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Iranian composer adds zest to performance

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  • Iranian composer adds zest to performance

    San Jose Mercury News , CA
    Jan 10 2005

    Iranian composer adds zest to performance

    By Richard Scheinin

    San Jose's Jon Nakamatsu has a way of mixing the tried and true with
    the truly unusual. For a couple years now, the pianist has performed
    stirring and almost entirely forgotten music by Josef Wölfl, the
    Austrian composer who was a friendly rival of Beethoven's in their
    day. Now Nakamatsu has found another worthy candidate for stardom:
    Loris Tjeknavorian, the living, Iranian-born composer of Armenian
    descent whose piano music is drenched with ethnic rhythms and
    alluring melodies -- and is pretty much never performed in this
    country.

    Saturday night at Le Petit Trianon in San Jose, Nakamatsu offered a
    bracing recital -- his first here in a year -- in which wild card
    Tjeknavorian sat comfortably amid the tried and true.

    There was Chopin, whose 19th-century mazurkas and polonaises opened
    the gates to Tjeknavorian-style ethnicity in modern music. There was
    Liszt, who built on Chopin's bejeweled harmonic world. And there was
    Rachmaninoff, who flew off in all sorts of crazy new harmonic
    directions. His ``Variations on a Theme by Corelli,'' the best part
    of Nakamatsu's program, runs a Spanish folk melody through 20
    outrageous turnarounds.

    The recital, part of the Steinway Society's ongoing series, began
    with yet another famous incorporator of folk music: Scarlatti. The
    Italian loved Spanish song, rhythm and guitars, blending them into
    his nearly 600 Baroque-period keyboard sonatas, many technically
    bold. Nakamatsu chose four for the program, which repeated Sunday. He
    performed them with an idiomatic clarity that captured the trilling
    metallic brilliance of the harpsichord, Scarlatti's instrument.

    Next came the Rachmaninoff, which elaborates on the Corelli theme
    known as ``La Folia.'' Rachmaninoff took this Baroque borrowing of a
    Spanish folk melody and ran it through his visionary blender. And
    Nakamatsu -- voicing each chord just so, infusing the music with
    crisp rhythms -- stamped each variation with personality: marching or
    galumphing, pouncing like a panther or lolling about like an
    elephant. Poor ``La Folia'' seemed to have wandered into a strange
    harmonic universe, pointing to jazz, Sondheim, even a Beatles ballad
    or two.

    Chopin followed: First, a liquid nocturne, then a steely scherzo with
    daunting double-octave sequences and clashing rhythms.

    After intermission, came Tjeknavorian. It turns out there's a story
    behind Nakamatsu's interest in this music: His lifelong teacher,
    Marina Derryberry, attended conservatory in Tehran with Tjeknavorian.
    In 2001, Tjeknavorian conducted at the San Francisco Opera where, for
    the first time in decades, he and Derryberry met. Nakamatsu attended
    the reunion and soon came under the composer's spell.

    Saturday, he played five of seven dances from Tjeknavorian's ``Danses
    Fantastiques,'' all evoking, Nakamatsu said, a ``sense of heritage --
    the spirit of Armenian music.''

    The first three dances were understated. There were swirling figures
    over a virile, ostinato bass line. There was a haunting modal melody
    set to chorded accompaniment. It sounded like a mother's hummed song
    to a child and had an unresolved ending; perhaps the child fell
    asleep.

    One dance kept three serpentine lines moving: the ostinato, the
    melody, and a descending chromatic sequence. The music was at times
    trance-like, then grew flashier, full of rippling pools of
    ultra-Romantic melody, á la Liszt.

    And it was with Liszt that Nakamatsu closed the program. Truth be
    told, midway through the Mephisto Waltz No. 1, a brutally taxing
    piece for any pianist, I began thinking that unceasing virtuosity
    isn't always exciting. I would have preferred to hear a couple more
    dances by Tjeknavorian. Maybe next time.

    http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/entertainment/music/10605906.htm
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