Sports: Armenia’s junior freestyle wrestler to start competing in World C’ship today

MediaMax, Armenia
Sept 17 2018
Armenia’s junior freestyle wrestler to start competing in World C’ship today

Armenia’s Tigran Minasyan will face Cihat Ahmet Liman (Turkey) in the 55kg category in the quarter-finals. Hrachyan Poghosyan (Armenia, 63kg) is starting the qualification round with a match against Turkish athlete Abdullah Toprak.

Another Armenia representative Hakob Baghdasaryan (87kg) will compete with Junyeop Park (South Korea), while his teammate David Ovasapyan (130kg) is facing Ignat Sevinov Milenov (Bulgaria) in the quarter-finals.

Other Armenian athletes to compete in Trnava are Ararat Manucharyan (60kg), Malkhas Amoyan (67kg), Erik Eloyan (82kg) and Razmik Khachatryan (97kg).

Sports: European C’Ship winners from Armenia to participate in Junior World Championship

MediaMax, Armenia
Sept 17 2018
European C’Ship winners from Armenia to participate in Junior World Championship

The team will be almost the same as during the European Championship in August. They took 3 gold and 2 bronze medals back then.

The main change will be made in 74 kg weight category. Hrayr Alikhanyan got an arm injury and will probably be replaced by Davit Gevorgyan.

The head coach Avetik Vardanyan introduced Mediamax Sport to the names of the athletes to participate in the tournament: Arsen Harutyunyan (57kg), Vazgen Tevanyan (61kg), Gegham Galstyan (65kg), Arman Andriasyan(70kg), Arman Avagyan (79kg), Mher Markosyan (86kg) and Hovhannes Maghakyan (120kg).

“The team is well prepared and ready for the competition. We have hopes for medals too. We had little time after the European Championship, but we tries to recover and prepare for this very important tournament. We will depart for the competition site on September 19,” Vardanyan said.

Rome to host concert dedicated to 2800th anniversary of Yerevan

Public Radio of Armenia
April 17 2018


17:36, 17 Sep 2018

Sergey Smbatyan, artistic director and chief conductor of the Armenian State Symphony Orchestra, will lead a concert at Teatro dell’Opera in Rome dedicated to the 2800th anniversary of Yerevan.

The evening will feature works by Armenian composers Komitas, Aram Khachaturian, Edgar Hovhannisyan and others.

Violinist Hayk Kazazyan will be the soloists at the concert. Duduk player Kamo Seyranyan will also play with the orchestra.

The event has been organized by the Armenian Embassy in Italy.

Yerevan Opera Theater to perform ‘The Magic Flute’ in Kuwait for first time

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 17 2018

The Armenian National Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet named after Alexander Spendiaryan will bring “The Magic Flute” by one of the most celebrated composers of all time, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to the Kuwait Opera stage for the first time within the frames of its inauguration.

This will be the first opera performance throughout Kuwait’s history, Yerevan Opera Theater’s press service told Panorama.am.

Earlier in September, the opera theater held tours in Dubai, with “The Magic Flute” premiered at the newly opened Dubai Opera Theater.

Yerevan Opera Theater soloist Zohrab Zohrabyan, playing Sarastro in the performance, says “The Magic Flute” has never been presented in Armenia, only performed in concert format.

“The Magic Flute” is a tale, which illustrates the resplendent power of love, art and music, transporting audiences into a wonderful fantastical realm. The opera tells the story of Tamino, a young hero, sent on a quest by the Queen of Night to rescue her daughter, Pamina, from the wicked wizard, Sarastro.  

Arianne Caoili to bike through Cilicia to support Armenian children

Chessbase News
Sept 17 2018

Arianne Caoili to bike through Cilicia to support Armenian children

by Antonio Pereira
              
9/17/2018 – While Levon Aronian is fighting the chess elite in arduous events, his wife Arianne Caoili is engaged in various entrepreneurial and philanthropic initiatives in Armenia. The Australian Woman International Master will cycle through the south coastal region of Cilicia to raise funds on behalf of the Children of Armenia Fund. The biking tour’s fundraising will allow COAF to expand its athletic programs for youth living in six villages of Armenia’s Tavush region.

