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A partner to make music come alive
April 23, 2005 02:45:24
A partner to make music come alive By JOHN CHARLES, EDMONTON SUN FREELANCE
Edmonton Sun, Canada April 22 2005
It seemed like an innocent question. Toronto soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian, who sings tonight and tomorrow with the Edmonton Symphony, has a new CD of French songs, and with a rather hunky accompanist whom I didn't know.
"Have you worked with that pianist before?" I ask on the phone to Toronto.
"That pianist - (pause) - is my husband," the singer answers in a slightly chilly tone. Who knew? Seems Serouj Kradjian is a proud Armenian-Canadian like our soprano. He's currently professor of piano and chamber music in Madrid, so both live there much of the year, and they've been married nearly a year.
At the Winspear Centre, under Yves Abel, Bayrakdarian will sing opera arias by Mozart, Rossini and others, and the University of Alberta Madrigal Singers will sing opera choruses. There'll also be orchestral opera overtures.
Bayrakdarian is having a richly blossoming international career. She just won her second Juno Award for an exquisite CD of arias for Cleopatra by Handel and lesser-known 18th-century composers, an imaginative disc that provides much beautiful and seldom-heard music.
And her French-language CD, Viardot-Garcia, gives us 23 songs by Pauline Viardot-Garcia, a major French singer and intellectual who also composed dozens of songs and two operas.
Italian superstar Cecilia Bartoli was the first modern singer to take her up, but Bayrakdarian's recital is much more extensive, and makes a strong case for the vivacious, playful and haunting songs. Kradjian makes a splendid case for the elegant and demanding piano parts, and it's a beguiling disc.
"It's wonderful to work with someone who can be a full partner in the music, and there must be a lot of trust for the music to really come alive.
"This autumn I'll sing the role at London's Royal Opera House with Sir Colin Davis, which I'm looking forward to very much. And I'm busy with research and new projects."
A lot of research was involved in putting together the Cleopatra and Viardot-Garcia CDs, ferreting out unusual music, determining its worth. She likes rediscovering neglected music that has real value.
She's sung many 18th-century operas that have delighted today's audiences once they've been dusted off and presented with passion.
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