Revisiting Gyumri, Armenia’s Cultural Capital
Call for Help Restores Music for Artsakh Children and a Dedicated Music Teacher Twice a Refugee
Children Enjoy Therapy in Theater
Armenians and Germans Join Efforts to Help Artsakh Refugees
Gyumri Conservatory Hosts Premier Harp Concert
New Jazz Quartet in Antwerp Has Roots in Mass.
Ruben Hakhverdyan Trio Plays at My Way Center
My Way Celebrates Creative Inclusion for those with Autism
Bridging Social Distancing for People with Autism
Ceramics Lab for People with Special Needs
A Harp for Gyumri
Ars Musica Brings Grand Concert Harp to Gyumri
Armenians, Autism and the Emirates
“My Way” Center for Autistic Children Celebrates Expansion
Yerevan Music Students Win in Rimini
Artists Launch Creative Fundraising in Istanbul
Young Musicians Prepare for a Better Future
Armenia Visit
Gegashen Concert
Poland Welcomes Promising Armenian Vocalist
Concert at the Gegashen Music School
Visit to Armenia
Sharing the Gift of Music
Wiesbaden Kurhaus Hosts 6th Hessian Foundation Day
Mirak-Weissbach Foundation Featured in Wiesbadener Kurier
Lusine Arakelyan Sings in Italy and Spain
Germans Celebrate Paruyr Sevak
German Tour for Lusine Arakelyan
Mirak-Weissbach Foundation Presented at Lepsius House
Ruben Hakhverdayan and a band member listen
as young Raphael plays on the piano.
YEREVAN, JANUARY 21, 2021 – One can always find reason to celebrate. No matter how difficult the last year was for Armenians, with the suffering caused by the COVID pandemic and the Artsakh war, Christmas brought with it a spirit of hope for a better future. And that is something to celebrate.
At My Way Socio-Rehabilitation Day Care Center for Children and Teenagers with Autism, children, parents, guests, teachers and staff therapists joined in the newly equipped multi-functional performance hall for a live concert on December 25. The My Way center, located in Yerevan, provides therapy, education and vocational training in its two large, newly renovated buildings. Music and musical therapy play a central role in the educational and social process.
Ruben Hakhverdyan with the center’s therapists
The idea for a special concert came from one of the trained music therapists, Nara Sargsyan, who organized the guest performers. Ruben Hakhverdyan is a poet, lyricist, and guitarist who performs his own compositions as well as traditional pieces. Joined by a cellist and accordion player, as well as the trio’s musical technician — who is also a pianist — they presented songs that the adults had grown up with, and that the children and young adults also knew very well, having learned them a few years ago from a special Ladybird edition of songs by Hakhverdyan “for children from 0 to 100 years old….“ The musicians were delighted to discover that their audience could sing along, as most of them knew the lyrics and melodies by heart, with all the nuances and musical shifts. Among the pieces presented were Ete Imanayi, Navak and Dzyun.
Following the performance, the guest musicians put away their instruments, and the audience took over. Music therapist Marina Meliqsteyan provided the piano accompaniment and the teenagers and staff broke into song. Soon the professionals joined in. One young man, Raphael, son of board member and co-founder Sona Petrosyan, displayed his remarkable talent on the piano. He performed works by Ray Charles, Johnny Mandel and Aznavour, which inspired a band member to join pianist Marina in a four-hand version of Yerevan (music by Artem Ayvazyan). Carried away by the music, Raphael invited his favorite therapist to dance, and at the end the students had taken over the stage to sing.
Outside guests who had come to visit several centers for children with special needs were astonished by the facilities and by the capabilities displayed by the youngsters, not only in music, but in the arts and crafts they had produced and put on display.