Music: Postcard from Yerevan

STRAD
Sept 17 2018

Cellists from around the world descended on the Armenian capital in June for the Khachaturian International Competition. Tom Stewart reports from its thought-provoking final round

Jonathan Swensen

Its streets of pink stone thronged with vines and shaded by trees, Yerevan sits at the foot of Mount Ararat, an extinct volcano more than 5,000 metres tall and the supposed resting place of Noah’s Ark. Although the mountain was lost to Turkey shortly after the infamous genocide of 1918, Ararat’s distinctive shape is depicted on the stamp added to travellers’ passports at the border. Armenia is a country proud of its powerful national symbols and – along with Ararat, apricots, the world’s oldest Christian tradition and a unique 39-character alphabet – composer Aram Khachaturian (1903–78) ranks highly among them.

Beyond the ubiquitous Sabre Dance and the Adagio (both from his ballet Gayane) that features on the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, much of Khachaturian’s output remains obscure to most outside the former USSR. Soviet audiences and censors alike appreciated its synthesis of Armenian folk elements and muscular Socialist realism, but others dismissed the composer as a puppet apologist for Stalinist cultural policy. His conservatism has been reassessed in recent years, however, with the composer likened to a kind of Vaughan Williams of the Caucasus.

Now in its 14th year, the Khachaturian International Competition is a celebration of the composer’s work, open to violinists, cellists, pianists, singers and conductors on a rotating five-year schedule. The four finalists in this year’s competition – for cello – had been selected from sixteen in the first round (reduced to eight in the second) and played either Khachaturian’s Cello Concerto or his single-movement Concerto-Rhapsody in Yerevan’s aptly named Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall. Sergey Smbatyan conducted the  Armenian State Symphony Orchestra, a group that evolved just over a decade ago from the State Youth Orchestra of Armenia and which now acts as an ambassador across Europe for the country’s unjustly overlooked classical music culture.

Khachaturian’s conservatism has been reassessed in recent years

First among the finalists was 30-year-old Russian Fedor Amosov. After the 23-minute Concerto-Rhapsody’s orchestral introduction – a serpentine melody that emerges from a haze of horn calls and staccato cymbal crashes – comes a long solo passage for the cello, with its opening octave leap lent an operatic élan by Amosov’s arresting portamento. In the feverish passagework that followed, the cello sounded like a Heldentenor in the midst of a particularly fraught mad scene. Although a little gloominess or introspection of tone might have helped sustain the drama as Amosov hurtled towards the bottom of his C string, the disparate nature of Khachaturian’s phrases here makes stitching them into  a compelling narrative hard work. Amosov gave an especially tight and stylish account of the long and lavishly ornamented melody that twists its way through the work’s central and most obviously folk-inspired section. Alongside its ferocious technical demands, the Concerto-Rhapsody’s most challenging aspect is its rather patchwork nature, with abrupt jumps between different ideas. Amosov would have benefited from forming these sentences into paragraphs, even if the finished message still remained elusive. Making the piece sound coherent and satisfying requires a certain pig-headedness from the soloist, and while Amosov’s account was sophisticated and often thrilling, he perhaps allowed himself to become lost among the composer’s obfuscations.

French–Russian Rustem Khamidullin, 29, was the only finalist to choose Khachaturian’s better-known Cello Concerto over the Concerto-Rhapsody showpiece. While the bravura flashiness of the latter must be hard to resist, the former is a more considered and imaginative work that, across its three movements, offers the soloist far greater resources from which to construct a persuasive interpretation. It is worth noting that the Cello Concerto was written just two years before the publication by the Communist Party of the 1948 Zhdanov Decree, in which Khachaturian was denounced alongside Shostakovich, Prokofiev, Myaskovsky and others for writing ‘anti-popular’ music of ‘excessive individualism’. Shortly afterwards, Khachaturian issued an apology: ‘I want to warn those comrades,’ he wrote, ‘who, like myself, hoped that their music, which is not understood by the people today, would be understood by future generations tomorrow. This is a fatal theory.’

