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Nareh Arghamanyan: Virtuosity And Heart

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  • Nareh Arghamanyan: Virtuosity And Heart

    NAREH ARGHAMANYAN: VIRTUOSITY AND HEART
    Joseph So

    La Scena Musicale
    10 July 2008
    Canada

    Nineteen-year-old Armenian pianist combines technical brilliance and
    uncommon musicality to win MIMC Grand Prize

    Sitting face to face with Nareh Arghamanyan in her dressing room during
    a break from rehearsal of the MIMC Gala Concert, one is struck by her
    large and luminous eyes, her shy yet friendly manner, and above all,
    the articulate and mature way she handles herself in an interview. Her
    arms and hands are deceptively slender, hardly hinting at the power
    and energy she brings to her music making, which a delighted Montreal
    audience had experienced at the finals two nights earlier. Where does
    it all come from? "It's from God," Arghamanyan says with a smile. "He
    gave me the talent and I use it for His glory."

    Born on January 21, 1989, in Vanadzor, Armenia, to a professional
    family - "my father is a lawyer and my mother a textile engineer,
    although she also studied piano in music school" -, Nareh Arghamanyan
    was four when she had her first encounter with destiny. It was 1993
    and times were hard in Armenia in the aftermath of the break-up of
    the Soviet Union. "There was no electricity, and my mother was already
    pregnant with my brother. She put me in front of a piano to let me play
    with this 'toy'," she says. Three hours went by and the young Nareh
    continued in the dark after the candle had burned out. The following
    year, her parents enrolled her at the Tchaikovsky Music School for
    Gifted Children in Yerevan, where she studied with Alexander Gurgenov.

    Her prodigious talent was recognized quickly: she won the first of a
    string of competitions in Novi Sad, Yugoslavia, at the age of 8, in
    1997. This was followed by First Prize at the International Competition
    for Young Talents in the Ukraine (1998), and Second Prize at the Gina
    Bachauer Junior Piano Competition in Salt Lake City (2000). In 2004,
    Arghamanyan entered the Universität fur Musik und darstellende Kunst
    in Vienna, under the tutelage of Heinz Medjimorec. More successes
    followed - First Prize at the Josef Dichler Piano Competition in Vienna
    (2005), Herbert von Karajan Award (2006), First Prize at the Piano
    Campus International in Pontoise, France (2007), and Second Prize at
    the José Roca International Competition in Valencia, Spain (2007).

    Even with the surfeit of great talent one encounters at major
    competitions, Arghamanyan stands out as someone special. Technical
    virtuosity is a given at this level, but she also brings a sensitivity
    and artistic maturity to her playing that belies her youth. Her playing
    is entirely at the service of the music, unlike some established
    pianists who pander to the audience with affected mannerisms and
    showmanship. There is nothing artificial in Arghamanyan's movements at
    the keyboard - everything she does comes from the heart. Watching her
    play the Tchaikovsky No. 1, one is struck by how the music just flows
    out of her body. "Music is more than just sound," she explains. "It
    comes from the composer's heart and our duty is to share it with the
    audience. Too much 'show' and the inner feeling is lost."

    Arghamanyan currently lives with her mother and siblings in Vienna,
    where she is finishing her Master's degree. Next year will be a
    watershed for Nareh, when her teacher Medjimorec retires. Their
    four-year teacher-student relationship has been important for
    Arghamanyan. Armenians are a warm and passionate people, so studying
    in the Germanic tradition took some initial adjustments. "I was warmer
    (in temperament) than the Austrians when I went to Vienna. My teacher
    kept saying, 'not too much emotion'! " she laughs. "I think it has to
    be a balance between the heart and the head." There is of course no
    substitute for hard work. When she was 6 or 7, 8-hour practice days
    were the norm, but given her heavy schedule at the university, the
    hours in front of the keyboard are less, although she makes up for
    it on weekends. When there's a rare free moment, she enjoys reading
    novels, detective stories side by side with Dostoevsky! And living
    in Vienna means visits to museums to enjoy her favourite paintings
    of van Gogh, Monet, and Goya.

    Arghamanyan is not sure what she'll do after her Master's. With 15
    concertos already in her repertoire, she can easily concertize full
    time. "I enjoy playing with orchestra," she tells us. But given her
    youth and her affinity for competitions, she'll likely try her hand
    at more in the future. Any plans for the substantial prize money from
    Montreal? "I am the wage earner, paying for my brother's and sister's
    education and our living expenses in Vienna. I'll use it to repay
    some money I borrowed," she answers. The MIMC win also means she will
    have the opportunity to make her first commercial recording. Future
    dates include a reprise of the Tchaikovsky No. 1 with the Boston Pops
    in July, and a two-month piano fellowship at Tanglewood. It appears
    Ms. Arghamanyan is well on her way.

    Parting thoughts - for all her successes in the big, showy repertoires
    of Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff, Arghamanyan's favourite composer is
    Bach. "It used to be Chopin, but now it's Bach, Beethoven, Brahms,
    Schumann and Schubert," she confides. A piece she is currently working
    on is Goldberg Variations. She explains, "Glenn Gould's playing of
    this inspires me, as does Rosalind Tureck. When I play Bach, it heals
    all problems and I am in heaven somewhere." n

    --Boundary_(ID_AaS9vTPXXiWLiuhWrE+PVQ)--
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