Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

He [Leo Sarkisian] collected a continent of rare recordings

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • He [Leo Sarkisian] collected a continent of rare recordings

    The Washington Post
    September 29, 2012 Saturday
    Met 2 Edition

    He collected a continent of rare recordings

    by Tara Bahrampour



    Long before there was ping-pong diplomacy or perestroika, a short,
    balding, Armenian American was lugging an enormous reel-to-reel from
    village to village, sweet-talking people into singing and playing for
    him.

    Leo Sarkisian had the kind of career that today lives only in legend:
    Hired by famed broadcaster Edward R. Murrow, he was paid by the U.S.
    government to travel throughout Africa, visiting every country over
    half a century and returning with thousands of rare recordings of
    music that most of the world had never heard.

    On Friday, Sarkisian, 91, officially retired from the Voice of
    America, where the weekly radio show he started 47 years ago,"Music
    Time in Africa," isVOA's longest-running English-language program.

    In Africa, he socialized with presidents, military dictators,
    accomplished musicians and tribal villagers. He outwardly steered away
    from politics, but under the surface he wove a subtle diplomatic
    tapestry based around grooving on tunes.

    "So many of them had never talked to an American before," Sarkisian
    said Friday morning as colleagues gathered around their desks for a
    coffee-and-doughnut send-off. "The embassies wouldn't have
    cultural-affairs officers, so the embassies would use me."

    Listeners across English-speaking Africa grew accustomed to hearing
    the flat A's of Sarkisian's Boston accent, teaching them about the
    music of their own countries and those of their neighbors.

    "He was the man," said Peter Clottey, a native of Ghana who is now a
    reporter for the VOA program "Daybreak Africa" and who listened to
    Sarkisian's show in the 1970s, '80s and '90s. "People thought he was
    very authentic, and he got to know the musicians firsthand. To hear
    your country's music on an international station is a big deal. . . .
    Nobody had done that before."

    In the words of his wife, Mary, who traveled with him, Sarkisian "just
    lucked out." He had enviable leeway, going where he wanted and staying
    as long as he liked. Often he was met at the airport by dignitaries
    and admirers.

    "I step out of the airplane, and there are all the fans and the
    military escort into the capital," Sarkisian recalled of an early trip
    to Ghana. "VOA, we were so damn important! This was unbelievable. I
    hate to get political, but that's gone."

    Sarkisian, whose parents emigrated from Turkey early in the 20th
    century, had studied art and worked as a commercial artist in New York
    and a map-drawer for the Army during World War II.

    He took an interest in world music at a time when "foreign music was
    kind of a dirty word here," he said, and after he wrote a paper on it,
    he was hired by California-based Tempo Records to go abroad and record
    music.

    Marrying in 1949, he and Mary, also a Massachusetts-born Armenian,
    started traveling in the Middle East, where, "in the mountains of
    Afghanistan, in the Hindu Kush mountains, she slept in pup tents while
    I made sure that the howling wolves wouldn't come in," he recalled.

    With a knack for languages, he picked up Farsi and some Arabic, in
    addition to the Turkish, Armenian and French he had learned as a
    child. As African countries were getting their independence in the
    1950s, Tempo sent him to Ghana and then to Guinea, where Murrow caught
    up with him.

    His wife described the day in 1961 that Murrow, then head of the U.S.
    Information Agency, climbed up seven flights of stairs to their
    apartment in Conakry, Guinea, because the elevator didn't work. After
    listening to some of Sarkisian's recordings, "he said, 'That's
    marvelous; it's just like American jazz' - because it was really
    jivey," she recalled. Murrow hired him on the spot.

    As his wife spoke, Sarkisian smiled and touched her arm. "I'm glad
    that I had this little balm with me," he said. "You should have seen
    her in some villages where I had a corps of about 35 women. . . . She
    would talk to them, put them at ease. Even the women who would come
    nursing a baby to the microphone, she put them at ease."

    Although they traveled through Africa during sometimes politically
    unstable times, the Sarkisians said they never encountered a problem.
    Being Armenian was a bonus, because many countries had
    well-established Armenian communities eager to help them.

    And spending so much time in Africa helped Sarkisian understand the
    currents of conflict in Africa well enough to choose music that would
    resonate. He played songs from both North and South Sudan during
    fighting there and chose songs from particular villages during ethnic
    battles in Nigeria.

    "The big part of this music is to let them know that we're interested
    in them," he said.

    He recorded Louis Armstrong performing in Tunis, and he discovered
    African musicians who would later become legends themselves, such as
    Fela, whom he first recorded in Lagos, "before he was anything."

    "It helped raise pan-African awareness . . . and status of some of the
    musicians," said Jonathan Kertzer, associate professor of music at the
    University of Alberta in Canada and director of its Folkways Alive
    center. "He was a true pioneer."

    Sarkisian's recordings, which VOA Director David Ensor called "one of
    the most valuable and sought-after collections in the world," reside
    in the basement of VOA, in the Leo Sarkisian Library of African Music,
    and the collection is gradually being digitized by the University of
    Michigan's African studies department.

    The library is stacked with reels of tape, vinyl records, and art and
    hand-carved gifts from African friends. It provides a trove of
    material for Heather Maxwell, director for African music for VOA's
    English to Africa service who is taking over Sarkisian's role as host
    and producer of "Music Time in Africa."

    "I just never thought I would be taking up the reins for him," she
    said. "It's really an honor." Because of funding cuts and security
    concerns, her job is unlikely to entail the same kind of freewheeling
    travel that his did.

    Standing in the library, Sarkisian leafed through a stack of
    handwritten fan letters, many from children. All get replies from
    Sarkisian or his wife. "A country like Burkina Faso, with $25 per year
    per family, Mary said a little kid in a country like that, he has to
    be answered," he said.

    "A big thanks to my/our elder brother Leo Sarkisian for his dedication
    and untireless work he has done for music time in Africa," wrote a
    listener from Zambia.

    A listener from Nigeria wrote to "felicitate" the United States on the
    killing of Osama bin Laden. "You see, these people are on our side,"
    Sarkisian said, holding up the letter. "This is the satisfaction we
    get - in making friends with the people who believe in us."

    In Bangui, Central African Republic, Sarkisian recalled a radio
    director who couldn't quite believe an American had traveled so far
    for African music. "He said, 'You came all this way to visit us?' "
    Sarkisian said. "I said, 'Yeah, this is what we do.' "

    Now, Sarkisian said he plans to do more painting (he has done many
    portraits of the Africans he met), and playing the kanun, a 74- string
    Middle Eastern lap harp. He drinks a glass of raki every day, has
    perfect recall of decades-old phone numbers, and still can't help
    raising his arms and shuffling his feet whenever African music plays.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X