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  • Girl power fuels touring trio

    Wichita Eagle, KS
    Feb 23 2007

    Girl power fuels touring trio

    Folk-pop artist Melineh Kurdian returns to her hometown with a few
    friends this week for a show at the Anchor.

    BY JILLIAN COHAN
    The Wichita Eagle

    Although she's a grown woman, there's an impish quality to Melineh
    Kurdian's phone manner. She's prone to the sort of run-on sentences
    that indicate she's thinking aloud, yet she never comes across as
    scatterbrained.

    But to engage Kurdian in conversation is to get only a hint of the
    sassy, intelligent attitude she brings to her music.

    "I'm always expanding," the Wichita native says. "I'm always trying
    to learn new things, getting better on vocals and expanding what I
    can play on guitar."

    The East High alumna traded Kansas for New York City soon after she
    graduated from the University of Kansas in 2000. She now lives in Los
    Angeles, where she performs regularly at troubadour-friendly
    nightspots such as the Hotel Cafe. Her self-financed debut CD, "From
    Where You Are," was released in 2004.

    This week, Kurdian will trade her solo gigs for a
    three-and-a-half-week stint with Girl Parts, a folk-pop trio she
    formed with New Yorker Liz Clark and Chicagoan Julie Lloyd. The group
    stops at the Anchor Tuesday on a Midwest tour that begins in Memphis
    and ends in Austin at the South by Southwest music fest.

    "They are some of my favorite musicians," Kurdian says of her
    bandmates. "We decided, we're all touring anyway, why not do it
    together? It'll be a good time."

    They also decided to make the tour a benefit for the National Center
    on Domestic and Sexual Violence. All of the proceeds from the sale of
    their live EP will benefit the center, and local representatives of
    domestic violence shelters will be on hand at their performances to
    raise awareness for the cause.

    "It's going to be a great show," Kurdian says. "If anything, I want
    people to know that when they come to our shows, they are going to
    laugh so much. I don't think there's going to be one grumpy day on
    tour because we have so much fun together."

    She and her bandmates produce the sort of inspired harmonies and
    sassy lyrics that make critics reach for comparisons to Ani DiFranco
    and the Indigo Girls. Those influences certainly are there, Kurdian
    says, but so are elements of funk and soul, inspired by the hip-hop
    her cousin listened to and the jazz her father was always playing.

    "Whether it was the Beatles, the Indigo Girls or Joni Mitchell I was
    listening to, solid melody and lyrics are what I look for."

    She continues: "I say in my bio that my mom wouldn't let me play with
    the neighbors' kids until I'd finished practicing my classical piano,
    and it's completely true."

    Growing up Armenian in Kansas had its challenges, she adds --"People
    always thought I was Albanian or Romanian" -- but she wouldn't trade
    it for the urban environments she's since adopted.

    "I always say I'm really glad I was raised in Kansas, because it made
    me who I am."

    The laugh that follows is at once impish and worldly, like the woman
    herself.

    http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/e ntertainment/16761037.htm
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