me famous," Gasparian says. "I still don't have an answer." How and why did a simple shepherd's flute move from an ethnic curiosity to a staple in the Hollywood composer's arsenal? "I don't think there's anything that sounds as close to the human voice, and there's nothing as compelling to the human ear as the human voice," explains Jon Ehrlich, whose credits include now-defunct TV shows "Invasion" and "The Agency," and who composed a piece for the duduk for his own wedding. It's a great dramatic tool for composers, Ehrlich points out. "With the duduk, you're pointing to a moment you want to keep alive, making a static moment breathe and be alive," he says. "Battlestar Galactica" composer McCreary attributes the duduk's rise to "a current trend in films and television to branch away from the traditional orchestral score, which opens the door for unusual instruments and non-Western musical influences." His roots led him to the instrument. "I first introduced the sound of the duduk mainly as background color in my orchestration, simply as a way to represent my Armenian heritage," says McCreary, who first heard the duduk while researching and writing an opera based on his grandmother's exodus from Turkey after the 1915 Armenian genocide. "I was instantly struck by the haunting, vocal quality. "However, as the scoring process for 'Galactica' went on, I found it more useful than I had originally imagined, and the producers responded to the intimacy and power of the sound. It was not long before a mournful duduk wailed over the main title." Although the show last season saw some changes, the duduk remained. "Set against the heavy percussion in the 'Battlestar Galactica' score, the duduk has an even more powerful impact," McCreary says. "During the most dramatic scenes, a melodic instrument will always resonate more with viewers."There is the danger, of course, of going to the well too often. "It seems like composers are getting tired of the duduk or at least they're afraid it will get overused," says Chris Bleth, Gasparian's first American student and a professional duduk player who has worked with Ehrlich and McCreary. "I get asked, 'What's like the duduk but isn't?' " Yet the duduk's sound is so ephemeral it has yet to be synthesized successfully. "The depth of perception — the stirring mournfulness that comes from so many years of suffering — at some level we can all relate to that," says Pedro Eustache, a woodwind musician and ethnic instrument disciple who played the duduk in scores for "The Passion of the Christ" and "Munich," among others. But, he adds, "I will not let movies define the duduk. The duduk is the antidote to desensitization." "It's slowly become part of the musical landscape," Ehrlich says of the instrument. "That's staying power." The duduk's musical résumé 'Battlestar Galactica': Third season begins at 9 p.m. Friday on the Sci Fi Channel. To hear samples from the "Battlestar Galactica" soundtrack and learn what composer Bear McCreary says about the instrument, visit his blog at www.bearmccreary.com. Past movie scores: "The Crow," "Dead Man Walking," "Gladiator," "Hidalgo," "The Hulk," "The Passion of the Christ," "Munich" and "Syriana." In concert: The Yuval Ron Ensemble, featuring duduk player Yeghish Manukyan, performs at 11:15 a.m. Oct. 19 at the Santa Monica College Conert Hall, 1900 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica. Free. www.smchillel.org. Also: 8 p.m. Oct. 28 at the Chapel of the Sacred Heart, Loyola Marymount University, 1 LMU Drive, L.A. $15 in advance; $20 at door; free to LMU students/faculty. (818) 505-1355 If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives. Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted November 16, 2006 Report Share Posted November 16, 2006 FOR THE RECORD: Duduk player: An article about the duduk in the Oct. 5 Calendar Weekend said Djivan Gasparian had played the instrument on the soundtrack to the film "The Last Temptation of Christ." The duduk soloist in that film was Vatche Hovsepian. — Finely At Last some one has got it !!! yes it was VAche not Jivan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Johannes Posted November 16, 2006 Report Share Posted November 16, 2006 Ծիրանի փող Երբ հայ դուդուկահարները գնացել են Մոսկվա առաջի անգամ, ռուսերն ուզել են գիտենալ այս նուագարանի անունը, հայերն ասել են ծիրանի փող, նրանք չեն հասկացել, եւ այդ գործիքն անուանել են դուդկա, որի հայկական տարբերակն է դուդուկ: Այս տեղեկութիւնը հեռուստացոյցից մի դուդուկահար պատմեց: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted November 16, 2006 Report Share Posted November 16, 2006 amen patmatsy mi havata / amen mek @mi tesaki batsatrutyun uni Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jenovah Posted November 28, 2006 Report Share Posted November 28, 2006 Hi, I'm new to this forum. I just bought a duduk but I'm having a real hard time playing it. I feel like I have to put way too much pressure to get sound out, also I cant get the high notes soft, I feel like I should be able to control the softness, but I either get a hard sound or no sound at all... My duduk is in key of C and was (suposedly) made by Samvel Grigoryant. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vava Posted December 4, 2006 Report Share Posted December 4, 2006 Mosjan is the duduk pro around here. Is your reed wet enough? How about the collar (could it be too tight, or too loose)? Controlling the "softness" as you say, takes practice and patience - your reed, the instrument itself and your embouchure have to all be working together in order to retain control. Duduk.com has some "learn to play duduk" DVDs that are very helpful. