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E Prelacy: Musical Armenia 2006 Performance Received With Enthusiasm

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  • E Prelacy: Musical Armenia 2006 Performance Received With Enthusiasm

    PRESS RELEASE
    Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
    138 East 39th Street
    New York, NY 10016
    Tel: 212-689-7810
    Fax: 212-689-7168
    e-mail: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.armenianprelacy.org
    Contact: Iris Papazian

    MARCH 22, 2006

    MUSICAL ARMENIA 2006 PERFORMANCES RECEIVED
    WITH ENTHUSIASM AND APPRECIATION

    NEW YORK, NY-On Sunday afternoon, February 26, 2006, a sold-out Weill
    Recital Hall audience responded with enthusiasm, appreciation, and affection
    at the Armenian Prelacy's Musical Armenia concert. The 2006 concert, the
    twenty-third event in the series, featured two talented ensembles: Zulal,
    an innovative a capella vocal trio comprised of Teni Apelian, Yeraz
    Markarian, and Anais Alexandra Tekerian; and Duo Maestoso, a dynamic
    sister-and-brother piano duo comprised of Gianeh and Ovanes Arakelyan.
    The Musical Armenia program, conceived by Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian and
    the Prelacy Ladies Guild in 1982, endeavors to help the artistic development
    and promote the visibility of emerging Armenian performers. This year's
    event benefited from the sponsorship of Musical Armenia's many supporters,
    most notably a major contribution from the distinguished pianist Lucy
    Ishkanian. Archbishop Choloyan and the Prelacy extend their deep
    appreciation to Ms. Ishkanian for her sustaining generosity towards Musical
    Armenia and for her multi-faceted dedication to the development of Armenian
    musical artists.
    At Weill Recital Hall, Zulal's delicate renderings of Armenian folk
    songs established a strong emotional connection with the audience. In
    introductory remarks, the group explained the integral role of the folk
    music art form in Armenian rural society, where it functioned as a means of
    communicating a wide range of sentiments. The group's carefully chosen
    program made for graceful transitions from tender love songs to tributes to
    the wonders of nature and tunes celebrating the promise of youth. The trio
    kept the audience involved with lively descriptive interludes between the
    songs.
    Duo Maestoso displayed great virtuosity and command in a varied program
    of nineteenth- and twentieth-century music. They performed two Liszt
    compositions: a spirited caprice based on a theme from a Paganini concerto,
    and the familiar Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2. In the Rhapsody, the Duo
    admirably met the challenge of finding its own expressive vocabulary within
    the two-piano arrangement. In between the two Liszt pieces, the Duo
    presented a confident performance of three sections from Saint-Saens'
    Carnival of the Animals. The program also included a fine performance of the
    Waltz from Khachaturian's Masquerade Suite, one part of several pieces of
    incidental music Khachaturian composed for a stage production of the play
    Masquerade, by the great Russian Romantic poet Mikhail Lermontov.

    ZULAL TRIO
    Zulal's arrangements are written in an organic style, enabling the group
    to pay tribute to Armenia's folk roots and, at the same time, offer
    imaginative harmonies to add fresh energy to the traditional repertoire.
    Formed in 2002, Zulal (which means clarity) was created when the members
    began exploring their shared love of a capella singing and their affinity
    for the textures of Armenian folk music.
    In the past four years, Zulal's diverse achievements include a
    coast-to-coast United States tour, a performance with Cirque du Soleil,
    nomination in the "Best Folk/World Album" category at the 2005 Contemporary
    A Cappella Recording Awards, and recognition with "Best Newcomer" and "Best
    Vocal Traditional Album" awards at the 2005 Armenian Music Awards. The group's
    list of performance venues includes the John F. Kennedy Center for the
    Performing Arts in Washington, New York's City Hall, the Museum of the City
    of New York, and the Tsai Performance Center at Boston University.
    Soprano Teni Apelian, a native of Philadelphia, graduated from Carnegie
    Mellon University with a bachelors degree in professional writing and a
    masters in arts management. Her affinity for a capella singing grew out of
    her work in a jazz choir at CMU. Ms. Apelian has lived in various parts of
    the East Coast and now resides in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She feels that
    Zulal has brought life to her foremost passions and allowed her to explore
    both spirit and sound with two talented women.
    Yeraz Markarian, who is a contralto, has enjoyed singing from a young
    age and was a "bass" in an all-female a cappella group while she was a
    student at Columbia University's Barnard College. A native New Yorker, Ms.
    Markarian has a background in advertising and currently works in cancer
    research. She is also a master's degree student in psychology. Ms.
    Markarian is proud of her contribution in interpreting Armenian folk music
    and is overjoyed that an informal conversation among friends about folk
    music led to the creation of Zulal.
    Anaïs Alexandra Tekerian, an alto, studied theatre at Yale University,
    where she sang with and directed the Yale Slavic Chorus. Originally from San
    Francisco, Ms. Tekerian now lives in New York City. She performs in plays
    and films in and around New York and is also active as a poet and piano
    teacher. Ms. Tekerian is thrilled to be exploring the musical heritage of
    her ancestors through Zulal.

    DUO MAESTOSO
    Gianeh and Ovanes Arakelyan studied at the University of Southern
    California's Thornton School of Music. At USC, they were each awarded
    bachelor of music degrees in piano performance under the direction of
    Professor Daniel Pollack. Duo Maestoso's performances with orchestral
    accompaniment include concerts with the Moscow Symphony Orchestra, the
    Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra, and the American Youth Symphony (AYS).
    In 2004, at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, the Duo
    performed Saint-Saens' Carnival of the Animals at the AYS's 39th Gala
    Concert, under the direction of Alexander Treger. Also in 2004, Ms.
    Arakelyan and Mr. Arakelyan were each awarded gold medals at the World
    Championships of Performing Arts in Hollywood. In a review of a recent
    performance, Richard Ginell, a music critic for the Los Angeles Times,
    wrote: "The Arakelyans are blessed with abundant technique, and they
    displayed a graceful feeling for the flourishes and wit of the piano parts."
    Duo Maestoso's list of performance venues includes the John Anson Ford
    Amphitheatre in Hollywood, the Henry Fonda Theater in Los Angeles, the
    Florence Gould Theatre at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor in
    San Francisco, and the Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall in Yerevan. In 2005,
    the Duo performed at the Las Vegas Music Festival and they will appear in
    the Las Vegas Chamber Music Concert Series during the 2005-06 season.
    A compact disc by Duo Maestoso, a recording dedicated to the centenary
    of Aram Khachaturian, earned very favorable reviews. In summer 2004, the
    disc was recognized as the "compact disc of the season" by music critics in
    Portland, Oregon. The recording's debut was held at the House-Museum of Aram
    Khachaturian in Yerevan, where the Duo had the honor to perform on the
    composer's own grand piano, which had not been touched for thirty years. An
    upcoming compact disc will feature well-known compositions for two pianos,
    including Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2, Bizet's "Los Toreadors" from
    Carmen, selections from Carnival of the Animals, and the "Sabre Dance" from
    the Khachaturian's ballet Gayane.
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