Vigil Posted March 8, 2004 Report Share Posted March 8, 2004 (edited) Djivian Gasparyan Famous Duduk player actually hes the best their is. Edited May 31, 2004 by Vigil Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted March 8, 2004 Report Share Posted March 8, 2004 Vigiel jan Sorry but no Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vigil Posted March 8, 2004 Author Report Share Posted March 8, 2004 (edited) Vigiel jan Sorry but no Edited May 31, 2004 by Vigil Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marsuvan Posted April 2, 2004 Report Share Posted April 2, 2004 he is very popular in turkey. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nakharar Posted April 3, 2004 Report Share Posted April 3, 2004 Popular Armenians in Turkey? That must be a novelty then. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aliendj Posted May 6, 2004 Report Share Posted May 6, 2004 his music is gr8 & passionant. I believe that he made the Armenian Doudouk international instrument. I wish there was any doudouk player in Lebanon. I need some in my music Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
armenjc Posted January 30, 2005 Report Share Posted January 30, 2005 I believe that he made the Armenian Doudouk international instrument. style_images/master/snapback.png Peter Gabriel was the one resonsible for making the duduk internationally known when he used Levon Minassian's duduk tracks for the music to the movie The Last Temptation of Christ in 1988. A couple years later, Gabriel released his CD Passion which was an album that contained completed versions of the music cues from the film score. Before 1988, no one but Armenians really knew what the duduk was. It was after all this that Gasparyan became popular and you started hearing duduk on film scores and other non-Armenian artists' CDs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted January 30, 2005 Report Share Posted January 30, 2005 Peter Gabriel was the one resonsible for making the duduk internationally known when he used Levon Minassian's duduk tracks for the music to the movie The Last Temptation of Christ in 1988. A couple years later, Gabriel released his CD Passion which was an album that contained completed versions of the music cues from the film score. Before 1988, no one but Armenians really knew what the duduk was. It was after all this that Gasparyan became popular and you started hearing duduk on film scores and other non-Armenian artists' CDs. style_images/master/snapback.png HI & Welcome to HyeForum i was told that Peter Gabriel used Vatche Hovsepyans recording in 1986 - music was used in 1986 FigureSkating championship then in 87~88 Jivan has played the music one more time for him, duduk in the movie is played by Vache Jivan is well known duduk master - not necessary the best that we have to offer or the most recorded in western music “market” If I’m not wrong Jivan was in USA in 91~93 – this is wan he start recording for western “market” Duduk by Levon Minasian is A+ I love it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoniaM123 Posted April 23, 2005 Report Share Posted April 23, 2005 I think that Djivan Gasparyan is the greatest duduk player of all time. There is nobody better. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 23, 2005 Report Share Posted April 23, 2005 ok if you say so Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vava Posted April 23, 2005 Report Share Posted April 23, 2005 Have you guys heard Souren Baronian play duduk? His music is definately non-taditional and he does play clarinate and other reed instruments on his jazz albums... but I think he's pretty good LINK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 23, 2005 Report Share Posted April 23, 2005 Yes Vavajan i know Suren Suren is not in to Armenia music - his in to Tasqim en Mid east Music - and Armenian Duduk is not his Specialty - This days if your looking for Armenia duduk master Best Known Duduk Master Vache & Jivan - Charchurlyan Karo ( CharchOghlu ) - Levon Madoyan - Marqar Marqarian - Gevorg MInasyan ( MInasoF ) in Movies Vardanyan Albert & Dabaghyan Gevorg Harutyunyan Ruben & Vardan Levon Minasyan Ararat Petrosyan M@gel Malxasyan Yeghish Norik Kostik Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aratta-Kingdom Posted August 3, 2007 Report Share Posted August 3, 2007 NIGHT OF THE DUDUK By Natalie Nichols LA City Beat, CA Aug 1 2007 Master at work: Djivan Gasparyan I'm a sucker for a little mind-expansion under the stars, especially when it's accompanied by a delicious homemade meal and copious amounts of wine. So it was that I spent last Sunday evening at the Hollywood Bowl with two friends, soaking up the culture and scarfing incredible farmer's casserole and honey-apricot cake during the "Spirit of Armenia!" concert. It was a Bowl first: three-plus hours of folk music, pop sounds, and traditional dance, all from that faraway land east of Turkey and north of Iran. But for many of the half-million Armenians living in SoCal, my late stepmother's ancestral homeland is just a heartbeat away. Her parents escaped the Turkish genocide at the turn of the last century; I grew up hearing the sort of harrowing tales of narrow survival that many descendents know too well. Mom, who would've turned 83 last month, always encouraged us to learn about our Armenian "roots," so I pretty much had to attend this show, part of the KCRW-FM/L.A. Philharmonic's "World Festival" series. "This is like a