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The Keys To His Future

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  • The Keys To His Future

    THE KEYS TO HIS FUTURE
    By Joyce Rudolph

    Glendale News Press, CA
    July 14 2007

    Pianist Hovsep Hajibekyan will be performing at the Brand Park Recital
    Hall in Glendale Saturday.

    Hovsep Hajibekyan took the year off from college to pursue a personal
    goal - to perfect his talent on the piano.

    The Glendale resident is calling his public recital today a final
    test that will show how much he improved over the year, he said.

    "It's one thing to play well, but it's another thing to perform in
    front of people an entire program and manage to keep the concentration
    and not let nerves take hold of you," he said. "It's part of the
    learning process. it's part of this quest to improve."

    For the last three months he has been practicing three hours a day
    in preparation for the recital, he said.

    In addition, he has been working as an usher at the Los Angeles Music
    Center and has watched the professionals, picking up their nuances
    along the way, he said.

    "I got to hear amazing concerts and learned valuable lessons from
    listening and watching others perform," he said. "It was a paid
    education."

    Hajibekyan is now a lot more confident with his playing, he said,
    and is enthusiastic about his recital.

    The program consists of works by Frederic Chopin, Franz Liszt,
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Arno Babajanyan, he said.

    Hajibekyan's former instructor, Jungwon Jin, a Glendale Community
    College adjunct professor, recently heard him play Babajanyan's
    "Vagharshapat Dance."

    "I was not familiar with the piece and he was able to communicate
    it to me and make me understand it," she said. "And it's a very
    beautiful piece, and a very interesting piece, because it has Armenian
    folk tunes in it. He was able to bring out the folk quality of its
    Armenian origin."

    Born in Armenia, Hajibekyan started the piano when he was 8. But it
    wasn't until he was much older that he became serious about playing,
    he said.

    His family moved from Armenia to Glendale in 2000. He graduated from
    Glendale High School four years later and continued taking private
    lessons on and off, he said.

    The 21-year-old political science major completed two years of study
    at Glendale Community College and was accepted to UCLA and UC Berkeley.

    He starts UC Berkeley in August, and will work toward a bachelor's
    degree and then his master's, he said. He is intrigued by foreign
    policy and the political process here and abroad and is hoping for
    a career with the state department, he said.

    But music is his personal goal.

    "I know how I want it to sound, but the hard part for me is how to
    get it across, in a technical aspect," he said. "I want to play as
    well as I can."

    He is not hoping to become a concert pianist, because that takes more
    dedication than he is willing to give, he said. But he wanted to rid
    himself of some bad habits at the keyboard and believed this was the
    perfect opportunity to take a break from his studies and dedicate
    the time to his music, he said.

    "Once you finish college, life sucks you in, [and there is] not much
    time for fixing things on personal level," he said.
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