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Music Review: Trio Nareg Offers Armenian Rarities

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  • Music Review: Trio Nareg Offers Armenian Rarities

    MUSIC REVIEW: TRIO NAREG OFFERS ARMENIAN RARITIES
    By Richard S. Ginell, Special to the Times

    Calendar Live
    LA Times, CA
    May 25 2007

    The new group, which takes its name from a mystic poet, makes an
    impressive debut in the Chamber Music in Historic Sites series

    A new piano trio has come onto the scene, one that definitely has an
    identity of its own.

    Named after the 10th century Armenian mystic poet St. Gregory of
    Nareg, Trio Nareg aims to mix Armenian repertoire with European
    classics, not unlike the Dilijan Chamber Music Concert Series
    downtown. Appropriately, the trio made its debut Wednesday night in
    Burbank's Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America -
    another distinctly different locale for the Da Camera Society of
    Mount St. Mary's College's Chamber Music in Historic Sites series.

    Two of the musicians are noted veterans - pianist Armen Guzelimian
    and violinist Ani Kavafian - while cellist Ani Kalayjian represents
    a young, up-and-coming generation. On Wednesday, the balance of
    the instruments tended to strongly favor the piano and the violin,
    but this cannot be attributed solely to star power. For one thing,
    Guzelimian was manning an aircraft carrier of a piano, a 97-key
    Bosendorfer Imperial with the lid fully open.

    Yet already, one could hear a well-developed sense of give-and-take
    in Haydn's brief Trio in A, Hob. XV:9, with Guzelimian offering a
    particularly sharp, incisive presence (the Bosendorfer can serve
    classical-period music surprisingly well). The Mendelssohn Trio in
    C minor was a little rough in patches - especially the difficult,
    quicksilver scherzo - but the performance had life and impressive
    weight.

    Of greatest interest were the rarities from Armenia. Arno Babadjanian's
    Piano Trio turned out to be another powerful, unabashedly Romantic
    composition from this composer - a little easier on the Rachmaninoff
    sauce this time, highlighted by the juicy, gorgeous melody lines for
    the strings in the second movement before a boisterous folk-flavored
    finale.

    Tigran Mansurian's meditations and modernisms are more fashionable
    these days; his style is a good fit for the sleek sound of the ECM
    label, which has released a lot of his music. Yet the most striking
    thing about his Five Bagatelles - with its episodes of spare trance
    music and vehement mini-dances - is its symmetry, the arch-like shapes
    of each of the central three pieces and the work as a whole.

    Trio Nareg also played a lighthearted Edward Aprahamian scherzo that
    was loaded with tunes of local color.

    Everything sounded clear, if rather dry, in the ballroom-like Nazareth
    and Sima Kalaydjian Hall, which is very well-insulated from the noise
    of its next-door neighbor, Interstate 5.
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