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Vancouver Symphony Debuts Mikhail Simonyan

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  • Vancouver Symphony Debuts Mikhail Simonyan

    VANCOUVER SYMPHONY DEBUTS MIKHAIL SIMONYAN

    HULIQ
    March 27 2009
    SC

    The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra proudly presents Mikhail Simonyan -
    a violinist hailed as having "a flawless, liquid line and ravishing
    tone," by The Washington Post - performing Chausson's Poeme and
    Ravel's Tzigane.

    The program, Fine French Fantasies, will be conducted by Vancouver
    Symphony Orchestra Assistant Conductor Evan Mitchell and also
    features Berlioz's Le corsaire, Op. 21, Ravel's Mother Goose Suite
    and Dukas' The Sorcerer's Apprentice. The concerts take place on
    Saturday, March 28 at 8pm and Sunday, March 29 at 2pm at the Orpheum
    Theatre and will mark Mr. Simonyan's debut with the Vancouver Symphony
    Orchestra. Marking another debut, this concert features Evan Mitchell's
    2008/2009 Musically Speaking concert debut. These two great young
    artistic talents team up for a beautiful concert of French repertoire.

    Mikhail Simonyan, who hails from Novosibirsk (the same city that Vadim
    Repin and Maxim Vengerov call home), began to study the violin at
    the age of five. As part of the first generation of artists to forge
    careers in an era with substantially decreased government support,
    he has blazed a trail for young musicians in Russia. In 1999, at 13,
    Mr. Simonyan made his acclaimed New York debut at Lincoln Center
    with the American Russian Young Artists Orchestra (ARYO) and his
    debut in St. Petersburg, Russia at the Mariinsky (Kirov) Theatre in
    ARYO's joint concert with the Mariinsky Youth Orchestra, performing
    the Szymanowski Violin Concerto No. 1.

    Mr. Simonyan has earned first prize awards at the all-Russia
    Competition in Saint Petersburg, the Siberian Violin Competition,
    the National Prize Prizvanie in Moscow, and the Salon de Virtuosi in
    New York. He is a winner of the Yehudi Menuhin Foundation Award, and
    received the 2000 Virtuoso of the Year award in Saint Petersburg. In
    2003, the National Academy of Achievement selected him for an award
    in the Performing Arts. In 2005, he received the highest level
    of recognition when President Putin received him at the Kremlin,
    in acknowledgment of his status as one of Russia's most promising
    young musicians.

    Now in his early twenties, Mr. Simonyan is recognized as one of
    the great talents of his generation. Celebrated for his "breadth,
    lyricism and fleet technique" by The New York Times and compared to
    master violinist David Oistrakh "on a good day" by The Miami Herald,
    Mr. Simonyan proves that he has the talent and dedication to be one
    of the great talents of our time.

    Evan Mitchell, conductor

    Conductor Evan Mitchell is proving to be one of Canada's most promising
    young conductors. Currently the Assistant Conductor of the Vancouver
    Symphony, Evan is slated to play a key role in programming, artistic
    development and of course performance with the Vancouver Symphony
    Orchestra, leading the orchestra through a wide assortment of concerts.

    Equally at home with chamber music, opera and full symphonic
    masterpieces, Evan has enjoyed critical acclaim with recent operatic
    performances including Britten's Albert Herring, Ward's The Crucible,
    Hindemith's "Hin und Zuruck" and the world premiere of Glenn James'
    opera "To Daniel." Evan also won positions with the National Academy
    Orchestra of Canada for four consecutive years as both conductor and
    percussionist and now holds the title of Associate Mentor with the
    orchestra. Highlights include conducting violin soloist Elizabeth
    Pitcairn, the concertmaster of the New West Symphony and owner of
    the Mendelssohn Stradivarius 1720 "Red Violin."

    Evan is an advocate of contemporary music. Recently the resident
    conductor of NUMUS New Music Ensemble, he has premiered several new
    works, toured across Canada conducting a festival of contemporary
    Chinese music and recorded works for the CMC, collaborating with such
    Canadian artists as the Pentaedre Wind Quintet, Penderecki String
    Quartet and Dancetheatre David Earle. Evan has also conducted and
    performed works during the highly acclaimed Open Ears Festival.

    As a percussionist Evan has enjoyed equal success. In demand as a
    recitalist and concert soloist (recent performances of the Rosauro
    Marimba concerto and the Mayuzumi Xylophone concerto), Evan's
    percussive performance has been hailed as "breathtaking in (his)
    sensitivity" as well as "wizardly" and "awe-inspiring." Evan has
    toured Canada, the United States and abroad, including a memorable
    tour as Canadian ambassador during a concert tour with virtuoso
    composer/percussionist Nebojsa Zivkovic, during which he performed as
    concert soloist and along with the composer in a sold out performance
    of Zivkovic's celebrated "Trio per Uno" at the Stuttgart International
    Theatre. Evan is a frequent performer with the Kitchener-Waterloo
    Symphony and has performed with Orchestra London and the Toronto
    Symphony. Evan has also been a faculty member and guest lecturer
    with Wilfrid Laurier University, primarily as Music Director of the
    Flute Ensemble.

