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
Soloist Hasmik Mkrtchyan
GYUMRI — On June 18, 2023, a historic concert took place in the Gyumri branch of the Komitas State Conservatory of Yerevan. It was the first time in the Conservatory’s 25-year history that it had showcased a harp concert. The solo concert featured Hasmik Mkrtchyan, a second-year student in the string department. The talented harpist, who studies under Prof. Gayane Harutyunyan, performed in the small hall of the Conservatory. Her program presented a varied repertoire: Johann Sebastian Bach’s Prelude No. 2, L. Conconi’s Prelude No. 19, a 17th-century composition by an unknown author, Mikhail Glinka’s Nocturne, George Frideric Handel’s Prelude and toccata, and Théodore Dubois’s Fantasia.
Soloist Hasmik Mkrtchyan
Hasmik’s exceptional performance created a warm and inspiring atmosphere, and captivated the audience. It also brought back fond memories of the moment two years ago when the German “Ars Musica” Choir and the Mirak-Weissbach Foundation presented the harp instrument to the Gyumri Conservatory. The Conservatory had wanted to offer instruction in the harp and needed a quality instrument. On the initiative of Alexan Ter-Minasyan, Honorary Consul of Germany in the Shirak and Lori regions, contact was made with the two institutions in Germany, who then combined efforts to raise funds for a Venera Grand Concert Harp. (https://mirrorspectator.com/2021/08/26/ars-musica-brings-grand-concert-harp-to-gyumri/) This gesture of generosity touched the university community deeply, evoking profound gratitude and appreciation.
(Material for this article and photos courtesy of the Gyumri Conservatory)