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Isabel Bayrakdarian Showers Her Luxuriant Voice On Gusman Hall

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  • Isabel Bayrakdarian Showers Her Luxuriant Voice On Gusman Hall

    ISABEL BAYRAKDARIAN SHOWERS HER LUXURIANT VOICE ON GUSMAN HALL
    David Fleshler

    South Florida Classical Review
    http://southfloridaclassicalreview.com/2009 /12/isabel-bayrakdarian-showers-her-luxuriant-voic e-on-gusman-hall/
    Dec 21 2009

    The Armenian-Canadian soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian brought to the
    University of Miami's Gusman Hall a luxuriant soprano voice of a
    quality rarely heard on South Florida's opera stages.

    Although the performance Sunday began with a short set of Schubert
    songs, this was not a traditional lieder recital, and it's a good bet
    that even vocal aficionados wouldn't have known half the works on the
    program. And even in a music world that has become more international,
    Bayrakdarian's range of languages was impressive, as she sang in
    Greek, Armenian, Spanish, Arabic, Yiddish and Aramaic, in addition
    to the usual German and Italian.

    Bayrakdarian is not one of those sopranos you go to for showy high
    notes and vocal virtuosity, although there was plenty of that toward
    the end. Her creamy lyric soprano voice was made for long lines of
    melody, and this was displayed in song after song, in a recital that
    was hard to beat for sheer sonic pleasure. Technically, her voice
    was a precise instrument, with fine intonation and a tight vibrato
    that never lost the tonal center, except for a few high notes.

    She performed with her husband Serouj Kradjian at the piano, as part
    of the Sunday Afternoons of Music Series.

    Her technical precision, lush voice and sensitive phrasing were on
    display in the Schubert lieder and Bellini songs. And she brought
    a piquant and sensual quality to Ravel's arrangement of six Greek
    folk songs. But the highlight of the recital were four Armenian folk
    songs recorded and arranged by Reverend Gomidas, an Armenian composer
    traumatized by the Turkish government's 1915 campaign of genocide, who
    determined to travel Armenia and record the country's musical heritage.

    Bayrakdarian was born in Lebanon to Armenian parents and came to
    Canada as a teenager, graduating from the University of Toronto.

    Introducing these songs, she alluded to the genocide, telling the
    audience the songs came from villages that "do not exist anymore." She
    sang Dear Mara, a song of mourning and grief, and an Armenian lullaby
    in tender, gentle tones. She brought a passionate but still polished
    tone to Children's Prayer. And her performance of an Armenian woman's
    complaints about her mother in law came off with a light touch and
    wry wit.

    Also fine were the performances of Spanish folk songs by Fernando
    Obradors and a series of tangos by various composers, as Bayrakdarian
    allowed a darker, smoky tone into her voice for these sultry,
    passionate songs.

    Her stage presence was inviting and engaging. Her expressions and
    gestures were those of a singer who enjoyed sharing the music with
    an audience, rather than just a vocal technician running through her
    repertoire. Her husband expertly handled the often-difficult piano
    parts, and unlike many accompanists he played assertively enough to
    take center stage when the occasion called for it.

    Applause was rapturous. She gave two encores, La Rosa Y el Sauce of
    Carlos Guastavino, and Tanti affetti in tal momento from Rossini's La
    Donna del Lago, where she showed off vocal pyrotechnics, handling the
    runs and ornaments of Rossini's florid coloratura work with accuracy
    and gusto.
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