We may not have won the competition but Brendan won a new group of fans
By Cormac O'Shea
Ireland's Eurovision song may not have been a big hit in the competition but there was one positive for Brendan Murray.
The former Hometown singer was beaten in the semi-final of the competition with his song "Dying to try".
However, while Europe didn't love the song, one eastern European country certainly did.
Speaking on TV3's The Six O'Clock Show Brendan revealed that his single had gone to number one in Armenia surprisingly.
He said: "Funnily enough, my single was actually number one in Armenia, number five in Slovenia and number 11 in the viral charts in Belgium."
"I didn't believe that I'd got to number one in Armenia when I was first told, but then I saw it and I was like 'that's ridiculous, so weird'".
The Galway man also left the door open for him to perform at next year's contest but said to win it is very tough nowadays.
He explained: "It's such a different competition now and it's going to get bigger every year, from what I've heard. There was a Chinese delegation there this year.
"It's getting so big. There wasn't 42 countries competing back in the 1990's when Ireland did well."
If Brendan does decide to go again next year he will be hoping that more countries like Armenia will be big fans and at least get him to the final.
Ireland have not made it to the final since back in 2013.
An open air concert dedicated to the 93rd anniversary of prominent French-Armenian singer Charles Aznavour will take place in Yerevan at Aznavour square. The organizer of the concert TM Production reports, the event will feature songs by Aramo, Hayk Petrosyan, Sona Rubenyan, Borya Yeganyan, Edgar Khachatryan, Tigran Muchyan, Michael Voskanyan and friends group, as well as other musicians.
The entrance is free.
The great chansonnier, singer, actor, hero of Armenia Charles Aznavour has written over 1300 songs and recorded over 1,400, sung in eight languages and sold more than 180 million records.
Aznavour is the receiver off France’s highest civilian award–the Legion of Honor.
Charles Aznavour celebrates his 93rd birthday today. The legendary French Armenian singer, who wrote more than 800 songs, recorded more than 1,000 of them in French, English, German and Spanish and sold over 100 million records in all, was born Chahnour Vaghinag Aznavourian on May 22, 1924, in Paris, the younger of two children born to Armenian immigrants who fled to France. His mother was a seamstress as well as an actress and his father was a baritone who sang in restaurants. Both Charles and his sister waited on tables where he performed. He delivered his first poetic recital while just a toddler. Within a few years later he had developed such a passion for singing/dancing, that he sold newspapers to earn money for lessons.
He took his first theatrical bow in the play “Emil and the Detectives” at age 9 and within a few years was working as a movie extra. He eventually quit school and toured France and Belgium as a boy singer/dancer with a traveling theatrical troupe while living the bohemian lifestyle. A popular performer at the Paris’ Club de la Chanson, it was there that he was introduced in 1941 to the songwriter Pierre Roche. Together they developed names for themselves as a singing/writing cabaret and concert duo (“Roche and Aznamour”). A Parisian favorite, they became developed successful tours outside of France, including Canada. In the post WWII years Charles began appearing in films again, one of them as a singing croupier in Goodbye Darling (1946).
Eventually Aznavour earned a sturdy reputation composing street-styled songs for other established musicians and singers, notably Édith Piaf, for whom he wrote the French version of the American hit “Jezebel”. Heavily encouraged by her, he toured with her as both an opening act and lighting man. He lived with Piaf out of need for a time not as one of her many paramours. His mentor eventually persuaded him to perform solo (sans Roche) and he made several successful tours while scoring breakaway hits with the somber chanson songs “Sur ma vie” and “Parce que” and the notable and controversial “Après l’amour.” In 1950, he gave the bittersweet song “Je Hais Les Dimanches” [“I Hate Sundays”] to chanteuse Juliette Gréco, which became a huge hit for her.
In the late 50s, Aznavour began to infiltrate films with more relish. Short and stubby in stature and excessively brash and brooding in nature, he was hardly leading man material but embraced his shortcomings nevertheless. Unwilling to let these faults deter him, he made a strong impressions with the comedy Une gosse sensass’ (1957) and with Paris Music Hall (1957). He was also deeply affecting as the benevolent but despondent and ill-fated mental patient Heurtevent in Head Against the Wall (1959). A year later, Aznavour starred as piano player Charlie Kohler/Edouard Saroyan in ‘Francois Truffaut”s adaptation of the David Goodis’ novel Shoot the Piano Player (1960) [Shoot the Piano Player], which earned box-office kudos both in France and the United States. This sudden notoriety sparked an extensive tour abroad in the 1960s. Dubbed the “Frank Sinatra of France” and singing in many languages (French, English, Italian, Spanish, German, Russian, Armenian, Portuguese), his touring would include sold-out performances at Carnegie Hall (1964) and London’s Albert Hall (1967).