    Awards include First Prize at the Werlde Musik Kontest in Kerkrade,
    Netherlands, finalist at the upcoming TD Canada Trust Elora Festival
    Competition and Winner in Marching category as part of the Kavaliers
    DCI Drum Corps. Evan is also the winner of the 2006 Pioneer Leading
    Edge Arts Award.

    Evan is a graduate of Wilfrid Laurier University where he completed a
    Bachelor of Music degree as a percussion major; he is also a graduate
    of the University of Toronto, where he studied on a full scholarship
    sponsored by Elmer Iseler and Victor Feldbrill, earning a Masters
    degree in conducting. His principal conducting teachers include Raffi
    Armenian, Doreen Rao, Paul Pulford and Boris Brott. Additionally,
    he has studied and performed in concert series with Denise Grant,
    Martin Fischer-Dieskau and most notably, Helmuth Rilling, in the
    inaugural Toronto Bach festival.

    Mikhail Simonyan, violin

    At just 22 years of age, Mikhail Simonyan is already recognized as
    one of the most celebrated talents of his generation. The New York
    Times has praised his, "breadth, lyricism and fleet technique," and
    reported that "Mr. Simonyan play[s] as if every note counted." The
    Miami Herald has declared, "Mikhail Simonyan . . . played with the
    poise, perfection and inner burning fire of a master like David
    Oistrakh - in his prime on a good night."

    Mr. Simonyan has performed with, among others, the Russian National
    Orchestra, the Kirov Orchestra, the Moscow Chamber Orchestra,
    the Kremlin Chamber Orchestra, the Vienna Tonkunstler Orchestra,
    the Novosibirsk Philharmonic, and the Moscow Virtuosi. He has
    worked with conductors including Valery Gergiev, Mikhail Pletnev,
    Constantine Orbelian, Vladimir Spivakov, Arnold Katz, Kristjan Jarvi,
    Leon Botstein, and the late Yehudi Menuhin.

    Performance highlights for Mr. Simonyan include a solo appearance
    with Leonard Slatkin at the Kennedy Center's 35th Anniversary Gala
    in 2001, after which he made his official debut with Maestro Slatkin
    and the National Symphony Orchestra in 2002. Later that same year,
    he performed at the Davos World Economic Summit.

    In 2004, Mr. Simonyan made his debut with the Kirov Orchestra
    of the Mariinsky Theatre under Maestro Valery Gergiev in Eduoard
    Lalo's Symphonie Espagnole at the Grand Opera House in Wilmington,
    DE, and at Mechanics Hall in Worcester. Also in 2004, he made his
    subscription debut with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra performing
    the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto with Maestro Gergiev. He also soloed
    with Maestro Constantine Orbelian at the Moscow State Conservatory's
    Great Hall, and in Saint Petersburg with the Novosibirsk Philharmonic.

    In addition, he was selected to appear at the Horatio Alger Awards
    Dinner in Washington DC. In spring of 2004, he performed the
    Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto at SUNY Performing Arts Center and with
    the Boston Pops Symphony Orchestra.

    In the autumn of 2004, after studying at the Curtis Institute of Music
    in Philadelphia, Mr. Simonyan returned to Russia and was immediately
    in demand by the leading Orchestra's of his home country. After his
    debut with the Russian National Orchestra, the Moscow Times wrote,
    "... he seems destined to be ranked on the same Superstar level as
    fellow Novosibirsk natives Maxim Vengerov and Vadim Repin." Highlights
    of the 2004-2005 season included his debut in Vienna's Musikverein as
    soloist with Maestro Kristjan Jarvi and the Tonkunstler Orchestra, a
    highly acclaimed solo recital debut in Washington D.C. at the Kennedy
    Center, as well as recitals and orchestral performances in New York
    and other cities across the US.

    Other performance highlights of Mr. Simonyan's past seasons include
    a tour of the United States with the Kirov Orchestra of the Mariinsky
    Theatre under Maestro Valery Gergiev, concerts with Maestro Kristjan
    Jarvi and the Russian National Orchestra, his debut at the Prague
    Spring Festival under Maestro Pletnev, and recitals in Europe, Asia
    and the United States.

    Highlights of Mr. Simonyan's current concert season include debuts at
    the Wigmore Hall in London and at the Berlin Philharmonie; his debut at
    the Teatro Municipal in Santiago, Chile, performing the Bruch Violin
    Concerto; a recital during the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Musikfestival
    in Germany as part of the "Junge Elite" concert series; appearances
    with the Seoul Philharmonic, the Vienna Tonkunstler Orchestra at the
    Musikverein, and the Vancouver Symphony; and recitals in the United
    States and Russia. In addition, his much anticipated debut recording
    of the Prokofiev Sonatas for Violin and Piano, recorded with Grammy
    Award-winning producer Adam Abeshouse, will be released in 2008.

    Mr. Simonyan continues to work with Victor Danchenko in the United
    States and now lives in Philadelphia. He performs on a Zygmuntowicz
    violin. He is managed worldwide by Tanja Dorn at IMG Artists. --
    www.vancouversymphony.ca
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