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Music: Armenian cello star Narek Hakhnazaryan seduces Vancouver

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  • Music: Armenian cello star Narek Hakhnazaryan seduces Vancouver

    Straight.com
    Feb 13 2013


    Armenian cello star Narek Hakhnazaryan seduces Vancouver Recital
    Society audience

    by Alexander Varty on Feb 13, 2013 at 12:25 pm

    Narek Hakhnazaryan
    With Noreen Polera. A Vancouver Recital Society production. At the
    Vancouver Playhouse on Sunday, February 10. No remaining performances

    `Did you like that razzle-dazzle?' asked one presumably
    less-than-impressed patron during intermission, but his cynical query
    fell on unsympathetic ears. `I loved it!' countered his companion, and
    there's no doubt she was voicing the majority opinion. Narek
    Hakhnazaryan's Vancouver debut brought a capacity crowd out on a sunny
    Sunday afternoon, and that audience was effusive in its approval.

    It's undeniable that there was an element of show-biz razzle in the
    young Armenian cellist's program, which was calculated to seduce.
    Opening with César Franck's Sonata in A Major is a surefire way to
    make a good first impression. It takes a really good cellist to nail
    the opening `Allegretto ben moderato' 's blend of swooning intensity
    and careful pacing, and Hakhnazaryan did just that, aided by the
    impeccable Noreen Polera on piano.

    Speaking of sonic glitter, Frédéric Chopin apparently described his
    own Introduction and Polonaise Brillante as having `nothing to it but
    dazzle', at least in its original incarnation as a violin showcase.
    Any thoughts that the darker cello would unearth a layer of deeper
    meaning were denied by Hakhnazaryan's flamboyant performance - but both
    his 1698 David Tecchler instrument and Chopin's 182-year-old work
    sounded as fresh as tomorrow.

    Which was a nice segue into a second half that began with two works by
    living composers, and that touched on some more sombre themes. Anyone
    disappointed by Hakhnazaryan's decision not to perform György Ligeti's
    Sonata for Solo Cello, as advertised, was more than mollified by its
    replacement, Armenian composer Adam Khudoyan's Sonata No. 1 for Solo
    Cello. Dedicated to the 1.5 million Armenians killed by Turkish forces
    during the last days of the Ottoman Empire, it opens with an
    impersonation of tolling bells and continues in a similarly mournful
    manner. This is one tough elegy, though, marked by passages of
    jazz-inflected pizzicato, eerie artificial harmonics, and the
    effective use of traditional Armenian melodies.

    One caveat: the Khudoyan piece rendered Mikhail Bronner's The Jew:
    Life and Death, which followed, mildly redundant.

    Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky's moody Nocturne made an effective transition
    into the same composer's far more upbeat Pezzo Capriccioso, Op. 62,
    and the fireworks towards the end of the cellist's encore: Niccolo
    Paganini's Variations on a Theme From Moses in Egypt, also known as
    Introduction and Variations on One String. As the alternate title
    suggests, this is played entirely on the cello's A string - but
    Hakhnazaryan made it music.

    http://www.straight.com/arts/351816/armenian-cello-star-narek-hakhnazaryan-seduces-vancouver-recital-society-audience


    From: Baghdasarian
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