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Toronto: An Exotic Evening Full Of Gems

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  • Toronto: An Exotic Evening Full Of Gems

    AN EXOTIC EVENING FULL OF GEMS
    By Ken Winters

    The Globe and Mail (Canada)
    May 28, 2007 Monday

    Amici
    Isabel Bayrakdarian, soprano
    Serouj Kradjian, pianist, arranger
    At Glenn Gould Studio
    In Toronto, Friday night

    Amici - Friends - ended their season Friday night with a stunning
    concert of Armenian, Spanish and Spanish-influenced vocal and
    instrumental music in an arresting balance.

    Soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian and her
    pianist-composer-arranger-accompanist husband Serouj Kradjian were
    together in the spotlight. Core Amici members clarinetist (and artistic
    director) Joaquin Valdepenas and cellist David Hetherington were there
    in crucial supporting roles, as was violinist Benjamin Bowman. And
    for the last three numbers the cello section was quadrupled, as if by
    visiting Valkyries, when Winona Zelenka, Roberta Janzen and Rachel
    Mercer joined Hetherington and the others for lush accompaniments
    of songs by the Argentinian Carlos Guastavino, the Spaniard Xavier
    Montsalvatge and the Brazilian Jayme Ovalle.

    The highlight of the richly exotic program, however, both in freshness
    and in worth, was a set of seven Armenian folk songs collected
    by Reverend Gomidas and arranged by Kradjian for soprano, piano,
    violin, clarinet and cello. The songs were having their Canadian
    premiere. Kradjian's arrangements were classy and strikingly effective,
    and Bayrakdarian's singing of them was ravishing.

    On a single hearing I have no hesitation in asserting that this set
    of songs, in these arrangements, is as vivid and enticing as the
    famous Auvergne folk song arrangements of Joseph Canteloube. As for
    Bayrakdarian's performance, it had an authority reminiscent of the
    legendary Madeleine Grey's in the Auvergne songs or of the fabled
    Conchita Supervia's in Manuel de Falla's Seven Spanish Folksongs. I
    think the proper term is ownership: Bayrakdarian sings these songs
    as if she owns them. Her voice takes on a fullness and a subtle
    expressive flexibility it does not always bring to the classics,
    beautifully and intelligently though she sings these, too.

    Another handsome set of songs that we too seldom hear - Seven Classic
    Spanish Songs, by Fernando Obradors - came after intermission. These
    were more in the formal recital mode, with just Bayrakdarian and
    Kradjian performing. The tough and touching El Vito is the third song,
    but every one is a gem and the team performed all of them superbly.

    Two instrumental trios bookended the two song sets. The Armenian-born
    Soviet composer Aram Khachaturian's Trio for clarinet, violin and cello
    opened the concert, and the Armenian composer Arno Babadjanian's Trio
    for violin, cello and piano followed the Obradors.

    The Khachaturian had that composer's typical difficulty in achieving
    real structural movement in his bass-line, but there was much
    interesting detail in the clarinet and violin writing, and in the
    piano, too, when it wasn't just striking and sustaining those long-held
    pedal points. Valdepenas, Bowman and Kradjian played the work superbly
    and shone especially in the lively rhythms of the finale.

    The Babadjanian Trio was the other surprise of the evening: a major
    work for the classic piano trio which seems not yet to have found
    its niche in the repertoire, though it dates from 1952. Yes, it has
    echoes of Rachmaninoff in its discourse and even more of Cesar Franck
    in its chromatic enharmony; but only the best of both other composers,
    and much of its own, distinctive and vigorous. Bowman, Hetherington
    and Kradjian played it magnificently, with Bowman particularly fine
    in the exquisite opening of the Andante, and all three absolutely on
    their mettle in the five-to-the-bar finale. This was a real discovery.

    After it came the three songs with the Valkyrie reinforcements
    mentioned earlier, and with Bayrakdarian again in her glory. And then,
    the uproar of applause, and the encores. What a concert.
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