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Soprano Bayrakdarian Soars At Sunday Afternoons

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  • Soprano Bayrakdarian Soars At Sunday Afternoons

    SOPRANO BAYRAKARDIAN SOARS AT SUNDAY AFTERNOONS
    By Enrique Fernandez

    Miami Herald, FL
    April 4 2006

    As she proved Sunday afternoon, Isabel Bayrakdarian is the complete
    singer. With talent and beauty to burn, the Canadian-Armenian soprano,
    accompanied on piano by her husband Serouj Kradjian, ran through a
    diverse repertoire that showcased her range -- and not just vocal.

    That range is impressive indeed. Not only can she hit the high notes
    with apparent ease and run through coloratura passages, like she
    did in Rossini's Una voce un poco fa from The Barber of Seville,
    but she is complete control of her instrument.

    She can stop dead or turn on a dime. And while some classical
    singers appear to be showcasing vocal calisthenics, Bayrakdarian
    uses her skills for dramatic purposes. In Plainte d'amour, a Pauline
    Viardot-Garcia composition on a Chopin mazurka, the singer's sudden
    stop signaled a sob. She balanced it with another mazurka-inspired
    piece, Aime-moi, that was playful and flirtatious. With a voice so
    rich in dramatic power, one longed to hear Bayrakdarian in a full
    opera role.

    The singer can handle a wide array of material with equal virtuosity
    and aplomb, swinging from Falla's folksy Siete canciones populares to
    some serious Clara Schumann lieder after the intermission. The Schumann
    began with a very lyrical song, but was followed by a dramatic and
    earthy one so sensual Bayrakdarian placed her hand not on her heart
    but on her hip and pelvis. She ended with a carpe diem themed song,
    flashing an occasional wicked gleam from her eyes.

    Bayrakdarian is particularly adept at handling Spanish material, like
    the Madrid song of the half Spanish, half French Viardot-Garcia, and
    of course, the Falla, which included songs from up north in Asturias
    and down south in Andalucía. Her roulades in that song mimicked the
    wail of flamenco most convincingly, and even more forcefully when
    she sang Ernesto Lecuona's popular Malagueña as an encore.

    Two encores she got. And standing ovations. And "bravas!" It is no
    exaggeration that Bayrakdarian had the audience eating out of the palm
    of her hand. And it is no disrespect to call her an entertainer --
    albeit of a very high order. Her dramatic skills are not confined to
    her voice. Unlike classical singers who just stand there and sing,
    Bayrakdarian acts out her songs.

    In Viardot-Garcia's L'Enfant et la Mre, a dialogue between a dying
    child and his mother, the soprano went from a tiny plaintive voice
    emanating from her throat to a deep tragic one that poured from her
    very core. And with a few contained gestures -- the pejorative use
    of the word "operatic" could never be applied to her -- she conveyed
    the full pathos of the song.'

    Skepticism is the attitude to assume when one sees on the program
    that a classical singer will do material from the American Songbook.

    Yet, Bayrakdarian's treatment of Gershwin walked the fine line between
    her classically trained voice and the Tin Pan Alley flavor of the
    songs. She seldom veered from what a fine soprano would do with
    such material as Someone to Watch Over Me or Love Is Here to Stay,
    yet what veering she did, like speaking some of the lines, worked as
    beautifully as hitting the high notes built into the compositions.

    And when she changed the gender of Embraceable You to "Come to mama",
    she seemed to be channeling one of Elizabeth Taylor's famous scenes. A
    critic could not be blamed for shouting "I'm yours!" were it not for
    Bayrakdarian first singing and then speaking boldly "I got my man"
    from I got rhythm while pointing to her husband.

    Who could ask for anything more?

    --Boundary_(ID_adHGiBsMaTw0P+PAXt8KHA)--
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