Press release

Arianne Caoili, wife of Armenian Chess Grandmaster Levon Aronian, will embark on a two-week cycling tour throughout Cilicia, Anatolia and northern Iran this month. Arianne will start her journey from the medieval Armenian port city of Ayas in Cilicia [Mersin province, in modern-day Turkey -Ed.] on September 21 and will finish the trek in the town of Agarak located on the Armenian-Iranian border. 

Arianne’s biking-ride route (click or tap to expand)

Born in Manila, Arianne Caoili moved to Armenia in 2013 and has been engaged in various entrepreneurial and philanthropic initiatives. The Australian chess player, born to a Dutch mother and Filipino father, was awarded the title of Woman International Master (WIM) by FIDE and has competed in seven Women’s Chess Olympiads.

Children of Armenia Fund (COAF) is an organization dear to Arianne’s heart since it is committed to improving the lives of children throughout rural Armenia by giving them opportunities for advancement. Arianne has always been passionate about helping children, especially with regard to education, music and disabilities. 

The biking tour’s fundraising goal of $5,500 USD will allow COAF to expand its athletic programs for youth living in six villages of Armenia’s Tavush region. Funds will go toward establishing clubs and much-needed sporting equipment and salaries for coaches. Tavush, located on the border with Azerbaijan, is prone to sporadic attacks and is in vital need of programs aimed at revitalizing the region and giving youth newfound opportunities and health-oriented activities. 

Arianne has lived in Armenia since 2013

Caoili has utilized her professional background in public and private sector consulting as an advisor to the Armenian government. In 2015, she established Armenia’s first boutique strategy consulting firm, Akron Consulting, which specializes in business and public policy advising. She is also owner and editor-in-chief of Champord, the only free, mass-distributed newspaper in the Caucasus region, with the largest print run in Armenia. She serves as chairman of the board for the Champord Fund, an organization invested in the development of civil society and the training of young Armenian journalists. Arianne is currently the CEO of one of Armenia’s largest alcohol distributors, 40 Degrees, a fast-growing, unique and novel start-up which she founded three years ago.

Arianne’s cycling expedition will be documented by GoPro action cameras and journalists who will accompany her. Converse Bank has agreed to cover some of the expenses Arianne will incur on her trip. COAF will regularly share footage of Arianne on the road via its social media outlets. Stopping points on the route include Adana, Sis, Gaziantep, Tarsus, Urfa, Diyarbakir, Van, Dogubayazit and Maku. 

Caoili expressed her excitement regarding the biking trip:

I am excited to explore the rich history and amazing culture of medieval and ancient Armenia. Throughout the cycling tour I will encounter the vestiges of Hellenistic and Roman empires in Armenia. Further afield we will discover ancient cultures and temples that predate recorded history.

You can support Arianne Caoili’s biking tour for COAF by visiting her GoFundMe page.

Twitter #bike4coaf

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COAF (www.coafkids.org) has been using community-led, comprehensive approaches in reducing poverty in rural Armenia since 2003, impacting the lives of 75,000 people.  Its strategic programs in education, healthcare, child and family services, community engagement and economic development help Armenian village youth access the resources to achieve and, in turn, give back to their communities and the world. COAF believes the new generation of Armenia, together with their families, have the potential and opportunity to revitalize the fabric of community life, and combat the rapid emigration plaguing the country since its independence from the Soviet Union. The organization has dramatically improved the quality of life in 44 village communities over the past 15 years.

