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  • Maestro drops baton for mic

    Barrie Examiner (Ontario)
    September 8, 2007 Saturday

    Maestro drops baton for mic

    by Susan Doolan


    The founder of Opera Belcanto sets aside his baton this month to take
    to the stage and sing.

    It's the first time David Varjabed will perform in Barrie. Slated to
    be a fundraiser for the local opera company, Varjabed is also
    featuring a number of solists.

    "As a singer, you always like singing and love to perform. Plus,
    everybody knows me, I'm an opera singer. They don't leave me alone,"
    he said. "So I decided to do it."

    Many who knew of Varjabed's reputation as an internationally known
    singer of classical music and opera had never heard the baritone
    sing, because he cut back on performing after his mother died several
    years ago.

    Instead, he continued to teach. Two years ago, encouraged by the
    communities in south Simcoe, started an opera company.

    Since then, Opera Belcanto has staged seven concerts showcasing
    popular songs from famous operas. Four of those concerts were held in
    Barrie and a couple more are slated for the 2007-08 season.

    It is opera singer, conductor and voice teacher Varjabed who has
    attracted these talented singers to the professional-level,
    non-profit opera company.

    Many are also his students, up-and-coming opera stars including
    university music students and graduates. Five of these students,
    including 12-year-old Russian-born soprano Ekaterina Chelekova, will
    be featured at a concert at the end of September.

    The concert is a fundraiser for the opera company.

    All of the singers, whether they are his students, part of Opera
    Belcanto's chorus or soloists with the company, are trained in the
    Bel Canto technique. It's an Italian voice training style of
    breathing and projection that is unique to Italy, and the reason so
    many of that country's opera singers have become so famous. Varjabed
    calls it a science that is highly individual to each singer.

    Translated, bel canto means "beautiful singing."

    Varjabed has sung professionally across the globe for three decades.
    Born in Armenia, he began singing at four years old in boys' choirs,
    and at age nine, conducted an 85-member church choir.

    He debuted in La Traviata in 1971, while still at school, studying
    for his masters in opera performance and voice pedagogy at the
    Komitas National Conservatory in Yerevan, Armenia.

    He graduated with the highest honours and won a competition as the
    "most promising young artist in Armenia."

    Following a successful stint with the Armenian National Opera
    Company, Varjabed came to Canada in 1974, at age 20, where he was
    immediately accepted into the Canadian Opera Company with a five-year
    contract. Once established here, he brought his wife and baby
    daughter to Canada.

    Since then, he's toured Europe, the United States, the former USSR
    and the Middle East.

    While Varjabed was encouraged by the communities of Beeton (where the
    opera company rehearses), Alliston and New Tecumseth to start Opera
    Belcanto, he had additional reasons for taking it on.

    He felt there was a lot of talented singers in the area that had no
    place to perform and limited prospects to grow a professional career.

    He said the opera company serves as a training ground and launching
    pad for singers he maintains are better than the Canadian Opera
    Company.

    Varjabed also loves teaching and has continued to take on students
    throughout his own professional career.

    "I love it," he said. "I've seen many young people desire to be good
    singers, and to bring them to a professional level is very beautiful.
    It's a duty."

    Varjabed performs along with five soloists on Saturday, Sept. 29 at
    First Christian Reformed Church at 33 Shirley Ave., in Barrie, 7:30
    p.m.

    Tickets are $30 for adults, $25 for seniors, $20 for students under
    the age of 18, available by calling 435-3730.
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