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Three Apples: Decoding the Rise of the Buffalo

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  • Three Apples: Decoding the Rise of the Buffalo

    Three Apples: Decoding the Rise of the Buffalo
    a column for the Asbarez Newspaper

    by Paul Chaderjian

    http://asbarez.com/108052/decoding-the-rise-of-the-buffalo/
    music video: http://youtu.be/wxxnY-QTUGU

    Once there was and there was not ...

    In a haunting phonograph recording from 100 years ago in Paris, the
    scratchy and hollow, melancholic and faraway voice of genius priest
    Komitas comes to life via 0's and 1's, bits and bytes, on an iPhone 4S
    in Hawaii.

    PROLOGUE

    Monochromatic images follow on the screen of the mind: a round
    cylindrical or maybe a flat 7-inch disc, spinning unevenly at 70
    rotations a minute. There goes a motherless child sent to the
    seminary. Here comes the celibate monk, a driven genius crisscrossing
    the lands of the Armens to create an encyclopedia and playlist of
    songs spanning thousands of years.

    The famous `notaji vartabed' gives his people their modern musical
    identity and perhaps more. He finds notoriety in Europe. There he is
    in Berlin, Paris, then back to Constantinople, where he is jailed on
    April 24, 1915.

    He sees the Great Catastrophe, Genocide, experiences the indescribable
    trauma we have yet to understand a hundred years later. And he breaks
    his vows to humanity, temporarily deciding not to speak, not to sing,
    nor write... until he can resurface digitally in 0's and 1's.

    ACT ONE

    Before Komitas' vow of silence, before the so-called mental
    breakdowns, and long before his long depressive states in asylums,
    came days when his voice was so potent and clear that it impregnated
    the future.

    `Lorva Kutan Yerk' he sings. It's a plow song he heard and transcribed
    from the region of Lori, a song ancient Armenian farmers sang as far
    back as our pre-Christian Era.

    Call it a `horovel' sung by generations who tilled the soil, labored
    until they broke their back, but always humbly honored the life force
    that gave them a chance to grow their food, nourish their young and
    quench their souls through prayers, music and art.

    Komitas' voice captured on a gramophone begins a song titled `Brrreh
    Gomesh' (PreGomesh on iTunes).

    His legendary voice sings a complex melody, a sequence of fast
    changing pitches of sound, the equivalent of trills on the piano,
    notes unexpectedly jumping far and near in what is authentic Armenian
    music.

    32 seconds into this column's musical score, the song started by our
    19th century genius priest, a 21st century pop icon turns it on its
    ear to plow a new musical path, one inspired by a plow song.

    The beat and base of club music begins. Cue the Dubstep, the light
    show and dancing. Atoms from centuries apart create a fusion to
    empower generations to come.

    Brrreh Gomesh, sings the pop star Sirusho, and thus she and her
    lyricist Avet Barseghyan flash us back 2000 years, melding the ancient
    into the here and now and towards Singularity - the forever.

    Komitas is in Da House, and he is singing again. His people's music
    has been thrust into eternity.

    ACT TWO

    Brrreh Gomesh, Arise Buffalo, arise beast, she sings, making the
    ancient Brrreh sound herders called out to lord over their animals.

    It's the `giddy up' of yesteryear when surviving meant a tougher
    fight, when it took the physical power, silent strength and
    marathon-worthy endurance of a buffalo for men (the ArMENians) to
    survive Mother Nature and their animal and human predators, be they
    familial or foreign.

    Arise, and let the world know
    that your path is just
    Arise, and let your fair fight
    receive its honor in heaven.

    It's the voice of pop icon Sirusho, the very same beautiful and
    energetic young woman who rocked the airwaves across Europe and
    Eurasia on the Eurovision stage in 2008.

    She is the glamorous daughter-in-law of the former First Family of
    Armenia, the powerful voice who represented her nation in the
    Eurovision contest.

    Her song then `Kele Kele' (Come On, Come On) was the rallying cry from
    the teenaged independent Republic of Armenia to the established
    nations of the world.

    As horovels helped the masses get through the labor-intensive
    pre-Christian Armenian Kingdom that spanned all of the region we know
    today as the Middle East, and as revolutionary songs motivated victims
    to take up arms against the pan-Turkic agenda, music became more than
    lullabies to get through the long days of tilling the soil or Schlager
    to entertain a captive audience.

    These songs, what Komitas put to paper, what Sayat Nova put to memory,
    the hymns heard in churches and the images seen in music videos turned
    into messages and lessons from the past that are beyond the grasp of
    our narrative-making, storytelling conscious mind.

