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ANKARA: Ara Dinkjian crossing borders on musical notes

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  • ANKARA: Ara Dinkjian crossing borders on musical notes

    Today's Zaman

    27 September 2009, Sunday

    Ara Dinkjian crossing borders on musical notes

    - Music reaches out to almost all segments of society more quickly
    than politics can.
    Music reaches out to almost all segments of society more quickly than
    politics can.

    Two important figures of Turkish and Armenian folk music, Erdal Akkaya
    and Ara Dinkjian, were together yesterday on the same stage in
    Ä°stanbul, performing at a special charity concert at the Hagia
    Eirene Museum.

    Titled `Roots and Branches' and organized by the Turkish Association
    for the Handicapped (TSD), the concert was more than a fundraiser. `We
    have been working on this project with Dinkjian for a year, and we
    started this initiative in order to maintain the humanism, love and
    memory of Anatolia,' said Akkaya during a press conference for the
    concert on Thursday. `This is also a social responsibility project,'
    he said. `And we are going to play the melodies that depict the joys
    and sorrows that make up our common memory.'

    As the concert coincided with an important political agenda in which
    debates are continuing on Turkish-Armenian relations, Dinkjian
    categorizes their own positions as musicians. `We're here to see what
    we have in common and respect our differences, and symbolically this
    is very important,' he stated during the press conference. `Once
    again, music brings people together instead of dividing them. The fact
    that we're giving a concert together is, in one way, a very strong
    statement. That's how we make our statements; that's how we say how we
    feel.'

    As the member of a family that migrated to the United States from the
    southeastern Anatolian province of Diyarbakır in the 19th
    century and as the son of Armenian folk musician Onnik Dinkjian, Ara
    Dinkjian points out the essence of the music is the `human element,'
    in an interview with Sunday's Zaman.

    You were born in the US, and you're still living there. But you have
    not forgotten your roots. How did this influence your music?

    For me, the most important th
    enian, it doesn't matter where I'm born, it's important to recognize
    who I am and my history. I might have been born in the United States,
    but I can never forget my history. So that explains the
    Armenian-Anatolian elements in my music. But at the same time, I
    cannot ignore the fact that I'm in America. That freedom of expression
    comes into my music, too. And in varying amounts, you'll hear some
    Eastern and some Western elements in my compositions. It's just who I
    am and what I am.

    How did the idea of the concert come about?

    I give Erdal all the credit for the concert. We actually met and
    performed together in New York City. I think it was nine years ago, at
    a concert for peace with Zülfü Livaneli and Maria
    Farandouri, and we were among the musicians who made guest appearances
    there. That's the only time we met. But for this concert, I give him
    all the credit. He contacted me and said, `Let's do something
    together.' I feel very strongly that through music we see what we have
    in common. And that's the human element. We all have those same human
    emotions and reactions. And music is a very safe place to [get
    together] with those common feelings. But at the same time, there's a
    great excitement and respect for the differences, for the cultures,
    the instruments and the languages.

    Armenian oud player Ara Dinkjian and Turkish baÄ?lama player
    Erdal Akkaya (R) pose for photographs ahead of rehearsals for a joint
    performance at a special charity concert Saturday evening at the Hagia
    Eirene Museum in Ä°stanbul.

    And your recent album `Peace on Earth' also gives the same message¦

    One day I found a picture that was taken in 1905 in
    Ä°stanbul. Pictured there were four Ä°stanbulite
    musicians. They were: Kanuni Artaki, an Armenian; Udi Ä°brahim,
    a Jew; Kemençeci Sotiri, who was a Greek; and Kemani
    Ä°hsan, who was a Turk. And four of them were sitting
    together. For me it was a very powerful piece of evidence of how the
    music community has always been together despite what might be
    happening all around the world. A
    istory, and I have every intention of respecting that concept -- even
    if it's a fantasy and even if the real world doesn't represent that
    music. It's the way we love the world. So my album `Peace on Earth' is
    [the live recording of] a concert that took place in Jerusalem; on the
    stage there was a Turk, a Jew, a Greek, an Arab and an Armenian. And
    we played none of my compositions. We played the masterpieces of
    Greek, Turkish, Arab, Jewish and Armenian composers. And we didn't
    make
    any political statements. We just mentioned our names and played the
    repertoire and let the people decide what that meant.

    You are the composer of many songs that have been made famous in
    Turkey by various artists, like `Dinata' (sung in Turkish as
    `SarıÅ?ınÄ&#xB1 ;m' by Sezen Aksu), but people are
    not aware of this. What do you think is the reason?

    As far as Sezen Aksu is concerned, she was one of the first artists
    who insisted on putting the names of the musicians on her albums. So,
    besides being an important artist, singer and composer, she has been
    an advocate for musicians, and she [respected my intellectual
    rights]. My name is there [on the album booklet]. If the people choose
    to read it, that's up to them, but she has been wonderful about
    that. Of course, when Sezen Aksu sings your song, people say, `Wow,
    you are a composer!' So she has helped me a great deal.

    But when people hear the Greek version of the song, they say that they
    stole it from us...

    To tell you the truth, please don't misunderstand, but from my last
    count, my songs have been recorded in 13 languages. To me what that
    says is sometimes language separates us. But music doesn't. There's a
    melody. And all those different cultures say, `That's our melody!' And
    my reaction is, `Yes, of course it's yours, of course!' So, that
    doesn't offend me. If anything like that happens, it's a great
    honor. It shows again we all feel the same things. We're sometimes
    political, military or cultural enemies, and yet we sing the same
    song. So what does that tell us?

    The same counts for the song, `Katibim,' which is claimed by many
    nations, for example...

    It's interesting that you bring that song up because there's actually
    a documentary about that song called `Whose Song Is This?' I watched
    that film, and it's almost comical how people got almost violent. `No!
    They stole it from us! That's not their song; it's our song!' I've
    always imagined being on the moon and looking down on the earth where
    unlike a map, there are no lines.
    ' and it's the same thing with the music. You can say, `That song came
    from this area,' on who wrote it, who owns it. I mean we can argue
    about that forever, but folk music is exactly that.

    Will there be more joint efforts with Turkish musicians in the near
    future?

    God willing. This is something special. And actually I should make the
    point that it's not enough for me that Erdal is a wonderful player. He
    had to be the right person for me to feel comfortable with, with the
    right thought behind his music. And he's exactly that. So when you
    meet people like that, almost anything is possible. So, yes, we are
    willing [to do more] projects [that will] bring people
    together. Sometimes people say, `Why don't you come to Turkey?' And I
    say, `I come every time you ask me to come.' I just don't come and
    say, `OK, I'm here.' Whenever projects come along, I will be here.

    27 September 2009, Sunday
    AHSEN UTKU Ä°STANBUL
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