COAF SMART is the organization’s newest initiative designed to jumpstart the advancement of rural communities by connecting them to the world by use of advanced communication and information technology. The first state-of-the-art COAF SMART Center opened its doors in Lori, Armenia in May of this year, offering the 150,000 population of the region both project-based and action-based learning programs. COAF’s board of directors cover all administrative costs, allowing 100% of donations to go toward funding programs. The organization has consistently secured the highest rating on Charity Navigator. Prominent supporters of COAF’s mission include Serj Tankian, Leonardo DiCaprio, John Stamos, Andrea Martin, Tigran Hamasyan, Vanessa Williams, Sean Hayes, Tom Hanks, Jennifer Aniston, Patricia Field, Victor Garber, Ariana Grande, Conan O’Brian, Alexis Ohanian, and Usher.

https://en.chessbase.com/post/arianne-caoili-bike-tour-2018



Music: Postcard from Yerevan

STRAD
Sept 17 2018

Cellists from around the world descended on the Armenian capital in June for the Khachaturian International Competition. Tom Stewart reports from its thought-provoking final round

Jonathan Swensen

Its streets of pink stone thronged with vines and shaded by trees, Yerevan sits at the foot of Mount Ararat, an extinct volcano more than 5,000 metres tall and the supposed resting place of Noah’s Ark. Although the mountain was lost to Turkey shortly after the infamous genocide of 1918, Ararat’s distinctive shape is depicted on the stamp added to travellers’ passports at the border. Armenia is a country proud of its powerful national symbols and – along with Ararat, apricots, the world’s oldest Christian tradition and a unique 39-character alphabet – composer Aram Khachaturian (1903–78) ranks highly among them.

Beyond the ubiquitous Sabre Dance and the Adagio (both from his ballet Gayane) that features on the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, much of Khachaturian’s output remains obscure to most outside the former USSR. Soviet audiences and censors alike appreciated its synthesis of Armenian folk elements and muscular Socialist realism, but others dismissed the composer as a puppet apologist for Stalinist cultural policy. His conservatism has been reassessed in recent years, however, with the composer likened to a kind of Vaughan Williams of the Caucasus.

Now in its 14th year, the Khachaturian International Competition is a celebration of the composer’s work, open to violinists, cellists, pianists, singers and conductors on a rotating five-year schedule. The four finalists in this year’s competition – for cello – had been selected from sixteen in the first round (reduced to eight in the second) and played either Khachaturian’s Cello Concerto or his single-movement Concerto-Rhapsody in Yerevan’s aptly named Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall. Sergey Smbatyan conducted the  Armenian State Symphony Orchestra, a group that evolved just over a decade ago from the State Youth Orchestra of Armenia and which now acts as an ambassador across Europe for the country’s unjustly overlooked classical music culture.

Khachaturian’s conservatism has been reassessed in recent years

First among the finalists was 30-year-old Russian Fedor Amosov. After the 23-minute Concerto-Rhapsody’s orchestral introduction – a serpentine melody that emerges from a haze of horn calls and staccato cymbal crashes – comes a long solo passage for the cello, with its opening octave leap lent an operatic élan by Amosov’s arresting portamento. In the feverish passagework that followed, the cello sounded like a Heldentenor in the midst of a particularly fraught mad scene. Although a little gloominess or introspection of tone might have helped sustain the drama as Amosov hurtled towards the bottom of his C string, the disparate nature of Khachaturian’s phrases here makes stitching them into  a compelling narrative hard work. Amosov gave an especially tight and stylish account of the long and lavishly ornamented melody that twists its way through the work’s central and most obviously folk-inspired section. Alongside its ferocious technical demands, the Concerto-Rhapsody’s most challenging aspect is its rather patchwork nature, with abrupt jumps between different ideas. Amosov would have benefited from forming these sentences into paragraphs, even if the finished message still remained elusive. Making the piece sound coherent and satisfying requires a certain pig-headedness from the soloist, and while Amosov’s account was sophisticated and often thrilling, he perhaps allowed himself to become lost among the composer’s obfuscations.

French–Russian Rustem Khamidullin, 29, was the only finalist to choose Khachaturian’s better-known Cello Concerto over the Concerto-Rhapsody showpiece. While the bravura flashiness of the latter must be hard to resist, the former is a more considered and imaginative work that, across its three movements, offers the soloist far greater resources from which to construct a persuasive interpretation. It is worth noting that the Cello Concerto was written just two years before the publication by the Communist Party of the 1948 Zhdanov Decree, in which Khachaturian was denounced alongside Shostakovich, Prokofiev, Myaskovsky and others for writing ‘anti-popular’ music of ‘excessive individualism’. Shortly afterwards, Khachaturian issued an apology: ‘I want to warn those comrades,’ he wrote, ‘who, like myself, hoped that their music, which is not understood by the people today, would be understood by future generations tomorrow. This is a fatal theory.’