Happily, Khamidullin’s performance embraced the broad arc of the 33-minute Concerto and, in its pacing, demonstrated a mature understanding of the underlying architecture. His sound, for the most part suitably rugged, brightened during pacey, purposeful passages of bariolage in the first movement before recovering its brawn in a descending series of bold multiple-stops. All three movements feature long sections in which a particular pitch is repeated and embellished in the manner of a monodic folk song. These provided opportunities for bold characterisation and transformations of tone that were sometimes missed, especially in the slow second movement. Khamidullin’s elastic detaché and tightly clipped acciaccaturas made for a bounding finale, however, which culminated in a dramatic and impressively well-tuned passage of octaves.

Jury chairman Suren Bagratuni (left) with Chae Won Hong (centre) and Rustem Khamidullin (right)

The following evening, South Korean–American Chae Won Hong’s rendition of the Concerto-Rhapsody’s opening cadenza only underlined Khachaturian’s occasional structural idiosyncrasies and the challenges they pose for a lucid performance. That said, while Hong, 27, played with a beautifully stentorian sound in the ornamented strains of ‘Armenian’ melody, detail in the faster passages was often scrappy. And with shaky intonation and a handful of wrong notes, speed here  came very much at the expense of clarity (a recording of the piece by Rostropovich conducted by the composer falls at times into a similar trap). Flashes of deeply thoughtful or strikingly dramatic playing suggested Hong’s technique was, on this occasion at least, getting in her way. Frenetic syncopations in the Concerto-Rhapsody’s final minutes help wrest both soloist and orchestra from any previous dead ends, but Hong struggled to recover sufficiently from her previous lapses of persuasiveness to take full advantage of this reprieve.

Last came Danish 21-year-old Jonathan Swensen. Although his first entry came without the theatre of Amosov’s, the bars that followed signalled an outstanding ability to shift convincingly between the disparate elements that make the opening so challenging. Swensen played with the  same muscular open-heartedness throughout the section, his performance alone making sense of it for the audience. Expertly placed fingers and a supple right arm ensured a smooth transition between sustained lines and passages of explosive spiccato, while Swensen’s obvious rapport with the orchestra and conductor was a testament to the clarity of his ideas and his skill in communicating them. It might just have been because this was its third performance of the piece in two days, but the orchestra sounded by turns more brooding and more brilliant than it had done before. A pizzicato countermelody just before the climax was discreet and polite under Hong’s fingers, whereas Swensen’s strings snapped against his fingerboard and propelled him headlong into the blaring horns.

In the final restatement of the theme, Swensen’s high notes were taut and full of menace, and brought the work to an exhilarating close. No one who had heard all four performances could have been surprised when honorary jury chairman and celebrated Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki announced that Swensen had won the $15,000 first prize. Second prize, worth $10,000, went to Amosov, with the $5,000 third prize shared between Hong and Khamidullin. After a reprise performance of the Concerto-Rhapsody, Swensen was whisked off to dinner with the competition’s jury and trustees, as well as its patron Nouneh Sarkissian, who sat between the cellist and her husband Armen, the president of Armenia. ‘This is a small country,’ he said, turning to Swenson and raising his glass of apricot vodka, ‘but one that has created many great artists. You will always be welcome in Armenia, as if it were your second home.’

ALL PHOTOS: KHACHATURIAN INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION

Yerevantsis bloc presents campaign program

Category
Politics

Ararat Zurabyan, mayoral candidate of Yerevan running for the city council from the Yerevantsis bloc, presented their campaign program to reporters today. The bloc is comprised from the ANM and Armenian Fatherland parties.

“We will have numerous meetings in different communities, we will present ourselves in all available formats,” he said. “Our city has sectoral problems and complete solutions will be given,” he said.

He suggested a unique solution for the public transportation issue of the city. “The Yerevan City Hall will establish a public joint stock company and will propose individual citizens to become shareholders of the Yerevan transportation system. We will do everything for Yerevan to have a completely new transportation system,” he said.

