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NYSEC Showcases Young Performing Artists at Carnegie Hall

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  • NYSEC Showcases Young Performing Artists at Carnegie Hall

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    Wednesday, November 11, 2009

    NYSEC Showcases Young Performing Artists at Carnegie Hall, Raises Close
    to $40,000 for AGBU Scholarships

    On Saturday, October 24, 2009, the AGBU New York Special Events
    Committee (NYSEC) held its second AGBU Performing Artists in Concert,
    which showcased the talents of a group of outstanding young Armenian
    musicians. The sold-out event was held at Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital
    Hall in Manhattan.

    As with the inaugural concert held last year, this celebration of music
    saluted the impressive artistic achievements attained by the various
    performers in their respective fields. The featured musicians were all
    recipients of AGBU scholarships towards their studies in the performing
    arts, which has allowed them to be educated at some of the world's most
    well-respected and prestigious conservatories and universities,
    including the Juilliard School, Manhattan School of Music, Komitas State
    Conservatory, Yale University, Mannes College of Music, Boston
    Conservatory, the State University of New York at Stony Brook, and the
    Royal College of Music. The success of last year's Debut Concert allowed
    NYSEC to contribute to future Performing Arts grants. Thanks to the
    generosity of AGBU's family of friends and the Armenian community at
    large, this year's benefit performance raised close to $40,000 for the
    newly established AGBU Performing Arts Fellowship Program. "It gives me
    great pleasure to contribute to your organization and to actually
    experience the talented musicians it helps support and promote. Bravo!"
    expressed notable benefactor Paul Khoury.

    Under the artistic direction of brothers Hrant and Kevork Parsamian,
    twelve performers collaborated to prepare a distinguished repertoire of
    music celebrating Armenian and other classical composers, including
    Babajanian, Khachaturian, Shostakovich, and Schumann. The concert also
    featured the US premiere of 19-year-old Gevork Badalian's composition
    based on five folk songs from the Armenian Genocide, compiled by Verjine
    Svazlian. Residing in Armenia, the young Badalian has won the top prize
    at the Ghazaros Sarian Competition, and his works have been performed at
    various Armenian festivals. Svazlian is an ethnographer and folklorist
    who has dedicated her life to finding and documenting memoirs and songs
    of historical characters narrated by eyewitness survivors of the
    Armenian Genocide.

    The twelve performing artists were comprised of three violinists: Monika
    Chamasyan of Virginia, Nazig Tchakarian of New York, and Viktoria
    Tchertchian of Massachusetts; two cellists: Hrant and Kevork Parsamian,
    both of New York; two violists: Aleksandr Nazaryan of New York and
    Anoush Simonian of New Jersey; two pianists: Marina Chamasyan of
    Virginia and Varta Tchakarian of New York; a flutist: Stepan Dadourian
    of New York; a marimbist: Sylvie Zakarian of Massachusetts; and an opera
    singer: soprano Natalie Aroyan of Sydney, Australia.

    The event was organized by the AGBU NYSEC Committee, chaired by Nila
    Festekjian and Sossy Setrakian, and included Anita Anserian, Carol
    Aslanian, Betty Cherkezian, Maral Hajjar, Hilda Hartounian, Maral
    Jebejian, Gacia Mangassarian, Vesna Markarian, and Vera Setrakian.
    Performing Artists in Concert contributors included graphic designer
    Alex Basmagian and coordinator Natalie Gabrelian of the AGBU Central
    Office.

    NYSEC committee member and AGBU Central Board Member Carol Aslanian
    noted the importance of the concert in raising awareness about AGBU's
    Scholarship Program and the AGBU Performing Arts Fellowship Program in
    particular. "I think the audience was thrilled to see the range of
    talent among these extraordinary students." She continued to comment on
    the overall evening and audience, which was attended by AGBU President
    Berge Setrakian and his wife Vera, as well as Ambassador Garen Nazarian,
    Permanent Representative of the Republic of Armenia to the United
    Nations, and his wife Siranoush. "I think it was a wonderful opportunity
    to have such an extraordinary audience. We had many leaders of the
    Armenian community and people active in various organizations, and I
    think these young people were very proud to display their talents to
    such a prestigious audience, who in turn will want to find and develop
    further ways to assist talented and motivated youth. So to them, this
    really was a gesture of future opportunity."

    In addition to its mission to raise awareness among the public, the
    event also offered a rare opportunity for performers to work with fellow
    musicians and reconnect with their cultural roots. Performer Sylvie
    Zakarian, who plays the marimba and is originally from Bulgaria, shared
    her sentiments on the evening. "It's always very exciting to play in
    front of an Armenian audience, and since my instrument is not very
    popular among Armenians, I was so grateful for the opportunity. I felt
    the audience was coming along for the experience. It was so wonderful to
    be on stage in front of such a receptive group of people." She also
    commented on the AGBU Scholarship Fund, adding, "AGBU was instrumental
    in helping me with the scholarship and with my decision on whether I
    could make it in the United States. I am entirely grateful to AGBU, they
    have been wonderful, and there are so many others who have similar
    stories to mine and feel the same way."

    For decades, AGBU scholarships have been awarded to tens of thousands of
    talented students of Armenian descent who are studying in the performing
    arts and have demonstrated excellence in their chosen fields. These
    awards enable recipients to reach their potential, laying the foundation
    for their future, as they celebrate their heritage and identity. Those
    who would like to make a contribution to the AGBU Performing Arts
    Fellowship Program to help sustain and support the enhancement of future
    Armenian musicians may contact AGBU by phone, 212-319-6383, or email,
    [email protected].

    Established in 2003, NYSEC is committed to upholding AGBU's mission to
    preserve and promote the Armenian identity and heritage in the Greater
    New York region through educational, cultural and humanitarian programs.

    Established in 1906, AGBU (www.agbu.org) is the world's largest
    non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
    preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
    educational, cultural and humanitarian program, annually touching the
    lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.
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