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CAIRO: Glorious Gayane

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  • CAIRO: Glorious Gayane

    GLORIOUS GAYANE
    Amal Choucri Catta goes Yerevan

    Al-Ahram Weekly, Egypt
    April 26 2007

    Armenian National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre, Yerevan,
    presenting "Gayane" by Aram Khachaturian, conductor Karen Durgaryan,
    choreographer Hovhannes Divanyan, Cairo Opera House Main Hall, 15
    April, 8pm; Sayed Darwish Theatre, Alexandria 18 April, 8pm.

    The music soared as the curtain rose to the colourful prospect of
    an Armenian village with lovely girls dancing in beautiful costumes,
    while Maestro Karen Durgaryan drove his orchestra to incredible heights
    of sound and percussions seemed to be shrieking their delight into
    the auditorium.

    That night, the Armenian National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre
    was presenting Aram Khachaturian's three-act ballet "Gayane", to
    a full house: it was one of the sunniest choreographic creations,
    signed Hovhannes Divanyan, a leading professional ballet dancer in
    Armenia, who teaches at the Yerevan State Choreographic School and has
    performed in many countries. Combining classical ballet sur pointes
    with Armenian folk dances, he succeeded in creating an enchanting
    if rather unusual language of gesture and movement, with excellent
    solos, thrilling pas-de-deux and fascinating formations of the corps
    de ballet. Lights were low and the ambiance sentimental in romantic
    love scenes, while they became bright and played on vivid textures in
    sequences of joy and happiness. There were, however, moments of sorrow
    and sadness, when the entire scene turned dark and grey, while the
    performer was in a dramatic state of hopelessness and anguish. Such
    was the case with Giko who loved Gayane, but was not loved by her.

    As the story goes in this version, Gayane, a lovely village girl,
    loves Armen, a likewise lovely village boy. There is, however,
    a third party in the show: Giko. He is jealous, watching the happy
    couple and realising Gayane was never meant for him. He therefore
    decides to kidnap her, but Armen and the village people discover his
    whereabouts and Giko is compelled to leave the village. Emotionally,
    this is one of the most painful moments: it is, however, soon
    forgotten, for Gayane and Armen are married in Act Three with the
    entire corps de ballet celebrating the wedding. In this final act,
    the famous sabre dance gloriously concludes the performance, while
    the Maestro is granted a special ovation.

    It is generally accepted that the ballet's first and second versions
    of Perm in 1942 and Leningrad in 1952, were in four acts, and the plot
    took place during World War Two. In that version Giko was Gayane's
    husband and a traitor dealing with the enemy. Gayane and her lover
    Armen were against him and the entire plot seemed at the time to be a
    masterpiece of Armenian patriotism. After the war, however, the plot
    underwent certain changes while being successfully adapted to the new
    post-war situation. The music remained the same and the ballet was
    applauded wherever and whenever it was performed. At Cairo Opera's
    Main Hall, the audience cheered all performers, with extra bravos
    for the Maestro.

    Born in 1969 in Yerevan, Karen Durgaryan graduated in 1994: he
    had studied chamber music and was a flute soloist at the state
    conservatoire before turning to conducting. In 1995 he was appointed
    associate conductor and was resident conductor of the Yerevan Symphony
    Orchestra. Winning fame and public acclaim Durgaryan conducted a
    number of major concerts of the Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra with
    the celebrated Lebanese prima donna, Fairouz. Since March 2001 he has
    been principal conductor of the Yerevan Opera and Ballet Theatre. At
    Cairo's Main Hall, his performance was spectacular. But so was
    Khachaturian's music.

    Aram Khachaturian, probably the most famous Armenian composer to this
    day, was born in Kodzhori, a suburb of Tiflis, on 6 June 1903 to a
    family of bookbinders. Though musically quite talented, he was 19
    when he entered the Gniesin Musical School in Moscow in 1922, from
    1929 to 1934 studying at the Moscow Conservatoire. He also worked
    with Serguey Prokofiev after the latter's definite return to Russia
    in 1933. By then, Khachaturian had written his famous "Toccata",
    the trio for piano, violin and clarinet, as well as a suite de danse,
    while simultaneously obtaining a degree in biology from the department
    of physics and mathematics at Moscow State University.

    Mainly influenced by Armenian folklore and traditional music,
    his works are particularly colourful. Written in 1934 for the 15th
    anniversary of the then Soviet Armenian Republic, his First Symphony
    is reminiscent of his endeavours for musical change, which he finally
    achieved in 1936 with his piano concerto dedicated to Lev Oborin,
    the famous Russian pianist.

    It is a brilliant composition filled with ethnic flavour, complex
    and expressive rhythms, audacious harmonies and marvellous orchestral
    hues. Lyricism and virtuosity are further expressed in his concerto
    for violin written in 1940 and dedicated to the renowned Russian
    David Oistrach, considered one of the greatest violinists of his day.

    It was, however, his two ballets "Gayane" and "Spartacus" that
    were acclaimed by Moscow critics as masterpieces, together with
    four orchestral suites for the international symphonic repertoire,
    and three orchestral suites from "Gayane". The author of some 50
    works, Khachaturian began conducting in 1950, appearing in several
    countries with programmes of his own works. He was the first composer
    to place Armenian music in an international context: though his forms
    are Western-based, they are enriched with innovations influenced
    by the art of ashugh, the ornamental style of mediaeval monody and
    the purity of national idioms, as well as with peasant songs and
    urban instrumental folklore. During his lifetime, Khachaturian won
    international recognition: elected full member of the Armenian Soviet
    Republic's Academy of Sciences in 1963, honourary Academician of the
    Italian Music Academy "Santa Cecilia" in 1960, honourary professor
    of the Mexican Conservatoire and corresponding member of the Academy
    of Arts of the German Democratic Republic in 1960. He died on 1 May
    1978 in Moscow and was buried in Yerevan.

    With one show in Cairo and another in Alexandria, the Gayane
    performances celebrated the 15th anniversary of the establishment
    of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Egypt. Gayane being a
    most welcome newcomer to the Cairo Opera House, local audiences would
    have preferred a greater number of performances. Nevertheless, after
    Giko's sad retreat from the flamboyant village, Gayane's wedding was
    a smashing hit and the sabre dance a sensational feat.

    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/842/cu1.htm

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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