KPFA-FM Music Dept. ➔ Morning Concert: Soul of Armenia: Folk Music Rarities of Komitas Vardapet, 2 of 2

Analog Audio


Event Type
Interview and Music
Origin
KPFA
Identifier
MC.1987.02.13.B
Program Series
Morning Concert
Program Length
102 min
Part
2 of 2
Dates
1987-02-13 | broadcast
| 1987-02-13 | created
Description
This program introduces some of the earliest and rarest recordings of Armenian folk music, soulful interpretations by performers who recorded during the 78 rpm era. Komitas Vardapet (1869-1935) was the first to document such works by recording the oral tradition of Armenian music. By 1912, he had recorded his own arrangements of these Armenian folk songs, (in the same way Bartok did for Hungarian music), with the legendary "Caruso of the Armenians," Armenak Shahmuradian. The latter traveled around the world from India to Fresno, California, performing this music, and his vocal legacy is unparalleled, as witnessed by these recordings from 1912 and 1916. The range, or tessitura, of most Armenian music is relentlessly stratospheric, in spite of which, Shahmuradian's breath control, declamation and ornamentation is of the highest order of musicality. Charles Amirkhanian hosts this program which features guest producer Ohannes Salibian, a composer and Armenian music historian on the faculty of the University of Southern California. Salibian also introduces recordings of other musicians performing Komitas' arrangements for piano solo, voice, chorus and instruments. Included are recordings made in Georgia in 1945 and 1947 by the Komitas String Quartet.
Genres
World music
Folk music
Musical Selections
Hayastan (”Armenia”) -- Garun a, dzun a arel (”It is Spring, but Snow has Fallen”) -- Kele Kele (”March, March”) -- Krunk (”Crane”) -- Urakh Ler (”Rejoice”) -- Bam, p‘orotan (”Boom goes the thunder”) -- Hayrik, Hayrik, k'o hayrenik' (”Father, Father, your Fatherland”) -- [a patriotic song]
Performers
Armenak Shahmuradian, tenor
Subjects
Music -- Armenia
Folk music, Armenian
Armenia -- History
World music