November 07, 2017
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Ninth AGBU Performing Artists in Concert Raises Over $50,000

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    (top row) Hayk Arsenyan, director of the AGBU Performing Art
    (top row) Hayk Arsenyan, director of the AGBU Performing Arts Department, Albert Newberry, Ani Karapetyan, Lusiné Harutyunyan, Vahan Mardirossian, Berj Karazian, Tamar Eskenian, Edvard Pogossian, Cara Pogosian, Alexandr Iradyan and Matthew Taylor and (bottom row) the members of NYSEC.
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    (from left to right) Matthew Taylor (dance), Lusiné Harutyun
    (from left to right) Matthew Taylor (dance), Lusiné Harutyunyan (violin), Ani Karapetyan (violin), Albert Newberry (piano), Vahan Mardirossian (piano), Tamar Eskenian (shvi/flute), Edvard Pogossian (cello), Cara Pogossian (viola) and Berj Karazian (tenor).
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    Conductor and pianist Vahan Madirossian served as the artist
    Conductor and pianist Vahan Madirossian served as the artistic director of the concert.
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    Lusiné Harutyunyan (violin), Ani Karapetyan (violin), Albert
    Lusiné Harutyunyan (violin), Ani Karapetyan (violin), Albert Newberry (piano), Vahan Madirossian (piano), Tamar Eskenian (shvi/flute), Edvard Pogossian (cello) and Cara Pogossian (viola).

Carnegie Hall Concert celebrates the 85th anniversary of the Composers’ Union of Armenia

On November 3, hundreds of guests gathered at the Weill Recital Hall in Carnegie Hall to listen to the ninth AGBU Performing Artists in Concert. Dedicated to the 85th anniversary of the Union of Composers of Armenia, the concert, the flagship event of the AGBU New York Special Events Committee (NYSEC), raised over $50,000 for the AGBU performing arts initiatives worldwide.

This year, along with young musicians, the concert featured well-known artists, tenor Berj Karazian, an Honored Artist of Armenia and a soloist of the Yerevan State Opera Theater, and conductor and pianist Vahan Mardirossian, who served as the artistic director of the concert.

“Carnegie Hall is a dream stage for many musicians,” said Berj Karazian who studied at the AGBU Lazar Najarian-Calouste Gulbenkian School growing up in Aleppo, Syria, and later received a scholarship from AGBU to master his vocal skills at the Yerevan State Conservatory. “It is important that tonight’s concert features Armenian artists from all over the world who have had AGBU’s support for years.”

AGBU Performing Arts Scholarship recipients from Armenia, France, Lebanon, Switzerland and the United States, including Tamar Eskenian (shvi/flute), Lusiné Harutyunyan (violin), Ani Karapetyan (violin), Albert Newberry (piano), Cara Pogossian (viola), Edvard Pogossian (cello), and Matthew Taylor (dance), formed this year’s ensemble. They are students or graduates of well-known educational institutions, such as Haute École de Musique in Lausanne, the Yerevan State Conservatory, London’s Royal Academy of Music, Mannes School of Music in New York, the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, the Juilliard School and the New York University Tisch School of the Arts.

“For the first time this year, we expanded the scope of the AGBU Performing Artists in Concert introducing an interdisciplinary collaboration with a dancer,” said Hayk Arsenyan, director of the AGBU Performing Arts Department. “By featuring the new generation of talented Armenian artists, the concert creates artistic opportunities for performers and builds enduring bonds for future collaboration.”

The eclectic program was comprised of favorites of Western classical and Armenian music, including Beethoven, Chopin, Dvořák, Schuman, Tigranyan and Mirzoyan. It also included three premieres: “Waltz” by Aram Satyan, president of the Union of Composers of Armenia, who specially arranged the piece for the chamber ensemble of the evening, Newberry’s “Shalakho” and Alexandr Iradyan’s “Frames.” The latter earned Iradyan the special Carnegie Hall Award in the 2016 AGBU Sayat Nova International Composition Competition. The dazzling evening captivated the audience, drawing a standing ovation.

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