Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Life-affirming notes

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Life-affirming notes

    The National , UAE
    May 18 2009


    Life-affirming notes

    Gemma Champ
    Last Updated: May 17. 2009 5:29PM UAE / May 17. 2009 1:29PM GMT


    As the State Youth Orchestra of Armenia launched energetically into
    their third encore to the cheers and stomping of an enthusiastic
    audience at the Cultural Foundation on Saturday night, one was
    reminded of the many reasons that seeing young musicians give their
    all can be such a life-affirming event. These youngsters, in their
    late teens and early 20s, are all students of the Yerevan Komitas
    State Conservatory, led by the conductor and violinist and all-round
    impresario Sergey Smbatyan (born in 1987, if you can believe it). That
    means two things: firstly, they are all blindingly talented, and
    secondly, they are as yet unbowed by the difficulties and pains of
    competing in a career as a professional musician ` optimistic, in
    other words.

    And boy, did it show. In the surprisingly few moments during which the
    music did, perhaps, lack something in finesse or accuracy, there was
    always the real passion and vigour of youth to make up for it. That's
    one of the other joys of hearing young musicians: because they are not
    yet professionals, one can temporarily suspend those overly critical
    faculties that allow us to complain about a badly tuned trombone or
    sigh at an unbalanced string section, instead simply becoming immersed
    in a wave of music created by uncynical, talented kids.

    There was, it has to be said, a little trepidation before the concert
    began: the programme, not published before the event, looked extremely
    long, with two multi-movement items and three arias in the first half
    alone. Entrance was free, though, which produced an audience that was
    informal, mixed, ready to be pleased and, it seemed, genuinely excited
    about the music. As one Moroccan listener called Kamal said to me: `I
    didn't know the concert was on, but I just wandered in because it was
    free, and it's really wonderful.'

    As it turned out, what was indeed a very long programme flew by all
    too fast, even with those three encores and two extra folk songs
    movingly sung a cappella by the talented soprano Hasmik
    Torosyan. Smbatyan chased the string orchestra along at a cracking
    pace, starting with a pleasingly lyrical Serenade for Strings by
    Tchaikovsky, in which his control of the orchestra was impressive:
    those regal first chords, which could easily be suffused with
    sentimentality, were ostensibly restrained, almost vibrato-free, yet
    subtly revealing some genuine underlying emotion.

    The orchestra's discipline was showcased again in the second piece, a
    five-movement Concerto Barocco for violin and string orchestra, by the
    midcentury Armenian composer Edgar Hovhannisyan. Smbatyan took the
    violin solo, standing in front of the orchestra and conducting with a
    flick of his bow and a nod of his head, yet even in this rhythmically
    complex and harmonically dissonant work, with its shades of midcareer
    Shostakovich, the strings held it together and produced some exquisite
    solos from among the cellos, violas and supporting harpsichord.

    This also showed another of those great benefits of a young orchestra:
    with the idealism of youth and without the desperate need to appeal to
    market forces with easy-on-the-ear classics, the ensemble has the
    chance to introduce the audience to music they may never have heard
    and may never hear again ` a rare occurrence in a world of popular
    crossover artists and recording labels.

    As was to be expected, the Hovhannisyan had a mixed response, with its
    modernity appealing to perhaps only half of the listeners (chatting,
    murmuring and phone-tapping is a dead giveaway), though the whole
    audience was good-natured enough to applaud vigorously, safe in the
    knowledge that the next song was one of Puccini's most famous arias, O
    Mio Babbino Caro, from the opera Gianni Schicchi. Once one was able to
    overlook the soprano Torosyan's violent blue dress ` so skintight and
    glossy that it showed every swelling of the lung, every flicker of the
    diaphragm ` it became evident that the 26-year-old has some serious
    talent. Her sweet turn and winning expressions worked well in this
    pretty aria, in the slightly boring Vocalize by Babajanyan and in the
    lively waltz Il Bacio.

    The second half rattled along, with the slight but cheery Symphony No
    24 in B flat by Mozart (during which a few brass, woodwind and
    percussion finally got to join the party), Torosyan's return for
    Verdi's aria Elena's Bolero from I Vespri Siciliani and the
    technically fiendish but well-executed Night Queen from the Magic
    Flute, and a finale in the form of Sinfonietta by Alexander
    Harutyunyan, a thrilling, technically difficult work of cinematic
    scope.

    As sure of themselves as 20-somethings all round the world, the
    orchestra was well prepared with three quick, rip-roaring encores: a
    traditional Altounyan Berd Dance, the Vienna March by Fritz Kreisler
    and Fiddle Faddle, a jazz-inflected romp by Leroy Anderson, in which
    the cellos break into song halfway through. Smbatyan conducted with
    the louche rhythm of an old fashion swing bandmaster, the crowd went
    wild and no one looked happier than the shiny young musicians taking
    their bows. Life duly affirmed.

    http://www.thenational.ae/article/20090 518/ART/705179986/1007
Working...
X