big reunion," exclaimed a little old lady ahead of us on the people-mover to the bench seats. Indeed, the crowd contained families, older folks, and young couples - many, if not most, of them Armenian, who applauded appreciatively when KCRW host Tom Schnabel gamely greeted them in the native tongue. The bill offered a number of vocal and instrumental acts, from enthusiastically cheered pop singers Adiss, Andy, Silva Hakobyan, and Sako to tenor Hovhannes Shahbazyan, classical pianist Vatche Mankerian, and L.A.'s own "folk-fusion" group Element Band. But, in a way, the true star of the show was the duduk, the double-reed woodwind that has for centuries been the centerpiece of Armenian music. There was scarcely a moment when you did not hear it - played by duduk ensemble Winds of Passion, by master of the instrument Djivan Gasparyan, and during the performances by Zvartnots Dance Ensemble and Vartan & Siranoush Gevorkian Dance Ensemble. It makes a mournful, keening sound that seems to capture all the suffering and hope in the entire history of Armenia - a sound so human, so suffused with meaningful sadness, that the duduk is a natural for poignant moments on movie soundtracks. I hear it often on TV's Battlestar Galactica, where it injects vulnerable melody into a score filled with stark, battle-rattling percussion and the hard-edged minimalism befitting a program about humans hunted nearly to extinction. As the full moon rose over the hills, Gasparyan took his too-brief turn, making his duduk warble, cry, and wail into the fast-approaching night. Here, clearly, was a man who knew his craft. His eyes closed, cheeks puffing out from the effort of forcing air into the thin, dark wood tube, he wove a transporting spell. He created, not an overwhelming sadness, but an almost conversational sense of sober reflection. Earlier, a mesh of Winds of Passion duduks had fleetingly reminded me of the modal antics rocker Jeff Beck gets up to with his guitar, and now Gasparyan brought to mind another quality shared by great musicians - the ability to channel their voices, maybe even their souls, through their instruments. My friends and I also noted occasional similarities between some of the Armenian folk songs and Celtic music, as well as that the dancing at times reminded us of an Irish jig. When the video screens flashed the Armenian coat of arms, decorated with an eagle and a lion, one of my pals, who's still suffering Harry Potter withdrawal, hollered "Gryffindor!" Which must qualify as the loopiest cross-cultural connection made all night. It was silly but had some logic: Gryffindor is Harry's house at wizard boarding school, symbolized by a lion and distinguished by members noted for their bravery and heart. It's weird how things come together like that. I'd read that Galactica composer Bear McCreary, a graduate of USC's Thornton School of Music, used the duduk as a way to reflect his Armenian heritage. I'd considered that cool and appropriate, but the simple wisdom of it hit me again on Sunday: how the music of a people who survived genocide in the real world so poignantly reflects the sorrow and resilience of fictional survivors in similar dire straits. And how, in turn, that musical thread of truth reminds us that Armenia is indeed alive. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted December 13, 2014 Report Share Posted December 13, 2014 SUNKEN TREASURE: AWESOME MUSIC FROM THE ACHIVES. THIS WEEK, DJIVAN GASPARYANThe Irish TimesDec 12 2014Donal Dineen digs through his music collection and explains why TheMoon Shines at Night deserves another listenThe duduk, a woodwind instrument indigenous to Armenia, is a small,double reed flute carved from aged apricot wood. The rich tonal colourand sweetness of the sound it makes is no coincidence.The ancient duduk's mournful, oboe-like sound is due to the widthof the reed, which require remarkable breathing techniques by theplayer.It is most commonly played with another duduk, where thesoloist plays over the accompanying drone or foundation. This iswhat gives the sound its uniquely touching sonic atmosphere, withthe scales changing harmoniously between both instruments.It's a captivating and free- flowing sound. There is an intimacy toit that invites contemplation. In its gentleness it resides close tosilence and its whispering tones appear not to disturb quietness verymuch at all.>From the breath of the great Djivan Gasparyan, the duduk, onceregarded as a poor person's instrument, has reached high places andwestern ears. In 1989 Gasparyan released an album on his own Opal labelcalled I Will Not Be Sad in This World. A subsequent collaborationwith the producer Michael Brook resulted in Moon Shines at Night.This is Gasparyan's masterpiece. Brook works his magic in the mostsubtle of ways, manufacturing a warm, acoustical setting in order tobring the sound even closer to the listener.Gasparyan's playing is heartfelt and graceful. There's a tenderness inevery note, phrase and song. The two tracks on which he sings, Motherof Mine and 7th of December 1988, are powerful and highly evocative.The similarity of his singing voice and his instrument is a mesmerisingcombination.It renders tangible the most elusive of things: A quiet, peacefuldream.http://www.irishtimes.com/culture/music/sunken-treasure-awesome-music-from-the-achives-this-week-djivan-gasparyan-1.2034242 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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