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Veteran disappoints, but newcomer dazzles

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  • Veteran disappoints, but newcomer dazzles

    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    March 29, 2004 Monday Home Edition

    Veteran disappoints, but newcomer dazzles

    by PIERRE RUHE

    A couple of decades ago, song recitals were declared dead and all but
    buried. Fewer composers were writing for the exposed duo of solo
    voice and piano; impresarios found vocalists a tough sell; young
    singers didn't see the benefits of all that discipline.

    Well, the rumors were greatly exaggerated. This season in Atlanta has
    heard terrific art-of-song performances. Over the weekend, a veteran
    and a rookie came to town and, not surprisingly, arrived with
    different agendas.

    Mezzo-soprano Susanne Mentzer has been a strong presence at the
    Metropolitan Opera for some 15 years. At Emory University, she and
    Craig Rutenberg, a lyrical pianist, opened with a pair of "what if?"
    composers --- music by the wives of great men, women who didn't
    pursue composition as a career, Clara Schumann and Alma Mahler.

    Where three Schumann songs from her Op. 12 sounded here like tepid,
    nicely wrought parlor songs, Mahler's set heaved with allure and
    personality. In the latter's "Balmy Summer Night," Mentzer conveyed a
    winking, almost swishy attitude.

    Works by Gustav Mahler (earthy) and Eric Satie (cabaret cute) led to
    Libby Larsen's "Love after 1950," five songs written for Mentzer and
    premiered in 2000. Each song gets a treatment: One is blues, another
    honky-tonk, a third tango, and so on. Fun to hear and mostly
    well-written for the human voice, these songs suffer from Larsen's
    self-conscious, post-modern approach, where the music is remote from
    the texts instead of interlocked. And throughout the evening, the
    mezzo's brushed velvety voice sounded a bit weary. It made for a
    low-energy recital.

    On Saturday, soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian, making her Atlanta recital
    debut, sang with the giddy excitement of a newcomer, without a
    horizon in sight. I first heard her in 1997, in a tiny role at the
    Glimmerglass Opera, and wrote she was "exquisite in her pure tones,
    generating a frisson of interest in her vocal possibilities." Even
    then, it was obvious here was someone special. Now just 29, she's
    starting to win acclaim in the opera house and through CDs.

    Yet the first half of her Spivey recital --- Grenados, Rossini and
    Vivaldi --- seemed more about wowing us with her technique than about
    singing to her strengths.

    Still a growing artist, Bayrakdarian's vocal timbre is somewhere
    between Kathleen Battle's and Sumi Jo's, equal parts soul and
    diamond-sparkle coloratura. She summoned despair for Vivaldi's "The
    Scorned Wife," although she left a few tones (like the word "fida")
    curiously uncolored, like it sat between two regions of her voice and
    she couldn't quite reach it. And was it fatigue that caused some
    misfiring vocal pyrotechnics in "Buffeted by Two Winds"? Her pianist,
    Serouj Kradjian, proved an inadequate accompanist, flashy and
    oblivious to the subtleties of the texts.

    In any case, after intermission the Canadian-Armenian soprano finally
    let us savor more than just her splendid technical gifts: She became
    an interpreter and an actress, telling moving stories with her voice
    --- the crux of a song recital. She was at turns naive and manic in
    Tchaikovsky's "The Cuckoo" --- both funny and scary --- pronouncing
    the bird's song like an antique clock gone haywire. She sounded like
    a non-smoking Edith Piaf for a set of cynical Kurt Weill love songs,
    squatting over the low notes with a seductively nasal drawl. Is the
    term "vocal charisma" adequate to describe a singer who makes time
    stop, who conjures magic? Whatever that intoxicating property is,
    Bayrakdarian has it in abundance --- the future of the art form.

    GRAPHIC: Photo: In her Atlanta recital debut, Canadian-Armenian
    soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian sang with the excitement of a newcomer.
    When at her best on Saturday, she was magical.; Photo: Susan Mentzer,
    a regular at the Metropolitan Opera, sounded a bit weary in her
    Friday recital.; Graphic: CLASSICAL REVIEW
    Mezzo-soprano Susanne Mentzer, Friday at Emory University's Emerson
    Concert Hall; and soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian, Saturday at Spivey
    Hall.
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