Aznavour served as actor and composer/music arranger for many films, including Gosse de Paris (1961), which he also co-wrote with directorMarcel Martin, and the dramas Three Fables of Love (1962) [Three Fables of Love”) and Dear Caroline (1968) [Dear Caroline]. The actor also embraced the title role in the TV series “Les Fables de la Fontaine” (1964), then starred in the popular musical “Monsieur Carnaval” (1965), in which he performed his hit song “La bohême.”
His continental star continued to shine and Aznavour acted in films outside of France with more dubious results. While the sexy satire Candy(1968), with an international cast that included Marlon Brando, Richard Burton and Ringo Starr, and epic adventure The Adventurers (1969) were considered huge misfires upon release, it still showed Aznavour off as a world-wide attraction. Later films included Yiddish Connection (1986), which he co-wrote and provided music, and Il maestro (1990) with Malcolm McDowell; more recently he received kudos for his participation in the Canadian-French production Ararat (2002).
Films aside, hus chart-busting single “She” (1972-1974) went platinum in Britain. He also received thirty-seven gold albums in all. His most popular song in America, “Yesterday When I Was Young” has had renditions covered by everyone from Shirley Bassey to Julio Iglesias. In 1997, Aznavour received an honorary César Award. He has written three books, the memoirs “Aznavour By Aznavour” (1972), the song lyrics collection “Des mots à l’affiche” (1991) and a second memoir “Le temps des avants” (2003). A “Farewell Tour” was instigated in 2006 at age 82 and, health permitting, could last to 2010.
In 2009 Aznavour was appointed Armenia’s Ambassador to Switzerland.
Charles Aznavour will be present at a concert in his honor to be held in Yerevan on June 1. Representatives of Armenia opera and pop music will welcome Aznavour with his own songs.
Actor and director Hayk Petrosyan, one of the organizers of the concert, who calls himself Aznavour’s representative in Armenia, will not only perform some of the world-known singer’s works, but also host the show.
“The past 60 years have seen a number of stars appear and fade away in France, but Charles Aznavour, 93, is still on the peak. He can serve a brilliant example of fighting and persistence not only for individuals, but also for the nation as a whole,” Hayk Petrosyan, a great fan of Aznavour, told Public Radio of Armenia.
The pop icon recently rocked the Billboard Music Awards with some of her greatest hits
By Rebecca Pinnington
22nd May 2017,1:43 pm
POP legend Cher has still got it even at 71 years old.
The star wowed the audience at the Billboard Music Awards with a crowd-pleasing performance of two huge hits, Believe and If I Could Turn Back Time, looking and sounding as amazing as ever, before receiving a prestigious Icon Award, recognising her epic career.
Here’s all you need to know about the living legend.
Cher is an enormously successful recording artist and icon of 1980’s and 1990’s pop-rock music. Her songs have hit no. 1 in over 20 countries and her music is still beloved by listeners old and young.
She was born Cherilyn Sarkisian in 1946 to an Armenian-American father, John, and model and actress mum Georgia Holt.
After her parents divorced, Cher moved to California with mum Georgia, who was playing small roles in TV series. Her mother managed to land the star some small roles, but Cher never thought she would be famous. She later said: “I couldn’t think of anything that I could do … I didn’t think I’d be a singer or dancer. I just thought, well, I’ll be famous. That was my goal.”
Fortunately, Cher did have her singing talent to make her famous, and was a staple of popular music for decades, switching between genres to make her music successful with a massive audience.
As well as an iconic singer, Cher is an acclaimed actress. She was nominated for an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for 1984 film Silkwood, then in 1988 won Best Actress for her main role in Moonstruck.
She has two sons: Chaz, by first husband Sonny Bono, and Elijah Blue, by Gregg Allman.
Cher has sold over 100 million records over her 53 year career, and is best known for huge hits like Believe, If I Could Turn Back Time, Gypsies Tramps & Thieves, and the Shoop Shoop Song.
1998 hit Believe was a huge club smash, and was nominated for two Grammy Awards for Record of the Year and Best Dance Recording, winning the latter.
But the pop diva actually HATES a lot of her best-known music. She revealed: “I’m not a Cher fan.
“I just don’t think my aesthetic taste lies in that direction.”
She branded 1998 smash Believe — No 1 in 23 countries — "a nightmare" and said she stormed out of the recording studio.