‘King of Instagram’ Dan Bilzerian Has Warrant Out for His Arrest in Azerbaijan

People Magazine
Aug 30 2018
'King of Instagram' Dan Bilzerian Has Warrant Out for His Arrest in Azerbaijan
Steve Helling

03:27 PM

The country of Azerbaijan has issued an arrest warrant for Dan Bilzerian, the social media celebrity with the lavish lifestyle known as the “King of Instagram.”

PEOPLE confirms that the Investigative Department of the Prosecutor General’s Office of Azerbaijan has initiated a criminal case against Bilzerian, alleging he illegally visited Nagorno Karabakh, a region that is the subject of a conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Authorities allege that Bilzerian illegally acquired grenades and firearms before “demonstratively” opening fire at a shooting range.

The exact charges Bilzerian faces were not immediately clear.

The alleged incident occurred after a trip that Bilzerian, 37, made to the neighboring country of Armenia.

Bilzerian, who is of Armenian descent, arrived in the capital city of Yerevan on Monday. He and his brother took part in a naturalization ceremony where they became Armenian citizens. Per the laws of the country, he also registered for military service.

Bilzerian tells PEOPLE that after the ceremony, he traveled to Azerbaijan with a group of other people, though of that group, only Bilzerian has been charged with a crime.

A source in the Azerbaijan government told Armenian Public Radio that “Interpol will search for the criminal.” (Interpol is the international organization that facilitates cooperation between police forces.)

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Bilzerian is the CEO of Ignite, a producer of cannabis products that are sold in licensed dispensaries in states where its sale is legal. He tells PEOPLE he thinks the arrest warrant was politically motivated.

“They only issued the warrant for my arrest, and nobody else on the trip,” he says. “I think it’s because I am a public figure and they want to try to make an example out of me.”

It appears that the country of Armenia is supporting Bilzerian.

PEOPLE confirms with the Consulate General of Armenia that the nation has contacted Interpol and urged them to dismiss Azerbaijan’s prosecution of Bilzerian as political.

Bilzerian vows to fight the charges, but says he’s focused on his work at Ignite. (He recently unveiled a search for spokesmodels for his new business, paying $1 million to models he hires.)

He tells PEOPLE that he has “no interest in ever going to Azerbaijan.”

Azerbaijani press: Merkel: Germany ready to contribute to settle Karabakh conflict

24 August 2018 19:50 (UTC+04:00)

Baku, Azerbaijan, Aug. 24

Trend:

Germany is ready to contribute to creation of a favorable atmosphere for settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said at a joint press conference with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the Armenian media reported Aug. 24.

Merkel stressed that Germany is a member of the OSCE Minsk Group.

"We said it would be good to resolve the conflict,” the chancellor said. “But it is important to resolve it in a good atmosphere. Germany is ready to contribute to that.”

“The conflict cannot be resolved without negotiations, and every effort should be made to resolve the conflict,” she added.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, in 1992 Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts.

Asbarez: Armenia’s ‘Velvet Revolution’ and the Increased Specter of War

An Armenian soldier at the border fortification with Nakhichevan

BY MOVSES TER-OGANESYAN

On April 23rd, the citizens of Armenia succeeded in deposing former President (and short-lived Prime Minister) Serzh Sarkisian who sought a third consecutive term in office as Prime Minister. What became known as the “Velvet Revolution” was one of the handful of times in history that a leader of a nation conceded power by means of a non-violent uprising. The event was of immense symbolic importance, coming just before the International Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide on April 24th. Many considered the movement, led by protest leader turned Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the rebirth of a nation. While the episode was touted as an example of the “people’s will” overcoming authoritarian rule, the moment of instability wasn’t lost on neighboring Azerbaijan.

