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  • An emotional link to a nation's past

    An emotional link to a nation's past

    The Boston Globe
    November 29, 2009

    Armenian composer's powerful music brings trio of collaborators together
    By David Weininger, Globe Correspondent | November 29, 2009
    The violist Kim Kashkashian has been a muse for several important
    composers, having worked with and elicited new music from Luciano
    Berio, György Kurtág, and Arvo Pärt, among many others. But her
    bond with Tigran Mansurian is different. They are marking more than
    two decades of collaboration with a rare series of American concerts
    with percussionist Robyn Schulkowsky. The brief tour - in which
    Mansurian will play piano and sing - begins Tuesday at Jordan Hall.
    Their program includes music by Mansurian as well as his arrangements
    of songs by Komitas Vartabed, the composer and musicologist who is
    widely regarded as a pivotal figure in Armenian classical
    music. Before he was arrested
    and deported in 1915, Komitas (the name is sometimes written Gomidas)
    spent years traveling the countryside, notating and arranging
    thousands of the folk and religious songs he heard. Both Kashkashian
    and Mansurian are of Armenian descent, and it was those songs - an
    invaluable link to the country's history - that brought the two
    together.
    Speaking by phone, Kashkashian recalls playing some arrangements of
    Komitas's songs in the late 1980s; to get what she calls `a more or
    less original take on them,'' she traveled to Armenia to
    hear Mansurian play and sing them. The encounter was transformative.
    `I was so entranced by what he was doing,'' she says. `It was so
    powerful, so potent that I took a little tape recording of the event
    with me to Munich,'' the home of ECM Records, Kashkashian's
    label. There she played the tape for two colleagues: Manfred Eicher,
    ECM's founder, and Schulkowsky, with whom Kashkashian worked
    frequently.
    `And we sat there, all of us, with tears in our eyes,'' the violist
    remembers. `Because it was so spectacular and for us something
    intimate and powerful and unique. And at that time we said,
    `We've got to do something about this.' ''
    What resulted was a 2003 recording called `Hayren,'' in which the trio
    played Komitas's arrangements and Mansurian's own works. On the
    recording, Mansurian's voice sounds raw and almost painfully
    constricted, a world away from what you would expect from a trained
    singer. It's unusual enough that in the program he's credited with
    `vocals'' instead of =80=9Csinging.'' But the appeal, says
    Kashkashian, lies in
    something deeper.
    `The rawness which you hear, and the unpracticed quality, really let
    through the incredible depth of emotion and knowledge of the people,
    of the land, of the circumstances of the nation - its blood,''
    she says. `I really believe that it's something that needs
    to be heard.''
    What Komitas did was to bring the ancient past into a form that modern
    Armenians - and Westerners - could understand and embrace. In a way,
    Kashkashian says, Mansurian's own music does the same thing. `We talk
    about him as a contemporary European-trained composer with all those
    techniques at his disposal,'' she explains. `But we're also talking
    about him as being rooted in the Armenian church and
    folk music of the past. So when I hear a piece of Tigran's, I get both
    things. It's like a red thread that goes through all his music.''
    Tuesday's concert opens with three Taghs, ancient religious chants
    that Mansurian has fashioned for viola and percussion. Also on the
    program
    are two groups of Komitas's songs, four of Mansurian's own
    songs transcribed for viola and piano, and a lengthy duet for
    Kashkashian and Schulkowsky. `You notice how everything feeds on
    everything else,'' Kashkashian says. `You definitely sense the flavor
    of the nation, the flavor of the geography, both emotional and
    physical, in all the works - in the ones that were written two years
    ago as well as the ones that were a couple centuries ago.''
    If that's the case, it will be due not only to Komitas and Mansurian
    but also to Kashkashian's unique voice. Over the course of her career
    she has created an uncommonly expressive tone - shadowy yet lyrical -
    from the most introverted of string instruments. It's most clearly
    evident in her two most recent recordings: `Asturiana,'' a 2007
    collection of song transcriptions with Robert Levin, and
    =80=9CNeharot,'' a diverse, darkly beautiful collection of
    orchestral and chamber music released earlier this year.
    Asked about her tone, Kashkashian is modest to a fault, preferring to
    frame her explanation in universal terms.
    `The thing that any musician is trying to do is to take the expressive
    tool offered them and say something that is, on the one hand, as true
    to the composer as possible, and on the other, that expresses the
    deepest, innermost regions of their own hearts. It just takes a great
    deal of objectivity and an unbelievable amount of vulnerability and
    courage to open yourself. And to do those two things together, and to
    keep some truth in the affair - it's not easy. But I think that's what
    all of us are striving for.''
    Information: www.necmusic.edu/kashkashian-hayren.

    © Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

    http://www.boston.com/ae/music/articles/2 009/11/29/trio_to_perform_armenian_composers_works ?mode=3DPF
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