She dismissed 1995 album It's A Man's World — which included her hit Walking In Memphis — as "crap", adding: "I didn't like any of it."
Cher said she wanted to make songs like Joni Mitchell but since the 1970s had been given ones she didn’t like.
She once fought her label’s bid to make a dance album until chief Rob Dickins told her: "I'm going to send you some songs. When you like them, tell me."
She also blasted her hits Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves, Half-Breed and Dark Lady.
But Cher reckons 1989's If I Could Turn Back Time was "OK", adding: "By that time, I figured out I wasn’t going to be the Eagles."
Cher wowed audiences with her joyful performance at the Billboard Music Awards, wearing a silver dress that featured diamante bands which barely covered her breasts and her crotch.
Underneath the raunchy gown, she wore nipple pasties and fishnet tights to preserve her modesty.
She then delighted fans when she changed into a throwback black one-piece for If I Could Turn Back Time that looked just like the one she wore when the single was first released in 1989.
He said: "At what point do Cher's outfits become inappropriate? She's 70."
Co-host Susanna Reid said: "Oh yes because you have a cut off don't you? What is it… 59?"
Piers clarified it was 56, before highlighting Cher's silver outfit, which made it look like the singer was not wearing a bra. Piers said: "That one in particular, come on Cher for goodness sake love."
But Kate Garraway, who was sitting on the other side of the 52-year-old, replied: "She's on stage! It's not like she's in the supermarket, it's different rules surely?"
Never one to back down, Piers continued: "She's a grandmother, it's like for goodness sake put it away, grow old gracefully, put them away."
Cher is worth an estimated $320 million, equivalent to just under £250 million.
She is believed to earn roughly $28 million a year, and owns a $45 million Malibu mansion as well as other properties. Her old home in Venice Beach, California, recently sold for $1.8 million.
As one of the highest selling recording artists of all time, and as Oscar winning actress, it shouldn't come as a surprise to learn that Cher is well-off.
Sonny and Cher were married from 1964-1975. After that marriage, Cher went on to marry Gregg Allman, a musician, but divorced him in 1979.
Sonny and Cher met in 1962, when she was 16 years old and he was 27 – 11 years her senior. Sonny was working for a record producer and brought Cher in as a backing singer before they started performing together.
Their marriage was reported in 1964, however in his biography Sonny says this was never an official legal marriage until their son Chaz was born in 1969.
After a string of hits like I Got You Babe and The Beat Goes On, they ended up doing a variety show together on US TV. However the show fell apart during their very public divorce in 1975.
Believe it or not, the legendary Cher just celebrated her 71st birthday this weekend and fellow Armenian star Kim Kardashian took to social media to mark the special occasion.
Both of the stars’ fathers have Armenian roots and they showed off pride for their heritage when they attended the premiere of the film The Promise earlier this year.
“Happy Birthday to my fashion icon Armenian Queen Cher!” Kim wrote on Instagram along with nine vintage photos of the superstar in some of her iconic outfits throughout the years.
Make sure to tune in for the 2017 Billboard Music Awards tonight (May 21) to watch Cher give a performance and receive the Icon Award.
The Nazis’ murder of 220,000 Roma, or Gypsies, has always been a historical anecdote overshadowed by the extermination of 6 million Jews in the Holocaust.
Mina Miller, president and artistic director of Music of Remembrance, wanted to focus on the persecution of Roma and decided it would be best told through the artwork and writings of Ceija Stojka, an Austrian Roma who survived internment at three concentration camps.
Miller was at a concert by the Kronos Quartet at UC Santa Barbara in December 2015 when she heard “Silent Cranes,” a multimedia work by composer Mary Kouyoumdjian commemorating the centennial of the Armenian genocide.
Miller immediately knew she had found the right person to create a piece about the Roma, but at first Bay Area native Kouyoumdjian was reluctant to take on the commission. Once she discovered Stojka’s work, she changed her mind.
“I didn’t really feel comfortable writing a piece about the Roma in the Holocaust because that’s not the community that I’m from,” Kouyoumdjian, 34, said in an interview from her home in Brooklyn, New York. “But I was comfortable writing about another artist. I really connected with her writings, and especially her paintings.”
Kouyoumdjian’s composition, in a program titled “Mirror of Memory,” will be performed Wednesday, May 24, at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music — three days after the world premiere in Seattle. The program includes San Francisco Opera mezzo-soprano Catherine Cook singing Yiddish songs written in the Vilna Ghetto.
Stojka, who survived the Auschwitz, Ravensbruck and Bergen-Belsen camps, went on to write three autobiographies that focused on Nazi persecution of Roma. She began painting at the age of 56, and her artwork was heavily based on depiction of the death camps, where her father and one of her five brothers were killed. She died in 2013.