On June 12, Azerbaijan repositioned heavy military hardware and personnel to the Line of Contact (LoC) separating the Artsakh soldiers from Azerbaijan’s own armed forces. The mobilization was first detected on April 22nd and resumed once more on May 1st. Armenia’s involvement in the conflict can be circumscribed as the patron and security guarantor for the blockaded Republic of Artsakh. With a population of 147,000, the statelet has been self-governing since 1991, seeking self-determination and independence from old, yet internationally recognized, USSR borders.

At the start of the Azerbaijani mobilization, Armenian society was caught in the fervor of the revolution, choosing to ignore the developments at the border. Many posited that the evidence provided by the Artsakh army was a ruse by the ruling party to thwart the revolution. While the previous government was notorious for its corruption, these conspiracy theories shed light on how primitive and skeptical the nascent democracy still is.

On June 4, simultaneous to its troop movements on the LoC, Azerbaijan conducted joint military drills with Turkey in its Nakhichevan exclave. The exercise came weeks after Azerbaijan advanced on an estimated 15km2 of strategic heights in the no-man’s-land separating itself and Armenia. The territory, flanked by Iran & Armenia, with a tiny land bridge to Turkey, has no direct connection to the rest of Azerbaijan, but it’s about to get closer.

Turkish media recently announced a planned 244-square-kilometer rail line that would connect Nakhichevan to Kars through the Turkish city of Igdir. This would create a link between the exclave and Azerbaijan’s capital via the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway. The connection guarantees a faster and more reliable means of transport for troops, advisors, and weapons not only from Azerbaijan, but from staunch ally Turkey as well. At 60 kilometers from its arch-foe’s capital Yerevan, Nakhichevan remains a Democlean Sword hanging over Armenia. President Aliyev of Azerbaijan periodically threatens to use the exclave as a launching pad to raze Armenia’s capitol.

Armenian analysts have been warning of a pincer attack originating from Nakhichevan and Azerbaijan proper to cut off the roads that connect Armenia to Artsakh. These roads are the lifeforce of the internationally unrecognized republic. During the clashes of April 2016, it was through these roads that an estimated 7,000 volunteer fighters from Armenia and its worldwide Diaspora poured in to offer support, a fact Azerbaijan would be remised to ignore.

The success of the Velvet Revolution seems to have provided a momentary safeguard against a resumption in fighting. Indeed, the biggest security threat to the region was neutralized during the change of the old guard. Had war ensued deliberately or through miscalculation, it would have been much easier for Azerbaijan to claim it was Sarkisian launching an attack to maintain power via martial law. Conversely, had Sarkisian stayed at the nation’s helm, a provocation would have been on his shortlist of tactics to solidify his own position. There will be much less cause célèbre to the origins of an attack now that former president Sarkisian has stepped down.

The new Armenian leadership has cracked down on corrupt Members of Parliament, organized crime, and other unsavory vestiges of a past that Armenian society is eagerly ready to leave behind. Because of this, Prime Minister Pashinyan enjoys an approval rating that would be the envy of any leader of a Western democracy.

On the other hand, Azerbaijan has been ruled by the Aliyev family for half a century. Ilham Aliyev inherited the presidency from his late father 15 years ago and has clamped down on opponents and independent media; even earning the title of the OCCRP’s corrupt “Person of the Year.” The prospect of liberal reform in his country are slim, however, in this conflict, the side that does not evolve will remain disadvantaged.

Movses Ter-Oganesyan is a fellow at the Eurasian Research and Analysis Institute (ERA). His area of expertise encompasses the wider Caucasus and American Foreign Policy. He has previously been published in Forbes, The Hill, The National Interest, The Daily Wire and various other outlets. Follow him on Twitter  and Facebook.




Asbarez: Armenian American Museum Welcomes Diaspora Minister

Armenia’s Diaspora MInister Mkhitar Hayrapetyan with the Armenian American Museum Governing Board

GLENDALE—Armenian American Museum officials welcomed Armenia’s Minister of Diaspora Mkhitar Hayrapetyan to the City of Glendale on his first official visit to the Los Angeles community.