Happily, Khamidullin’s performance embraced the broad arc of the 33-minute Concerto and, in its pacing, demonstrated a mature understanding of the underlying architecture. His sound, for the most part suitably rugged, brightened during pacey, purposeful passages of bariolage in the first movement before recovering its brawn in a descending series of bold multiple-stops. All three movements feature long sections in which a particular pitch is repeated and embellished in the manner of a monodic folk song. These provided opportunities for bold characterisation and transformations of tone that were sometimes missed, especially in the slow second movement. Khamidullin’s elastic detaché and tightly clipped acciaccaturas made for a bounding finale, however, which culminated in a dramatic and impressively well-tuned passage of octaves.

Jury chairman Suren Bagratuni (left) with Chae Won Hong (centre) and Rustem Khamidullin (right)

The following evening, South Korean–American Chae Won Hong’s rendition of the Concerto-Rhapsody’s opening cadenza only underlined Khachaturian’s occasional structural idiosyncrasies and the challenges they pose for a lucid performance. That said, while Hong, 27, played with a beautifully stentorian sound in the ornamented strains of ‘Armenian’ melody, detail in the faster passages was often scrappy. And with shaky intonation and a handful of wrong notes, speed here  came very much at the expense of clarity (a recording of the piece by Rostropovich conducted by the composer falls at times into a similar trap). Flashes of deeply thoughtful or strikingly dramatic playing suggested Hong’s technique was, on this occasion at least, getting in her way. Frenetic syncopations in the Concerto-Rhapsody’s final minutes help wrest both soloist and orchestra from any previous dead ends, but Hong struggled to recover sufficiently from her previous lapses of persuasiveness to take full advantage of this reprieve.

Last came Danish 21-year-old Jonathan Swensen. Although his first entry came without the theatre of Amosov’s, the bars that followed signalled an outstanding ability to shift convincingly between the disparate elements that make the opening so challenging. Swensen played with the  same muscular open-heartedness throughout the section, his performance alone making sense of it for the audience. Expertly placed fingers and a supple right arm ensured a smooth transition between sustained lines and passages of explosive spiccato, while Swensen’s obvious rapport with the orchestra and conductor was a testament to the clarity of his ideas and his skill in communicating them. It might just have been because this was its third performance of the piece in two days, but the orchestra sounded by turns more brooding and more brilliant than it had done before. A pizzicato countermelody just before the climax was discreet and polite under Hong’s fingers, whereas Swensen’s strings snapped against his fingerboard and propelled him headlong into the blaring horns.

In the final restatement of the theme, Swensen’s high notes were taut and full of menace, and brought the work to an exhilarating close. No one who had heard all four performances could have been surprised when honorary jury chairman and celebrated Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki announced that Swensen had won the $15,000 first prize. Second prize, worth $10,000, went to Amosov, with the $5,000 third prize shared between Hong and Khamidullin. After a reprise performance of the Concerto-Rhapsody, Swensen was whisked off to dinner with the competition’s jury and trustees, as well as its patron Nouneh Sarkissian, who sat between the cellist and her husband Armen, the president of Armenia. ‘This is a small country,’ he said, turning to Swenson and raising his glass of apricot vodka, ‘but one that has created many great artists. You will always be welcome in Armenia, as if it were your second home.’

ALL PHOTOS: KHACHATURIAN INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION

‘Economic integration effects aren’t complete without single currency zone’, Armenian Deputy PM’s interview to MIR 24

Categories
BUSINESS & ECONOMY
Politics

Armenia’s Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan argues that having alternative and diversified currency calculations in economic unions is effective, but at the same time difficult.

In an interview to MIR 24 TV, the Armenian deputy PM addressed the possibility of creating a single currency in the Eurasian Economic Union and prospects of achieving it.