Miller, who founded the Seattle-based nonprofit Music of Remembrance, said she felt it was time to focus on the plight of Gypsies, who like Jews were deemed racially inferior by the Nazis and targeted for extinction.
Last year, Miller, the daughter of Holocaust refugees who lost all their family members, commissioned an opera by Jake Heggie that was based on the writings of a Polish dissident and a gay man. “When you think about the victims of the Holocaust — the 6 million Jews, the gays, the Gypsies, political dissidents, journalists — it’s been the goal of Music of Remembrance from the beginning to illuminate not just the tragedy of the Jews but others as well,” she said. Kouyoumdjian, an Armenian American who grew up in Pleasant Hill and now is working toward her doctorate in music composition at Columbia University, is a big fan of Roma music and said it’s similar to Armenian tunes.
Her 26-minute piece based on Stojka’s artwork, “to open myself, to scream,” is scored for violin, cello, bass, clarinet and trumpet. It includes live music and an electronic track recorded by the musicians, the latter symbolizing a survivor’s reflections on the past.
With Stojka, “There’s this constant burden of a horrific past. She’s sort of exploring these horrific things that make no sense,” Kouyoumdjian said. “A lot of people who have gone through genocide feel this too; they create artwork to express their feelings.”
The music is complemented with a film by Syrian Armenian projection artist Kevork Mourad, who animated Stojka’s artwork and synched it to the music.
Miller said this year’s focus on Roma will be followed in 2018, Music of Remembrance’s 20th anniversary, by pieces focusing on the World War II experiences of Japanese and Japanese Americans. One work will be about internment in the U.S. and two pieces will be based on texts from victims of the atomic bombings.
For 2019, she plans to commission a work focusing on the current refugee crisis “because that mirrors what Jews experienced during the Holocaust.”
“We’re extending our focus beyond the Holocaust itself,” Miller said.“It’s really important today that Music of Remembrance is not just an organization for Jews talking to Jews, it’s about moral lessons.”
Kouyoumdjian supports such a change. “We still have genocide happening today, so this is a conversation that continues. Anything that gives listeners a connection to history is incredibly important.”
video of one of Kouyoumdjian's compositions can be watched at http://www.jweekly.com/2017/05/21/exploring-roma-persecution-in-shoah-remembrance-concert/
Armenia’s strongest GM Levon Aronian is set to participate at Norway Chess 2017. The fifth edition of the tournament will be held on June 5-17.
In the tournament Aronian’s rivals will be World Champion Magnus Carlsen (Norway), the ex-world champions Vladimir Kramnik (Russia), Viswanathan Anand (India), Wesley So (U.S.), Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (France), Sergey Karjakin (Russia), Fabiano Caruana (U.S.), Hikaru Nakamura (U.S), Anish Giri (Netherlands).
The 2017 European Sambo Championships (M&W) is over in Minsk, Belarus. The Armenian athletes have gained medals during the championship.
As Panorama.am was informed from the Armenian National Olympic Committee, in the Sports Sambo discipline Armenian athlete Arthur Sahakyan (62kg) won the silver, while Maksim Manukyan (57kg) and Arsen Ghazaryan (74kg) won bronze medals.
In Combat Sambo discipline, Grigor Mkhitaryan (52 kg) captured the silver. Two Armenian samboists Kolya Karapetyan (62 kg) and Edgar Mehrabyan (90 kg) took the third position.
As reported earlier, Armenia’s Tigran Kirakosyan (52kg) became the champion in the Sports Sambo discipline. Another Armenian athlete Harutyun Sargsyan (57kg) won the bronze medal.
In total, the Armenian athletes won 1 gold, 2 silver and 5 bronze medals at the European Sambo Championships.
YEREVAN, May 22. /ARKA/. Armenian arm wrestlers won six medals at the European Championship in the Polish city of Katowice on May 13-22. More than 900 athletes from 34 countries took part in it.
According to the National Olympic Committee of Armenia, Armenian athletes won one gold, four silver and one bronze medals.
The winners among adults are Ashot Adamyan (weight category 60 kg), Vladimir Mnatsakanyan (weight category 85 kg), David Boyakhchyan (weight category 110 kg) and juniors David Madoyan (weight category +90 kg). The national team of Armenia was represented by ten athletes.
The president of Arm-Wrestling Federation of Armenia Arsen Gabrielyan said now Armenian arm wrestlers will prepare for the World Championship in Budapest (September 2-11). -0-