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Folk Songs 'Like A Balm' To Armenian People

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  • Folk Songs 'Like A Balm' To Armenian People

    FOLK SONGS 'LIKE A BALM' TO ARMENIAN PEOPLE
    By: Alison Mayes

    Winnipeg Free Press
    http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/entertainme nt/music/folk-songs-like-a-balm-to-armenian-people -42177657.html?viewAllComments=y
    March 31 2009
    Canada

    She's a Canadian opera superstar who dances to her own drummer,
    taking time for projects outside her usual -- pardon the pun -- arias.

    Isabel Bayrakdarian performed the ethereal song Evenstar on the movie
    soundtrack of The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers.

    She loaned her stunning soprano to the band Delirium on its
    Grammy-nominated dance remix, Angelicus.

    But the project closest to Bayrakdarian's heart recently is a tribute
    to her Armenian heritage.

    The four-time Juno Award winner makes her long-awaited Winnipeg
    debut tonight with the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra in a program of
    Armenian compositions under guest conductor Alain Trudel. Tickets
    are still available.

    The 34-year-old soprano says she doesn't feel like a newcomer here
    because the MCO accompanied her on a six-city tour last October,
    culminating in a concert at New York's legendary Carnegie Hall.

    "Having done a tour, you become friends with most of the orchestra
    members," she says in lightly accented English.

    The ravishing Bayrakdarian was born in Lebanon to Armenian parents. The
    family immigrated to Toronto when she was in her teens. Her husband,
    pianist Serouj Kradjian, is also Armenian-Canadian. They have a
    one-year-old son and live in Toronto.

    Although she grew up singing in church, Bayrakdarian earned a degree
    in biomedical engineering and didn't seriously consider a musical
    career until she started winning voice competitions. She vaulted
    to fame after winning Placido Domingo's Operalia contest nine years
    ago. She has performed in many of the world's top opera houses.

    The singer had grandparents on both sides who survived the Armenian
    genocide, in which more than one million Armenians were exterminated
    during and just after the First World War.

    Last fall, she released a CD devoted to Gomidas Vartabed (1869-1935),
    a revered composer and ethnologist who is credited with saving Armenian
    folk music from oblivion. "Without him, there would be no Armenian
    music today," says Bayrakdarian.

    The often-haunting folk songs that Gomidas preserved and interpreted
    are touchstones for Armenians worldwide. During the tour with the MCO,
    the soloist would look into the audience and see Armenians mouthing
    the words to Gomidas's songs along with her.

    "It was tremendously moving for them, for our music to be sung on
    stages and given the recognition it deserves....

    "The perpetrator (of the genocide), Turkey, still hasn't accepted
    responsibility and still denies it. For us, closure hasn't happened
    yet. So for the Armenian audience... it's like a balm, to hear these
    songs -- an affirmation that we have survived."

    In 2004, Bayrakdarian made her first pilgrimage to Armenia, captured
    in a moving CBC-TV documentary called A Long Journey Home.

    The emotional peak of the trip, she remembers, came when she stood
    inside an ancient cathedral. The connection to her ancestral people
    struck her so deeply that she and Kradjian returned there for their
    wedding.

    "That was the moment," she says, "when I felt I belonged."

    [email protected]

    CON CERT PREVIEW

    Isabel Bayrakdarian with the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra Tonight at
    7:30 p.m.

    Westminster United Church Tickets $26.50
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