Sound Archive 2021 year in review
As we enter the New Year we’re taking a look back at the artists and topics covered in the Sound Archive posts since they began in March of 2021. We hope this overview helps emphasize the depth and richness of Armenian musical history encompassed in the collection. We’re also taking this opportunity to present a new format for the series. Going forward we’ll keep the writing brief and the audio will be presented in a playlist format rather than as discrete tracks. The goal is to help us share as much of the collection as possible in the most accessible way. We hope you enjoy this playlist which brings together some of the music we’ve shared to date. For those of you who may have missed previous posts or are just discovering the series, we encourage you to take a look back and explore last year’s posts in more depth.
To recap the project to date, we kicked off the series with an in-depth article written by Harout Arakelian that tells the story of the first Armenian language recordings made in the United States. These recordings were made for Columbia Records by Medros Der Sarkis Tashjian and his brothers Nishan and Levon in 1909. From there the project has gone on to cover the work of several Armenian business owners and entrepreneurs, such as Watertown’s own Armen Vahe, whose record and appliance store also encompassed a record label featuring regional musicians. Other entrepreneurs featured were two masters of the tar, George Shah-Baronian, and Haig Ohanian, who self-published their own recordings in California and Detroit respectively. We’ve presented a range of performers of Armenian classical music, from the pioneering voice of Armeneg Shah-Mouradian, a prodigy of Komitas Vartabed, to the lesser-known soprano, Nevarthe Jevelekian, who collaborated with the composer Grikor Suni. By contrast, the regional folk styles of artists such as Joseph Bedrosian and Vartan Margosian express the diversity of musical traditions that Armenians brought to the United States in the first decades of the 20th Century. Among this diversity, artists like Karekin Paroodian exemplify how this range of traditions covering patriotic, Western classical, and village folk song forms were all intersecting and reshaping in the early days of recording. This year we also celebrated the work of beloved Dikranagertzi singer Onnik Dinkjian who has been the voice for many generations of Armenians in America and around the world.
This year we’ll be bringing you more recordings from the collection exploring the music and the stories of the people who brought it into the world, so stay tuned and Happy New Year from everyone here at the Sound Archive.
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Mardiros Der Sarkis Tashjian
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Manoug Toumigian
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Nevarthe Shaghoian Jivelekian
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George Shah-Baronian
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George Shah-Baronian
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Hovsep Bedrosian
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Onnik Dinkjian
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Karekin Proodian
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Armenag Shah-Mouradian
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Vartan Margosian