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Komitas Honored In Berlin

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  • Komitas Honored In Berlin

    KOMITAS HONORED IN BERLIN
    By Muriel Mirak-Weissbach

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2012/09/24/komitas-honored-in-berlin/
    Community | September 24, 2012 10:21 am

    >From left, Archbishop Karekin Bekdjian, Primate of the Armenian Church
    in Germany, Ambassador Armen Martirosyan, and Hasmik Poghosyan,
    Armenian minister of culture, stand in front of the plaque
    commemorating Komitas.

    BERLIN - Every Armenian knows (or should know) Komitas Vardapet. He
    was the great musicologist, musician and composer who literally
    founded modern classical Armenian music and whose songs, dances and
    liturgical works play a prominent role in our musical culture. But
    perhaps fewer people know about the influence of Germany on his work.

    On September 5 in Berlin, a gathering of scientists, politicians and
    artists convened to honor Komitas, unveiling a bronze commemorative
    plaque at the Humboldt University, which was the composer's alma mater.

    The ceremony was moderated by Prof. Armenuhi Drost-Abgarjan, the
    leading Armenologist and director of the MESROB Center for Armenian
    Studies at the Martin Luther University in Halle-Wittenberg, who
    introduced the speakers, beginning with Prof. Jan Hendrik Olbertz,
    president of the Humboldt University. It was he who has led several
    joint Armenian-German projects over the years during his tenure as
    Minister of Culture of Sachsen-Anhalt, the state responsible for
    cultural, scientific and educational relations with Armenia.

    Representing the Republic of Armenia was Dr. Armen Martirosyan,
    ambassador to Germany.

    Among the guests who had traveled to Berlin from Yerevan for the event
    was the Minister of Culture Hasmik Poghosyan, under whose patronage
    the project was carried out, in collaboration with Martirosyan,
    architect Karl van Suntum of the university and public relations
    director Petra Schubert.

    As Poghosyan explained, a special competition had been launched for
    the design to artist Nara Mendelyan. When the plaque was ceremoniously
    unveiled, Archbishop Karekin Bekdjian, Primate of the Armenian Church
    in Germany, recited a prayer in Armenian and Manfred Richter, former
    dean of the Berlin Cathedral, offered a prayer in German.

    As Drost-Abgaryan noted, "two renowned specialists of Armenian
    music and its links to oriental and European music had been invited
    from Germany and Armenia" - Dr. Regina Randhofer, musicologist from
    the Sachsen Academy of Sciences in Leipzig, and Prof. Mher Navoyan,
    musicologist and historian from the Yerevan State Conservatory named
    after Komitas. Randhofer, who specializes in the cultural history
    of the Mediterranean and Near East, teaches and conducts research at
    universities in Halle, Budapest and Jerusalem, among others. Navoyan,
    who has published numerous works on medieval Armenian music, is

    also the artistic director of the Geghard women's ensemble from the
    Geghard Cloister, which presented folk songs by Komitas during the
    evening concert which concluded the festivities.

    More than one speaker compared the significance of Komitas's
    contribution in music to the contribution of Mesrop

    Mashtots, the founder of the Armenian alphabet, to language. Born in
    1869, Komitas displayed unusual musical talent at an early age and in
    1881 went to Echmiadzin, where he studied singing, choir directing
    and composition at the spiritual academy, Geworgean Jemaran. At the
    age of 24 he became a monk and

    two years thereafter was ordained a priest. In this period he worked
    closely with leading clergymen who were experts in Armenian music.

    His years in Berlin, from 1896-1899, were to prove crucial. Supported
    by a church scholarship, he entered the Humboldt University and also
    studied piano and music theory privately. Thus he came

    into contact with leading musicians and experts from the European
    tradition, among them, Oskar Fleischer, Heinrich Bellermann and Max
    Friedlander. In addition to lectures in music history, musicology,
    medieval church music, instrumental music, musical criticism and
    related disciplines, Komitas eagerly took part in folk music research.

    The young musical genius had already developed a passion for Armenian
    folk music and collected melodies far and wide. Fleischmann taught
    him aspects of musical notation, which was to aid him in deciphering
    the Armenian khazes (or neumes), an old sign system in which church
    music and prayers from the ninth to 16th centuries were annotated
    but which was no longer known.

    Through his studies and contacts in Berlin, Komitas forged a symbiotic
    relationship with the German and European musical tradition, learning
    from his teachers and sharing his knowledge of Armenian music with
    them. He became a member of the Berlin International Music Society
    founded by Fleischer and, following his return to Echmiadzin in 1899,
    traveled widely in search of old traditional melodies, while working on
    the decipherment of the ancient notation. Komitas used his knowledge
    of European music to rework these liturgical and folk compositions,
    transforming monodic melodies into polyphonic form.

    During his concert tours through Europe and the Ottoman Empire,
    Komitas again came into contact with other leading composers,
    like Ravel and Debussy. In 1910 he moved to Constantinople, where
    he founded a choir and, in 1915, was among the hundreds of Armenian
    intelligentsia who were brutally arrested and jailed. Though spared
    a worse fate through the intervention of then-US Ambassador Henry
    Morgenthau, Komitas suffered the psychological effects for the rest
    of his life, which ended in Paris in 1935. In the following year,
    his mortal remains were transported to Yerevan.

    Although his published works include 14 volumes of songs and fold
    music, much of his groundbreaking achievement has been lost through
    the ravages of war and the Genocide. Navoyan estimates that among
    those works lost are about 2,000 collected folk songs as well as
    some original compositions and - most tragically - his work on
    the decipherment of the neumes. The fruit of two decades' work,
    this major discovery would provide the key to reading thousands of
    medieval musical manuscripts written in this notation.

    Despite the massive loss, what has remained of Komitas is immense in
    significance. By combining his extraordinary musical insight and talent
    with his profound study of other musical cultures, especially through
    his Berlin years, he succeeded in creating an utterly new music -
    modern classical Armenian music - which is not only noteworthy as
    a unique compositional method, but constitutes the foundation of a
    national school of musical composition. Through comparative analyses
    of Armenian music and that of other traditions - whether Eastern
    or European - and his original compositions, Komitas demonstrated
    that "the Armenians have an independent music." In this sense, the
    comparison with Mesrob is not at all exaggerated. It is indeed a happy
    circumstance that leading personalities in the world of culture,
    education and politics from Germany and the Republic of Armenia
    have joined efforts to commemorate this brilliant individual and to
    recognize his symbolic value in elevating German-Armenian relations.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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