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arpa Posted August 26, 2008 Report Share Posted August 26, 2008 MosJan, this is for you. Do you know him? Look below. He bought a furkish duduk? AMERICAN LEARN PLAYING ARMENIAN DUDUK A1+ [01:50 pm] 26 August, 2008 37-year-old musician John is known in the world as JHNO-the inventor of electronic music. He has been in Armenia since March of 2008. During an interview with A1+ he said he had come to learn playing duduk (Armenian national pipe). "I first heard the tones of duduk in Martin Scorsese's film "Passion of the Christ" which immediately appealed to me," tells the musician. Although the music is performed by Armenian duduk-player Vache Hovsepian John wasn't keen on Armenian duduks at first. "I bought a duduk from an organisation importing duduks from every corner of the world. But it was not an Armenian duduk, it was a Turkish one." At first the musician couldn't play the instrument. As he says it is rather difficult to master the skills. "Duduk is a unique instrument. Though in comparison with a piano duduk is very small and has only a few holes it makes wonderful sounds", says the American musician who has played the piano since the age of 4. Then he moved to France and bought an Armenian duduk from an Armenian prominent duduk-player Ara Papikian. "He gave me lessons and taught me to breathe correctly using lungs and stomach. But even after taking lessons from a professional the American was unable to "subdue" the instrument. "I finally realized that I must get acquainted with the homeland of duduk and breathe Armenian air and drink Armenian water to play the instrument. During his visit to Armenia John went to Yerevan, Etchmiadzin, Dilijan, Vanadzor and Teghut. He says he is warmly welcomed everywhere. Armenians get surprised seeing a foreigner playing "Dle Yaman" so well. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arpa Posted August 26, 2008 Report Share Posted August 26, 2008 (edited) Ծիրանի փող Երբ հայ դուդուկահարները գնացել են Մոսկվա առաջի անգամ, ռուսերն ուզել են գիտենալ այս նուագարանի անունը, հայերն ասել են ծիրանի փող, նրանք չեն հասկացել, եւ այդ գործիքն անուանել են դուդկա, որի հայկական տարբերակն է դուդուկ: Այս տեղեկութիւնը հեռուստացոյցից մի դուդուկահար պատմեց: Այո, այդ գործիքին պաշտոնական Հայերէն անունը Ծիրանի Փող է: :ap: “Տուտուկ” ը կարելի է դասաւորել իբր բնաձայնային մականուն-nickname: Մի այլ լեզուով այդ բառը նշանակի “սուլիչ**”. Արի գնանք Language եւ տեսնենք քանի նուագարաններ բնաձայն են, որեւէ լեզուով, Արաբերէնէն մինչեւ Ֆրանսերէն (Այբ-էն մինչեւ Ֆէ): **Նոյնիսկ “սուլիչ” ը բնաձայն է: http://karlen-matevosyan.personalizedmemorial.com/ Edited August 26, 2008 by Arpa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted June 29, 2021 Report Share Posted June 29, 2021 Public Radio of ArmeniaJune 28 2021 Armenian duduk featured in Japanese textbooks On June 28, Ambassador Areg Hovhannisyan welcomed Japanese duduk player Yasutaka Tarumi, who is contributing to the popularization of Armenian music in Japan.The Ambassador thanked Mr. Tarumi for his efforts to promote duduk and Armenian music, and attached importance to closer cooperation with representatives of the field in Armenia.Yasutaka Tarumi informed starting from 2021-2022 academic year the Armenian duduk is featured in Japanese school textbooks.The perspectives of cooperation with the Embassy were also discussed during the meting. https://en.armradio.am/2021/06/28/armenian-duduk-featured-in-japanese-textbooks/ 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted June 29, 2021 Report Share Posted June 29, 2021 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blingbling Posted July 4 Report Share Posted July 4 On 6/19/2001 at 4:49 PM, MosJan said: quote: Originally posted by Hovig: Hello all, This is my first message in this discussion. I want to begin studying how to play duduk, but I don't know where to start . I live in Toronto, Canada, and I'm not sure if there are even any teachers here. I need some guidance. Thanks, Hovig Hovig stop by at My duduk web page i have some new duduk info . see if this might help you .. www.DudukOnLine.com Akhber, I saw in another forum you posted the link to duduk.com for reeds. Are these reeds made in Armenia? Would it be possible to get them here? Or must they be shipped from somewhere else? Do any stores in Haiastan carry them where I can see them and purchase one? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted July 6 Report Share Posted July 6 We Are in USA , have several reed material 3 from Armenia Soft, Medium & Melody, 2 from Artsakh Hard & Super Hard. my site is in need of an overhaul:( i hope soon my webmaster can get to it. Reeds are made in USA . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blingbling Posted July 8 Report Share Posted July 8 On 7/6/2024 at 1:26 PM, MosJan said: We Are in USA , have several reed material 3 from Armenia Soft, Medium & Melody, 2 from Artsakh Hard & Super Hard. my site is in need of an overhaul:( i hope soon my webmaster can get to it. Reeds are made in USA . good to know, thank you. I think my duduk is a piccolo duduk and I'm trying really hard to learn how to play. I might try to find a regular sized A duduk to make it a little easier? My first reed was a terrible buzzing reed from the Vernissage but I bought a nicer one. I will have to see if I can find an A duduk and if I will need to buy a new reed for it or not. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted July 10 Report Share Posted July 10 reed could make lot of different especially in a piccolo instrument, order Soft reed.it will help you to start. then you can move to medium or melody. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted July 26 Report Share Posted July 26 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted July 26 Report Share Posted July 26 Historical instruments : Vache Hovsepyan's and Karo Charchoghlyan's Duduks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.