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Saving Face With Sibling Revelry

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  • Saving Face With Sibling Revelry

    SAVING FACE WITH SIBLING REVELRY
    By Jay Nordlinger

    New York Sun, NY
    May 2 2007

    He had played concertos in New York, but never a recital - and Sergey
    Khachatryan remedied that on Monday night. The young Armenian violinist
    - b. 1985 - appeared in Zankel Hall.

    And he began with maybe the mightiest of all works for solo violin:
    the Chaconne from Bach's Partita No. 2 in D minor. You hear this
    so often in transcription, it was almost a relief to hear it on its
    original instrument.

    And Mr. Khachatryan did many things well in it: He was marked and
    resolute - undoubting. And he was ever attentive to the melodic line.

    But this was not exactly a spiritual experience. And Mr. Khachatryan
    had technical problems, to boot.

    He was sometimes flat, sometimes fuzzy, sometimes rough. A squeak
    or two came out. And his sound was now and then sickly. Zankel Hall
    can be an unforgiving place, its acoustics all-exposing. By the way,
    the nearby subway trains seemed louder than ever. Nothing like a
    solo-violin work to make them deafening. I could not agree more with
    my colleague Fred Kirshnit: This situation is not "interesting" or
    "funky" or "cool" or "urban." It's a real shame.

    After the Bach, Mr. Khachatryan played the Franck Sonata, joined
    by the pianist Lusine Khachatryan. Mother? Sister? Aunt? Sister -
    a couple of years older. She played the Franck with notable beauty
    of tone - pearly - and notable smoothness. She is not just the sister
    of a young star, but a musician in her own right.
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