    These songs are our Carl Jung's theoretical connections to god and the
    collective unconscious, a place universally understood symbols connect
    us to one another and the creator without language and regardless of
    culture, nationality, time in history, education or experience.

    EPILOGUE

    Could Sirusho's gomesh, the buffalo, be the collective symbol, a code
    for the essence of the hardworking Armenians who have not faded from
    history no matter what circumstances they've found themselves in?

    Is Sirusho's call for the rise of the symbolic buffalo a message to
    the progeny of the herders, be they in the Homeland or on a remote
    Pacific island?

    Are we the buffalo of the world, those beastly animals without
    predators, without fear, subjected only to the annoying Brrreh's of
    insignificant rules and rulers, irrelevant bosses and customers, and
    governments and for profit corporations that try to lord over us,
    break our spirits and backs?

    he is disobedient and courageous
    in the eyes live his silent struggle
    life is a duel with earth only
    overcome by the unbending soul

    Yes. A pop song via iTunes and YouTube can be how Komitas, Sayat Nova
    and Parajanov are reminding our subconscious about how to be true to
    our true essence, how to be righteous, do good and fight a fair fight
    in the eyes of heaven.

    Sirusho is telling us to listen to the voice of the genius, Komitas,
    who cultivated these ancient codes of a people to pass on to future
    generations. His notations on paper were more than cadences and `khaz'
    but keys to survival in a chaotic future of uncertainty. His were the
    lessons from the first humans to walk the Earth to modern Armenians,
    who have survived no matter who was or is lording over us or who has
    tried to destroy us.

    there's only one law in nature
    a strong will finds the way
    and continues to multiply.
    there's only one requirement of nature
    that the mind never rest
    and never give up

    MADONNA & FAYRUZ

    Brrreh Gomesh's use of Komitas is reminiscent of Madonna's
    code-breaking in `the Beast Within,' which sampled the Arabic hymn,
    `El Yom Oulika,' sung by the Lebanese icon Fayruz. Both Sirusho and
    Madonna's use of the ancient are calls to action for modern man.

    Just as rap artists in the 80s rallied for an uprising, sampling
    well-known melodies before their marginalized, underground genre
    became the mainstream, Sirusho is also asking you to fight the power
    and set aside corporate-set values and what your conscious mind
    believes is man's reality.

    Brrreh, she rallies, grasp the unseen, dispel the myths, listen to the
    dreams from your sleep. The conscious mind, the modern world, sees
    white and black; the subconscious sees rainbows and unity.

    PROLOGUE

    The dynamic, kick-up-the-dirt dancing of the Brrreh Gomesh music video
    features a stunning and fantastically clad, gorgeous Sirusho. She is
    our new Siren, born to destruct the inhumane and redirect, herd the
    buffalo.

    Her song is about all things Armenian, all things human: perseverance,
    cultural preservation, doing right versus wrong, family values, hard
    work, optimism, worship and the love for making and sharing the arts,
    books, knowledge and the wisdom of the ages.

    These elements are innate human dynamics, learned as man progressed
    from god's first creation on the Armenian Plateau through ages when
    villagers made wine and carpets, made microchips and the computer
    programs that unfortunately run the modern era's giant information
    technologies of consumerism.

    Like prayers and constitutions and corporate mission statements, the
    symbols unleashed in song, videos and print can refocus us on who we
    are, who we've been, whose we are and how we should be.

    Pain is sure to pass as waters
    from a mountainside are always cold,
    The face of fate is in your blood
    and the path you follow violates nothing

    The non-narrative dialogue and meaning of the buffalo and the call to
    those hearing it to once again giddy up and do something about their
    circumstances are what Sirusho Kocharian and Avet Barseghyan are
    telling their pop-loving global audiences.

    What else is Brrreh Gomesh than a reconfirmation about our potency and
    the message that no economic crisis, closed borders, unruly neighbors
    can dissolve our spirit. No ruler can ever lord above fair and just
    people, be the rulers Soviet, post-Soviet, businessmen-parliamentarians
    in power for power, Azeri, Ottoman or Martian.

    Arise, and let the world know
    that your path is just
    Arise, and let your fair fight
    receive its honor in heaven.

    And three apples fell from heaven: one for Sirusho, one for Avet, and
    one for Komitas.

    +++

    Paul Chaderjian is a television news producer at the ABC station
    serving the Hawaiian Islands. He began his career at Horizon Armenian
    Television and has worked at ABC News in New York as a writer-producer
    for `World News Now' and as a reporter in Fresno. He served as the
    Arts & Culture and West Coast Editor of the Armenian Reporter,
    anchored English-language news at Armenia TV and has hosted the annual
    Armenia Fund Telethon. He may be reached via [email protected]



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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