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At the Baird, atmospheric sounds from Armenia

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  • At the Baird, atmospheric sounds from Armenia

    The Washington Post
    December 10, 2009 Thursday
    Suburban Edition

    At the Baird, atmospheric sounds from Armenia


    The Smithsonian Associates and the Embassy of Armenia presented a
    memorable concert in the National Museum of Natural History's Baird
    Auditorium on Tuesday night. The hour-long program of Armenian music,
    performed by violist Kim Kashkashian, Armenian composer and pianist
    Tigran Mansurian, and percussionist Robyn Schulkowsky, was drawn
    largely from their admirable series of recordings for ECM.

    Speaking through an interpreter before the concert, Mansurian noted
    that, although he was going to sing some of the pieces, he is not a
    singer, and he was not kidding. Even with a voice that was barely
    audible, wobbly and generally unreliable, the venerable composer
    contributed something affecting and mysterious to two sets of Armenian
    folk song transcriptions by Vartabed Komitas, whose work on Armenian
    folk music is comparable to what BartÃ?3k and KodÃ?¡ly did in Hungary.
    Seeming to rise out of a distant past, Mansurian's voice, almost
    disembodied even with amplification, was echoed by many in the
    audience, humming along softly.

    To hear Kashkashian play makes one ashamed to have repeated those
    inevitable jokes about the viola: In her hands the instrument's tone
    is as malleable and expressive as the human voice. She gave an
    inflected, at times barbed line to the melodies of Mansurian's "Four
    Hayrens," composed originally for mezzo-soprano, and often doubled
    Mansurian's voice, watching carefully to match the articulation of the
    words. Schulkowsky contributed mostly atmospheric sounds, drones and
    harmonic clusters on the vibraphone with additional tinges and
    shimmers from crotales and gongs. Although one might criticize the
    overabundance of slow and reflective pieces, the concert had a
    mesmerizing effect, immersing the listener in a far-off world.

    -- Charles T. Downey
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