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Soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian needs to get serious

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  • Soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian needs to get serious

    The Globe and Mail, Canada
    May 10 2005

    Soprano needs to get serious

    By KEN WINTERS

    Isabel Bayrakdarian, soprano
    Serouj Kradjian, piano
    at Roy Thomson Hall
    in Toronto on Sunday



    Sunday afternoon at Roy Thomson Hall, the lovely young
    Armenian-Canadian soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian sang songs of Pauline
    Viardot (in a svelte golden-apricot gown) and Gioacchino Rossini (in
    a low-cut black number with long feathers flaring about the bottom
    half of the skirt). In the end, she brought the house down, but,
    alas, there are caveats.

    Without in any sense wanting to rain on the parade of this glamorous
    young star with her already large and adoring public, I feel
    nevertheless compelled to say that if she wants to become a deeply
    engaging artist as well as a clever and admirable vocalist, she will
    have to give more serious consideration to repertoire than she did on
    this occasion. To dedicate the entire -- and longer -- first half of
    a recital to songs by the legendary singer but very minor composer
    Viardot seems at best an underestimation of what will do.

    Viardot was a kind of Maria Callas of the era of Chopin and
    Mendelssohn. She was a pupil of Liszt, an enchantress of the vocal
    art (greatly admired by Berlioz) and a woman of strong charisma and
    rare intelligence. She also composed things for herself to sing and
    doubtless justified these as slender diversions in the context of
    more substantial programs. They tend to be pretty but derivative and
    rather similar, with an emphasis on ornamental roulades flattering to
    vocal agility but scarcely enthralling on any other level.

    Of the 14 Viardot songs Bayrakdarian chose, by far the best were not
    Viardot's at all, but rather her vocal adaptations of three Chopin
    Mazurkas. These three at least had melodic, harmonic and rhythmic
    distinction, and gave some sort of closure to the first half of the
    recital.

    The other 11 conceivably might have fared better in an intimate hall
    with Stephen Ralls and Bruce Ubukata of the Aldeburgh connection to
    provide the sort of special pleading they would need. But with no
    enlightening program notes to help, with Bayrakdarian's own spoken
    comments inaudible past the first six rows of the main floor, and
    with Roy Thomson Hall's cool, distant, vocal-unfriendly acoustics
    firmly against them, not to mention the audience's dogged
    determination to clap, however tepidly, after every single song,
    Viardot's morceaux were virtually doomed.

    Rossini, after intermission, might have afforded redemption, but the
    choices were disappointing. We might have had three gorgeous arias --
    say, the beautiful Willow Song from Otello (in which, as it happens,
    Viardot made her stage debut in London in 1839), the ravishing Sombre
    forêt from Act II of Guillaume Tell, and the aria from Elisabetta,
    regina d' Inghilterra, which Bayrakdarian actually did sing to end
    her recital. These, in succession, could have summoned her art from
    some deeper reservoir. Instead, we had four trivialities from Les
    soirées musicales of which only the last -- the catchy La Danza --
    made the grade, followed by the just moderately entertaining three
    songs of La regatta veneziana.

    What redemption there was came in the Queen Elizabeth aria and the
    two encores: the song version of Cuban composer Ernesto Lecuona's
    masterpiece, Malaguena, and what I took (Bayrakdarian's
    identification of it was, again, inaudible) to be a sad Armenian
    song, which she sang exquisitely and touchingly with a whole heart.

    She is too greatly gifted and intelligent a singer ever to involve
    herself with musical material she cannot sing thus with a whole heart
    and a whole mind.

    The Canadian-Armenian pianist Serouj Kradjian was her capable and
    sensitive partner-accompanist.
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