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Armenian Vocalist Mariam Matossian Performs With Free Planet Radio

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  • Armenian Vocalist Mariam Matossian Performs With Free Planet Radio

    ARMENIAN VOCALIST MARIAM MATOSSIAN PERFORMS WITH FREE PLANET RADIO
    Alli Marshall

    Asbarez Staff
    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/07/31/armenian-vocali st-mariam-matossian-performs-with-free-planet-radi o/
    Jul 31st, 2009

    When vocalist and composer Mariam Matossian made the move from her
    hometown of Vancouver, British Columbia to Greenville, S.C., she
    didn't figure on meeting any fellow Armenian musicians. In fact, for
    her first year in Greenville, when Matossian performed it was mostly
    at venues thousands of miles away with her Canadian backing band.

    Vocalist Mariam Matossian blends Armenian stories and songs with world
    music savvy."Just last summer, someone suggested I get in touch with
    River Guerguerian through MySpace," she tells Xpress. Surprised to
    learn that a Middle-Eastern influenced percussionist was living just
    an hour away in the mountains, Matossian checked out Guerguerian's
    tracks - and was blown away. "I was like, 'No way,'" she remembers.

    At the same time, Gene Berger of Horizon Records in Greenville passed
    a disc on to Matossian's husband (and promoter), Haro Setian.

    It was Free Planet Radio's album, with Guerguerian on drums. Two
    recommendations seemed like more of a sign than a coincidence, so
    Matossian contacted Guerguerian to see if he could suggest a local
    band to back her East coast performances. The percussionist suggested
    Free Planet Radio. Matossian describes her first meeting with the
    world-jazz trio (including multi-instrumentalist Chris Rosser and
    bassist Eliot Wadopian) as "probably one of the most amazing rehearsals
    I've ever had."

    But finding a band who could relate to and riff off of Matossian's
    exotic sound was only half of the challenge. The other side of the coin
    was finding an audience in her new home. Three years ago, the singer
    relocated after marrying Setian, a Greenville-based realtor. The two
    met when Setian purchased one of Matossian's CDs on Web retailer CD
    Baby, which tracks the e-mail addresses of its customers. "Because
    I was raised to be a polite Canadian, I wrote people thank-yous,"
    Matossian explains. That sparked an e-mail exchange and subsequent
    courtship. The two share not just a love of music but their Armenian
    heritage and a desire to do good for their ancestral homeland (neither
    were born there, but both have traveled to Armenia and volunteered
    in its orphanages).

    A former republic of the Soviet Union, Armenia is sandwiched
    between the oft-tumultuous territories of Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan
    and Georgia. It's an area rich in history (its patriarch the
    great-great-grandson of Noah of arc fame) but rarely registers on
    the American radar the way other ethnic music hotbeds (Africa, India,
    Brazil) do. So, when Matossian booked her first Greenville gig this
    past February, she billed it as "A Night of World Music" because
    "I didn't want to be too specific and scare people away."

    Far from alienating her audience, she sold out the Warehouse Theatre
    and drew crowds from across the region. Setian reports that his
    wife's upcoming White Horse performance (with Free Planet Radio)
    has attracted fans from as far as Nashville.

    >From the White Horse Web site: "Last time these folks were at
    White Horse we were sold out and the audience was transported to
    ecstasy." Last time was actually a Free Planet Radio concert with
    Matossian sitting in for three songs. This time it's Matossian's show.

    So what does Armenian music sound like? Filtered through Matossian's
    world-view, it's delicate yet rhythmic, mystical yet earthy, melodic
    yet invitingly groovy. "It's totally a fusion," the vocalist says
    of her style. Raised in Vancouver (which, she points out, has a
    smaller Armenian population than Toronto, New York or Boston), she
    was classically trained on piano; her vocal coaching in opera.

    "I grew up listening to Latin, jazz and Middle Eastern music," she
    notes. "I'm not a purist; that's not how I grew up." The end result,
    instead of an Armenian cultural program, is more of a jaunt through
    world cultures with an emphasis on the songs Matossian has collected
    from her mother and from the Armenian orphans she met. At a radio
    performance, a Chinese musician told Matossian how much her music
    sounded like traditional Chinese tunes; Setian points out that Irish
    listeners recognize a commonality to Celtic songs.

    Matossian is passionate about her culture, and about introducing it
    to others. "I don't just sing on stage," she says. "I tell stories. I
    tell my grandmother's stories. I'm singing in a foreign language,
    so I like to talk about the songs."
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