The momentous meeting began with a presentation about the Armenian American Museum’s mission, program, and design by Museum Executive Chairman Berdj Karapetian and Architect Aram Alajajian. Karapetian discussed the Governing Board’s vision for a cultural and educational center that will be a community asset honoring the past, recognizing the present, and building the future. Alajajian discussed the inspiration for the Museum’s iconic design and its message of unity for the global Armenian community.

Diaspora Minister attends meeting of Armenian American Museum’s Governing Board

“We are honored to welcome the Minister of Diaspora to the City of Glendale and have an opportunity to present the Armenian American Museum project,” stated Executive Chairman Karapetian. “The Museum is going to play a vital role in empowering our next generation, building our community’s future, and strengthening our Diaspora.”

Diaspora Minister Mkhitar Hayrapetyan tours the Armenian American Museum site

Museum officials and Minister of Diaspora Mkhitar Hayrapetyan discussed opportunities for collaboration and how the Museum and Ministry can work together to strengthen ties between the Diaspora and Armenia. The Minister expressed his excitement and support for the project and recognized the cultural and educational center’s importance for the community.

“It makes me truly proud to see such a beautiful project and vision for the community with the Armenian American Museum,” stated Minister Hayrapetyan. “The Ministry is excited and looking forward to collaborating and working together with the Museum to strengthen ties between the Diaspora and Armenia.”

Diaspora Minister Mkhitar Hayrapetyan Signs Armenian American Museum Plans

The meeting concluded with a tour of the future site of the Armenian American Museum in Glendale Central Park.

The Minister’s visit comes on the eve of a major milestone for the historic project. The Glendale City Council is scheduled to consider the Museum’s design, environmental, and entitlements on July 31st and is anticipated to take its final vote on the Ground Lease Agreement in August.

The Armenian American Museum is a developing project in Glendale, CA with a mission to promote understanding and appreciation of America’s ethnic and cultural diversity by sharing the Armenian American experience. The Museum will serve as a cultural campus that enriches the community, educates the public on the Armenian American story, and empowers individuals to embrace cultural diversity and speak out against prejudice.

The governing board of the Armenian American Museum consists of representatives from the following ten Armenian American institutions and organizations: Armenian Catholic Eparchy, Armenian Cultural Foundation, Armenian Evangelical Union of North America, Armenian General Benevolent Union – Western District, Armenian Missionary Association of America, Armenian Relief Society – Western USA, Nor Or Charitable Foundation, Nor Serount Cultural Association, Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America, and Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

Sharmazanov: I do not understand investigation officers’ haste to arrest Kocharyan

Arminfo, Armenia
Sharmazanov: I do not understand investigation officers' haste to arrest Kocharyan

Yerevan July 27

Tatevik Shahunyan. "I consider it unreasonable and illogical the investigation's proposal to choose arrest for RA former President Robert Kocharyan as a preventive measure." Eventually, Kocharyan himself appeared for questioning, stated that he intended to remain until the end of the investigation and answer all questions. I do not understand haste of the investigation bodies in an attempt to apply arrest against second president of Armenia, the first president of Artsakh, a man who made a great contribution to the liberation struggle of the NKR and to the development of Armenia, Spokesperson of the Republican Party, Deputy Speaker of the parliament Eduard Sharmazanov said in a conversation with the correspondent of ArmInfo.

"Kocharyan was not afraid of enemy bullets at the time, and now he is unlikely to be afraid of the investigation, so the hasty intention to arrest him is not clear for me," the Spokesman said, while agreeing to some extent with Kocharyan's opinion that the recent processes around him may pursue the goal of preventing the possible participation of the second president in the forthcoming political processes, in particular, early parliamentary elections.

