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Nune's Biography

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by Paul Chaderjian Sept 29, 2004 Nune Yesayan was born in Yerevan, Armenia, on August 5, 1969. Even before studying music in college, Yesayan made a name for herself at her high school for being a gifted vocalist and talented performer. She graduated from high school in 1986 and was accepted to the Polytechnic University of Yerevan to study engineering. During her first year in college, Yesayan excelled in her engineering studies and received high marks in both math and physics. She spent her time away from school performing Armenian folk music with an amateur band. The group, which included long-time friend and collaborator Arthur Hagopian, appeared at small venues and a few concerts. After successfully completing her first year of course work at the Polytechnic University in 1987, Yesayan decided to change her major and focus on her passion for music. She applied for admission and was accepted to the Jazz and Pop College of Yerevan, where she began her studies in the Fall of 1988. Ye...

My Brother's Road

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Book Review by Paul Chaderjian My Brother's Road by Markar Melkonian with Seta Melkonian By any account, the enigmatic genius, scholar, political activist, soldier and freedom fighter Monte Melkonian led a short-lived but extraordinary life. In the newly published My Brother’s Road, Monte’s brother Markar, with the help of Monte’s widow Seta, chronicles one Californian’s journey from small town kid to legendary martyr. Monte’s modern-day epic begins in 1969, when the Melkonians visit their maternal grandmother’s ancestral village in Western Armenia, some 55 years after the Genocide. At the impressionable age of eleven, Monte sees his grandmother’s birthplace, watches the Turks who have taken up residence in the village, notices the Armenian Church has become a Turkish movie theatre and ponders about the outlines left when crosses were chiseled off doors. His people had disappeared from the village and the region, millions of Armenians had evaporated from th...

My Brother's Road

--> Book Review by Paul Chaderjian My Brother's Road by Markar Melkonian with Seta Melkonian By any account, the enigmatic genius, scholar, political activist, soldier and freedom fighter Monte Melkonian led a short-lived but extraordinary life. In the newly published My Brother’s Road, Monte’s brother Markar, with the help of Monte’s widow Seta, chronicles one Californian’s journey from small town kid to legendary martyr. Monte’s modern-day epic begins in 1969, when the Melkonians visit their maternal grandmother’s ancestral village in Western Armenia, some 55 years after the Genocide. At the impressionable age of eleven, Monte sees his grandmother’s birthplace, watches the Turks who have taken up residence in the village, notices the Armenian Church has become a Turkish movie theatre and ponders about the outlines left when crosses were chiseled off doors. His people had disappeared from the village and the region, millions of Armenians had evapora...

Cascade Folk Trio Debuts on the World Music Scene

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--> by Paul Chaderjian (New York City) – The January 6, 2004, broadcast of Public Radio International’s “the World” program dedicated its Global Hits segment to the Cascade Folk Trio. The broadcast marked another significant in-road for the seldom globally-acknowledged sounds of Armenian music and also a giant coup for Cascade Folk Trio -- an Armenian group enjoying mainstream media attention for its newly released, “Old Street.” “It’s full of new and old sounds,” reported PRI’s Marco Werner. “The pop and jazz rhythms of today are mixed with ancient instruments. There's the duduk, the Armenian oboe, which has been around for more than 2,000 years. And the zurna, a single reed instrument. But perhaps the oldest sound on this CD is the Armenian language itself, which is thought to go back 5,000 years.” “Oh, my God. I have to say we were very, very excited,” says Cascade Folk Trio vocalist Armen Papikyan . “It was a joy, true happiness. It’s an incredible ...

Wrong Direction

The bloodiest century in all of human history, a century that marked the near-annihilation of the Armenian people, witnessed two world wars, holocausts, ethnic cleansing campaigns and left millions of humans in inhumane conditions, displaced and traumatized for generations to come, is being allowed by the great thinkers of our time to reinvent itself into traditions that continue into the 21st century. No sooner than imperialism was thought to have retired into legendary tales in history books, globalization became the rallying cry for the post-industrial quest to fuel the new world economic order. In this new century when mankind is amassing more information and advancing knowledge and science that in any other period in the history of civilization, humans are left questioning and contemplating why their loved ones are being butchered, abducted, held captive and their human rights violated not just in Iraq and Guantanamo, but in Yerevan, the Sudan and in Europe and the United States...

Broadband … A Big Hit Off Broadway

By Paul Chaderjian Thunderous applause and infectious laughter filled the prestigious Wilshire Theater in Los Angeles, the historic Tower Theater in Fresno and the regal Fox Theater in Stockton last week. On stage were the phenomenal MUMs (Mind Under Matter), who stormed the stage in colorful costumes, performing mesmerizing balancing acts on stilts and huge balls, moving to fancy choreography set to the thumping beats of pop and rave music, juggling balls and torches burning bright, and clowning around for the hundreds of new AT&T Broadband associates. “We want to make sure the employees know how special today is,” said Debi Picciolo, Senior Vice President of AT&T Broadband, Western Region. “It’s our first day as AT&T Broadband, and we’re now part of the largest telecommunications company in the world, and AT&T, I mean, who wouldn’t love to work for AT&T?” Picciolo and her entire senior leadership team participated in the brand name launch production; and judging...

A Message of Hope and Unity from Artsakh

NKR President Promotes Thanksgiving Day Telethon by Paul Chaderjian ( Fresno ) - The President of the Republic of Nagorno Karapakh, Arkady Ghoukassian, delivered an eloquent and passionate speech last week, asking local Armenians to help strengthen the spiritual and economic bridges between the homeland and the Armenian Diaspora. President Ghoukassian spoke at a banquet in his honor, organized by Armenia Fund Fresno Committee. Welcoming the President to the Haig Berberian Hall at the Saint Paul Armenian Church was Committee Co-chair, Deacon Allan Jendian, who toasted the President in Armenian. "On behalf of our entire community," said Jendian, "I welcome you to William Saroyan's city. General Antranig and Soghomon Tehlirian, both passed away here,  longing to return to the homeland and Karapakh. If for a moment, they would raise their heads, they would, with pride, bless the President of an independent and free Karapakh and the freedom fighters of...