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MUSIC REVIEW: Dilijan Group Is On A Mission

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  • MUSIC REVIEW: Dilijan Group Is On A Mission

    MUSIC REVIEW: DILIJAN GROUP IS ON A MISSION
    By Josef Woodard

    Los Angeles Times
    Calendar Live
    April 1 2008
    CA

    Concert at Zipper Hall is a tapestry of Armenian works.

    A stated goal of the impressive Dilijan Chamber Music Series, now in
    its third season, has been to celebrate the riches of Armenian music
    and give a forum to Armenian musicians based in Los Angeles and beyond.

    By blending Armenian music with that of other cultures, Dilijan (named
    after an Armenian resort city) weaves a tapestry of a larger culture.

    That mission reached a high point Sunday afternoon at Zipper Hall
    with the U.S. premieres of three fascinating Armenian pieces, by
    Artur Avanesov, Eduard Hayrapetian and Tigran Mansurian (who was
    in the hall). Armenian strengths aside, the program was also neatly
    divided between Armenian and Hungarian music, and it was a Hungarian
    composer whose voice rose above the others.

    Gyorgy Ligeti's trio for horn, violin and piano, "Hommage a Brahms,"
    has an unfair advantage in that it is, as violinist and series
    director Movses Pogossian rightly told the crowd, a "crown jewel"
    of chamber music literature. Wisely, Pogossian programmed a seamless
    segue into the Ligeti out of Gyorgy Kurtag's short, coolly evocative
    "Tre Pezzi." That 1979 piece demonstrates Kurtag's keen ability to
    suggest a dream state through music -- neither a pleasant nor a harsh
    dream but a place dislodged from rational reality.

    Ligeti's horn trio, played with mesmerizing aplomb by horn player
    Richard Todd, pianist Vicki Ray and Pogossian, was a stunner, surely
    one of the chamber music highlights of the season in the Southland.

    The Brahms connection is oblique, hinted at in phrasing and structural
    elements, but the harmonic language is Ligeti's seductive tough talk,
    expressed in complex, surprising and cathartic sweeps of energy.

    Avanesov, the youngest composer on the bill (born in 1980), projects
    a strong and sensitive assurance in " . . . leise . . . ", a short
    piece for piano and clarinet played solidly by Armen Guzelimian
    and Phil O'Connor, respectively. A subtle and airy thing, it wafts
    on romantic and impressionistic influences, though clearly from a
    contemporary starting point, and it whetted one's appetite for more
    from this promising composer.

    Hayrapetian's "Sonata for Two Violins and Piano," circa 1988,
    craftily mixes a neo-Romantic spirit with tonalities and melodic
    synchronizations that move beguilingly in and out of focus.

    Violinists Pogossian and Endre Granat were the suitably dizzying
    conversationalists.

    Mansurian has gained increasing attention in recent years, partly
    through his expanding international exposure via ECM recordings. What
    we heard, though, was a pocket-sized 1965 piece written when the
    composer was in his 20s. Mansurian's "Little Suite," played by
    Guzelimian, is an admixture of gnarly dissonance, folkish asides and
    otherwise Bartok-ish manners. It led naturally into the concert's
    closer, Bartok's "Contrasts."

    The most familiar piece of the afternoon, "Contrasts" is a melange
    of the composer's classic modernism and jazzy flavorings, written for
    clarinetist Benny Goodman and violinist Josef Szigeti in 1938. Here,
    the exacting performing parties were O'Connor, Granat and Guzelimian.

    To have a Bartok work as the closest thing to a war horse on a concert
    program says a lot about the courage and exploratory spirit of the
    Dilijan project. Keep an ear out.
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