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Music: May marvel from Armenian wonder

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  • Music: May marvel from Armenian wonder

    Oxford Mail, UK
    May 8, 2014 Thursday

    May marvel from Armenian wonder

    by Tim Hughes


    Tim Hughes conquers May Day sleep deprivation and basks in the musical
    embrace of one of the world's best jazz pianists

    Tigran North Wall Arts Centre, Oxford

    Tigran Hamasyan is not much of a talker. The virtuoso pianist lets his
    instrument speak for him- and what a story it tells.

    Hunched over the keyboard, the wild-eyed Armenian seems oblivious to
    the audience sat in rapt attention behind him. He is clearly elsewhere
    - and as he teases each note, riff and run from his piano he seems
    entirely at one with it.

    It's hard to categorize Tigran's music. Straddling the worlds of
    classical, ethnic Armenian, modern jazz, dance and bass-rich
    electronica, it stands to divide and alienate devotees of each genre
    as much as unify. But, to those of an open mind, his sweeping range
    and mischievous disregard for boundaries make this intense 27-year-old
    an irresistible artist - and one of the world's greatest jazz
    pianists.

    His performance to a small-ish but respectful audience at the North
    Wall Arts Centre on Thursday was, by turns, uplifting, ethereal and
    challenging. That haunting, spacy quality was magnified among the true
    Oxfordians in the crowd, by the fact we were sitting here on May Day
    evening - after a spectacularly early morning, surplus of ale and
    Morris dancing, and a criminal lack of slumber. Post-modern jazz and
    sleep deprivation, I discovered, make good bedfellows, however, and I
    was drawn into Tigran's spiral of lilting eastern scales, looped
    electronics and improvisation - backed by just an electric guitar and
    drums - captivated as the music unfurled like a blossoming rose,
    before violently scattering its petals in a spiky, discordant judder.

    Tigran calls his music "Armenian anti-experimental punk jazz", but
    that raises as many questions as it answers and comes no closer to
    describing its range. With his new album Shadow Theater (he favours
    the US spelling, having honed his craft in the States), his
    iconoclastic anti-classical side comes to the fore, in the shape of
    something approximating pop or rock as much as jazz. His recent
    compositions, meanwhile, cross completely into dance territory, with
    cool, looped beats that would go down with drum and bass fans.

    The rapturous applause and the enthusiasm with which the trio were
    enticed back on stage for an encore was evidence of the power of this
    enigmatic composer and of our delight in a magical mystery musical
    journey. I can't think of a better way to bring in the May.


    From: Baghdasarian
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