BOSTON, Mass.—The Signature Music Series at Berklee continues on March 3 with Berklee’s 6th annual Middle Eastern Festival: The Music of Armenia. The program will feature Perspectives Ensemble, directed by flutist Sato Moughalian, presenting “Dark Eyes/New Eyes” with a cappella folk trio Zulal and live painting by Kevork Mourad. Special guests include Ludo Mlado and acclaimed Armenian folk singer Aleksan Harutyunyan.
The concert will also feature music from neighboring regions, including a set of Bulgarian music with Berklee’s Pletenitsa Choir, the Ludo Mlado Dance Ensemble, and the Berklee World Strings directed by Eugene Friesen.
Berklee Middle Eastern Festival: The Music of Armenia takes place on Mon., March 3 at 8:15 p.m., at the Berklee Performance Center (BPC), 136 Massachusetts Ave., in Boston. Reserved seating tickets are available for $8 in advance, $12 day of show, by visiting berklee.edu/bpc. The venue is wheelchair accessible. For more information, call the BPC at (617) 747-2261.
The festival brings visiting artists from the Middle East and the Mediterranean together with students to experience the musical traditions of the regions; in past years, it has highlighted Flamenco, Balkan, Turkish, Lebanese, and Palestinian music. Festival founder and director Christiane Karam, assistant professor of voice, chose Armenia this year because she is part Armenian. “My grandparents were exiled in 1915 and my mother was born in Beirut,” said Karam. “It was important to me to go back to my roots and tell the story of the people and the culture through their music.”
Perspectives Ensemble was founded in 1993 by its artistic director, Sato Moughalian. The ensemble presents the works of composers in cultural context with thematic programs on subjects that bridge the visual, musical, and literary arts. “Dark Eyes/New Eyes” had its genesis in the friendship and collaboration that developed between Moughalian, Eve Beglarian, and Kevork Mourad. “These two New York-based Armenian artists and I share aspects of our family histories,” said Moughalian. “All of us being the descendants of people who were displaced, and then went on to create vibrant new lives.”
“Dark Eyes/New Eyes” incorporates a wide range of Armenian music–very old and very new. The program traces the arc of a life, from beginnings in a mountainous Armenian village, spending youth in a city learning an ancient art form, desolation, recovery, and regenerating in a new place. “‘Dark Eyes/New Eyes’ honors our ancestors and our friends–those who have passed into the great beyond but have left with us the gifts of their art and their spirits,” added Moughalian.
Syrian-born artist Kevork Mourad will paint live on-stage during “Dark Eyes/New Eyes.” Mourad got the idea to combine visual art with his love of music after receiving his master’s from the Yerevan Institute of Fine Arts in Armenia He has worked with many world-class musicians using his technique of spontaneous painting.
On Feb. 28, Moughalian and Zulal will present a public clinic at Berklee. For more information, visit Berklee.edu/events/music-armenia.
The “Dark Eyes/New Eyes” program is co-curated by Moughalian, Mourad, and Karam. The Signature Music Series at Berklee embraces the college’s global community and Boston’s diverse musical tastes.
Berklee College of Music was founded on the revolutionary principle that the best way to prepare students for careers in music is through the study and practice of contemporary music. For more than 65 years, the college has evolved to reflect the current state of the music industry, leading the way with baccalaureate studies in performance, music business/management, songwriting, music therapy, film scoring, and more. With a focus on global learning, Berklee in Valencia, a new campus in Spain, is hosting the college’s first graduate programs, while Berklee Online serves distance learners worldwide with extension classes and degree-granting programs. The Berklee City Music Network provides after-school programming for underserved teens in 45 locations throughout the U.S. and Canada. With a student body representing nearly 100 countries and alumni and faculty that have won more than 305 Grammy and Latin Grammy Awards, Berklee is the world’s premier learning lab for the music of today—and tomorrow.