Sharmazanov did not exclude manifestations of personal and political motives in the case on the events of March 1, 2008. "However, if this is so, then such manifestations can have extremely negative consequences for the state," he said. The Deputy Speaker also stressed that there are many questions in the legal process, which, at the very least, cause misunderstanding. "Thus, Article 140 of the Constitution of Armenia envisages that the head of state can not be prosecuted during his/her tenure and after that for actions arising from his office." Now the question is whether the announcement of the state of emergency during the March 2008 events was within the limits of Kocharyan's authority? In addition, he was charged with overthrowing the Constitutional order, which he himself was the guarantor of when he was president. How could a person who was a guarantor of the constitutional order, to overthrow it himself? There is another point that causes a legal casus – Kocharyan is charged under an article that was adopted a year after his resignation. I think that all these dubious points should be solved by the investigation, which hopefully will be fair and objective, "Sharmazanov summed up.

Touching upon the accusation against the CSTO Secretary General Yuri Khachaturov, who in 2008 occupied the post of the head of the Yerevan garrison, Sharmazanov noted that it could cast a shadow on Armenia's image in the CSTO, and at other international platforms.

Former President Robert Kocharyan denies wrongdoing as prosecutors request court to issue arrest warrant over 2008 unrest

Category
Politics

A Yerevan court has adjourned the hearing over the motion to remand former President Robert Kocharyan in custody. The hearing is set to continue 01:30, Kocharyan’s attorney Aram Orbelyan said.

He said that Kocharyan wasn’t notified about the hearing beforehand and his client did not make an appearance.

Orbelyan said they will deliver a press conference tomorrow after scrutinizing the case.

Earlier criminal charges were pressed against Kocharyan over the March 1 case, and prosecutors requested a court to issue an arrest warrant.

In an interview to a local news media, Kocharyan denied any wrongdoing and said he doesn’t accept the charges.

“It was the decision of the Constitutional Court which acknowledges the legitimacy of the elections and this is final. Before pressing such kind of charges against me, at least half of the Central Electoral Commission should’ve been jailed, it should’ve been proved that they had committed fraud and have committed a crime while making a decision. There should’ve been some kind of acts, solutions, punishments and others at least regarding the Constitutional Court,” the former president said.

Kocharyan is charged with paragraph 1 of Article 300.1 of the Criminal Code (breaching Constitutional order).

The March 1 case is an ongoing investigation into the deadly 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan. Kocharyan was the outgoing president at the time, as Serzh Sargsyan was named winner of the presidential election. Mass protests erupted in Yerevan, which led to fatal clashes between security forces and demonstrators.

Verelq: Ռոբերտ Քոչարյանը և Յուրի Խաչատուրովը Հատուկ քննչական ծառայությունում են

  • 26.07.2018
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  • Հայաստան
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Հայաստանի երկրորդ նախագահ Ռոբերտ Քոչարյանը Հատուկ քննչական ծառայության (ՀՔԾ) շենքում է: Այս մասին հայտնում է ՀՔԾ խոսնակ Մարիա Օհանջանյանը։


Նրա խոսքով, այս պահին քննչական գործողություններ են իրականացվում և հավելյալ տեղեկություններ կլինեն ավելի ուշ:


«Արմենպրես»-ը տեղեկացնում է, որ Մարտի 1-ի գործով հարցաքննության նպատակով Հատուկ քննչական ծառայությունում է գտնվում այժմ նաև ՀԱՊԿ գլխավոր քարտուղար Յուրի Խաչատուրովը: Լրագրողների հարցին, թե մտավախություն չունի արդյոք քրեական գործում ներգրավելու որպես մեղադրյալ, Խաչատուրովը պատասխանեց՝ «ոչ»: 


Խաչատուրովը, ով 2008 թվականին զբաղեցնում էր Երևանի կայազորի պետի պաշտոնը, Մարտի 1-ի գործով ունի վկայի կարգավիճակ։

Asbarez: ARF Bureau Executive Director Vahe Harutunian Passes Away

Vahe Harutiunian

It is with great sorrow that the Bureau of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation announces the passing of one its veteran members and the Executive Director of its Yerevan office, Unger Vahe Harutiunian, who passed away on Sunday, July 22 from a heart attack.

On behalf of the large ARF family we officer our condolences to Harutiunian’s family, relatives and friends

ARF Bureau
, Yerevan