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Soprano's Ethnicity Gives Her Roots From Which To Grow An Exotic Sou

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  • Soprano's Ethnicity Gives Her Roots From Which To Grow An Exotic Sou

    SOPRANO'S ETHNICITY GIVES HER ROOTS FROM WHICH TO GROW AN EXOTIC SOUND
    By Paul Horsley

    Kansas City Star
    http://www.kansascity.com/entertainment/story /457270.html
    Jan 24 2008
    MO

    Isabel Bayrakdarian is not just a globe-trotting soprano, she's an
    Armenian-Canadian and proud of it.

    Her ethnic background is important enough to her that she mentions
    it in her official bio. Because, she said, it's an essential part of
    understanding who she is as an artist and a person.

    "My identity makes me feel unique because I can express and approach
    music having had a completely different database of emotions and
    experiences," said the Lebanese-born soprano, who immigrated with
    her family to Canada at age 14.

    "For about 2,000 years, our identity and our culture has been defined
    by the duality of keeping our language alive and keeping our faith
    alive. The Armenian language is unique: There is no other language
    that you can say it's related to."

    As a result, even when she sings Mozart - as she did last season
    in the Metropolitan Opera's "The Magic Flute" - you should hear the
    difference "because the approach or the sensitivity to a phrase is
    instinctively different."

    Critics and audiences have certainly heard the difference, and she's
    now one of the most sought-after lyric sopranos among us. On Saturday
    at the Folly Theater, she joins a long line of great opera stars who
    have sung recitals on the Harriman-Jewell Series.

    She'll be accompanied by her husband, New York-born composer and
    pianist John Musto.

    But there are other sides to the 30-something Bayrakdarian
    (ba-rok-DAH-rian) than opera, most notably her interest in Armenian
    folk and sacred music.

    She first sought vocal training, in fact, so that she could be a better
    singer in the Armenian church. The style of singing there is free and
    flowing, almost cantorial, she said, with "gorgeous, soaring lines."

    Perfect preparation, as it turned out, for a future opera singer. But
    that was the last thing on her mind at the time. Things began to take
    off during her college years, but her voice teacher still urged her
    to have a backup plan.

    She got a degree in biomedical engineering.

    You mean, like, cloning?

    "Yes, that's right," she said with a laugh. So far she hasn't had to
    use her degree to support herself, but having it gives her a freedom
    that she enjoys.

    "You can't imagine the times I've had the courage to say no to a role
    because in my mind I had the confidence that I always had something
    to fall back on. Mimi (in 'La Boheme') at 22 was not good for my
    voice. It was empowering that I had something else."

    Some of Bayrakdarian's other sidelines are as interesting as her
    opera career. It was her CD of Armenian hymns, "Joyous Light," that
    captured the ear of Hollywood composer Howard Shore, who immediately
    wanted to find out who she was.

    "This is the voice I've been looking for," Shore said and sought
    her out for the score of "The Two Towers," the second "Lord of the
    Rings" film.

    The silvery purity of Bayrakdarian's voice makes the haunting song
    "Evenstar" one of the score's highlights.

    Involvement with the film has brought the singer into contact with a
    whole new audience, a phenomenon that was repeated when she sang on
    a Grammy-nominated track for the electronica group Delerium.

    "I still get fan mail from people who've never, ever been exposed to
    opera," she said.

    People see her name on Shore's soundtrack or on Delerium's "Nuages
    du Monde." They Google it, follow the link to her Web site,
    bayrakdarian.com, and then listen to the sample tracks.
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