Below is the question and answer during the interview:

Question: Now there is a tendency to refuse the dollar in mutual calculations in the territory of the Eurasian Economic Union. In your opinion, to what extent are the countries ready to fully transition to the Ruble, or for example the Tenge, in calculations.

Answer: You know, certainly having alternative and diversified currency calculations is very good and effective. It is a desired result for potential unions. It is also a rather difficult task which must be solved very delicately and in detail. This isn’t only a currency matter, it also relates to operational matters. This, after all, is a matter of symmetric support to the IT field. And this is a matter of harmonization of administrative, regulatory and other normative bases. This is possible theoretically, practically too, but this requires work. And, certainly, it is a difficult work. But it is real, if we study it. I believe that any economic union in different levels of activeness, including also the Eurasian Economic Union, will activate this work. This is obvious because even without any single currency zone the impacts which can be achieved from economic integration, unions, aren’t complete, if they work with the currency of another union or another country. In this sense I think, yes, this process is obvious, its actuality is obvious, and the process will proceed in a quite active manner. At least I think this way.”

Armenian foreign ministry denies Erdogan-Pashinyan phone call

Categories
Politics
Region

The Armenian foreign ministry is denying Turkish media reports which said that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan to request the release and return of Umut Ali Ozmen, a 16 year –old illegal border crosser who was arrested and detained in Armenia.

“This information is false. No such phone call has taken place,” foreign ministry spokesperson Tigran Balayan told ARMENPRESS.

The Turkish Hurriyet newspaper reported that Erdogan called Pashinyan over the phone to request the release of the 16 year old shepherd.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether or not someone named Umut Ali Ozmen is in fact detained in Armenia.


‘We succeeded in creating democratic administration system’ – Pashinyan’s interview to French Le Monde

Category
Politics

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was interviewed by the French Le Monde newspaper during his recent visit to France.

In the interview, the PM emphasized that since he took office there are no longer any privileged persons or privileges in Armenia, and that they are fighting an unprecedented fight against corruption and the underground economy [black market].

– What have you been able to change in Armenia after four month since taking office?

– The press is freer than ever now. For the first time in the history of the third republic there are no longer the privileged or privileges. We are fighting an unprecedented fight against corruption and underground economy. Economic monopolies no longer exist. Election of a mayor will take place September 23rd in the Armenian capital, which will become the freest in history. Unlike other revolutions, at least the ones I am aware of, in our case the revolution was not followed by economic decline. On the contrary, the indicators are positive, the capital is returning to the country, real estate prices are growing, bank deposits are growing. We succeeded in creating a democratic administration system.

– You were elected by parliament under public pressure, but MPs who were elected during the tenure of Serzh Sargsyan continue comprising majority there. Is this acceptable?

– When the parliament was electing me Prime Minister, I could only rely on four votes, one of which was mine. This parliament is a black stain in our political reality, but we must see the situation in its balance.

Armenian MMA fighter Karine Karapetyan annihilates Azerbaijani opponent, sister of notorious murderer Ramil Safarov

Category
Sport

Armenian professional MMA fighter Karine Karapetyan has triumphed over Azerbaijan’s Rena Safarova in the Tbilisi International MMA Championship in Georgia.  Rena Safarova is the sister of Ramil Safarov, the Azerbaijani army officer convicted for the 2004 shocking murder of Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan during a NATO training program in Budapest, Hungary. The Armenian lieutenant was 25 years old at the time of his murder.

“I dedicate my victory to the memory of Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan,” the MMA fighter said on Facebook.

The murder happened during NATO Partnership For Peace English-language courses.

In the night of February 19, 2004 Safarov, armed with an axe, broke into the dormitory room of Gurgen Margaryan and attacked the Armenian officer while he was asleep. He delivered multiple blows to Margaryan with the axe.

After nearly two years of trial, a Budapest court sentenced Safarov to life imprisonment.

However, on August 31, 2012, Safarov was extradited to Azerbaijan, where he received a state-level hero’s welcome. President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev promoted Safarov to the rank of major and provided him with over eight years of back pay. The same day, Armenia severed diplomatic ties with Hungary.