The result was merge to Duduk. Arbitrarily0 ( talk) 14:06, 17 February 2010 (UTC) reply
The first section of the article is simply recreating a article on duduk music. The rest of the article is full of original research based on the claim that since one musician is playing on these songs that means they are Armenian inspired. I think this is an insanely narrow topic for a list. Maybe Armenian influenced songs, or some other broad topic. Ridernyc ( talk) 18:24, 10 February 2010 (UTC) reply
http://www.unesco.emb-japan.go.jp/htm/d_ich_arm_duduk.htm
These armenian-inspired movie and tv soundtracks are so because they make use of the instrument. It doesn't exclude the possibility that these musics could be also japanese-inspired or arabic-inspired, when using additional instruments and mixing them with the duduk. But this article is about armenian-inspired music, not chinese nor german inspired soundtracks. This article is the first one specialized on armenian-inspired musics. The fact that one instrumentalist has been working with the same instrument, the Duduk, on dozens of soundtracks included in the list doesn't make a cause for page deletion. Thus, it seems logical to use this instrumentalist, as one of the world specialists and main players of this instrument, in more than one reference. This page should be expanded with the help of Japan and the UNESCO safeguarding project rather than deleted. PauperHell ( talk) 19:29, 10 February 2010 (UTC) replyRead the article and review its history to properly understand its topic. Some articles may have been harmed by vandalism or poor editing. Stubs and imperfect articles are awaiting further development, and so the potential of the topic should be considered.
PauperHell ( talk) 22:39, 10 February 2010 (UTC) replyThe result was merge to Duduk. Arbitrarily0 ( talk) 14:06, 17 February 2010 (UTC) reply
The first section of the article is simply recreating a article on duduk music. The rest of the article is full of original research based on the claim that since one musician is playing on these songs that means they are Armenian inspired. I think this is an insanely narrow topic for a list. Maybe Armenian influenced songs, or some other broad topic. Ridernyc ( talk) 18:24, 10 February 2010 (UTC) reply
http://www.unesco.emb-japan.go.jp/htm/d_ich_arm_duduk.htm
These armenian-inspired movie and tv soundtracks are so because they make use of the instrument. It doesn't exclude the possibility that these musics could be also japanese-inspired or arabic-inspired, when using additional instruments and mixing them with the duduk. But this article is about armenian-inspired music, not chinese nor german inspired soundtracks. This article is the first one specialized on armenian-inspired musics. The fact that one instrumentalist has been working with the same instrument, the Duduk, on dozens of soundtracks included in the list doesn't make a cause for page deletion. Thus, it seems logical to use this instrumentalist, as one of the world specialists and main players of this instrument, in more than one reference. This page should be expanded with the help of Japan and the UNESCO safeguarding project rather than deleted. PauperHell ( talk) 19:29, 10 February 2010 (UTC) replyRead the article and review its history to properly understand its topic. Some articles may have been harmed by vandalism or poor editing. Stubs and imperfect articles are awaiting further development, and so the potential of the topic should be considered.
PauperHell ( talk) 22:39, 10 February 2010 (UTC) reply