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Both the Armenian and English versions of "Where Were You" are presented in one video. The song starts off in a relaxing, voice-over way before Sirusho unleashes her power in the chorus, holding those long, high notes and expressing the pain of the song, which overtly references the Armenian genocide in this, the centenary year of the tragedy.
Sirusho was born in Yerevan, Soviet Armenia, on January 7, 1987, [9] to actor and director Hrachya Harutyunyan, and Syuzan Margaryan, one of the most popular singers in Armenia in the 1980s-1990s. [10] Sirusho won her first award as a child at the Armenian National Music Awards for her performance of "Lusabats", an Armenian folk song written in ...
Programs of DWPM/TeleRadyo Serbisyo/PRTV Prime Media include news, news commentary and issues, public service, public affairs, love and personal advice, music, entertainment and showbiz, informative, business, health and lifestyle, religious and spiritual programs.
The First Program; The First Wave Cafe; Fairy-Tale Calling; Once Upon A Time; Faces; Quality Mark; Mechanics of Happiness; Found Dream; Canticle of Canticles; Open Lesson; Cities of the World; Quotation Marks; On the Roads of Armenia; The Devotees; Armed Forces; Life on Border; Tandem [1]
Family Moments (1998-2000) Motor show-2000 (since 1998) Boomerang (1999-2003) Discovery (2000-2008) Evening with Hakob Rubinyan (2000) How are you friend?
The song was performed by Sirusho, who was selected internally by the Armenian broadcaster Public Television of Armenia (AMPTV) to represent Armenia in the 2008 contest in Belgrade, Serbia. Sirusho's selection as the Armenian artist was announced on 15 November 2007, while the song was selected through a national final, which took place on 8 ...
Armenia declared its independence on September 21, 1991. A month later, the president of the country signed the RA Law "On Mass Media". For the first time in Armenia the information system had an opportunity to develop in a free and favourable environment. The freedom of speech and purely national propaganda were predominant for the Armenian ...
Public Radio of Armenia (Armenian: Հայաստանի Հանրային Ռադիո, romanized: Hayastani Hanrayin Radio; Djsy Armradio) is a public radio broadcaster in Armenia. It was established in 1926 and remains one of the largest broadcasters in the country, with at least three national networks.