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  • Festival tangos back from tangles

    The Ottawa Sun, Canada
    July 27, 2008 Sunday
    FINAL EDITION




    Festival tangos back from tangles

    BY DENIS ARMSTRONG


    Bloodied but unbowed, the 15th annual Chamber Music Festival got down
    to the business of making music Friday night with a dramatic opening
    night performance by Canadian soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian and Tango
    Notturno.

    It was the kind of informal but spectacular music-making that the
    festival's new programmers -- The Gryphon Trio's Roman Borys, Jamie
    Parker and Annalee Patipatanakoon -- promised when they took over the
    festival's musical reins last year.

    A classical singer with strong pop-culture appeal, Bayrakdarian is the
    kind of new-generation opera singer who also has fans outside
    classical circles. The 34-year-old Armenian Canadian, who made her
    Carnegie Hall debut last spring, sang in the films Ararat and The Lord
    of the Rings: The Two Towers, and has won the Best Classical Album of
    the Year Juno three years in a row.

    It's not surprising then, that many of the 800 fans who attended
    Friday night's performance started lining up in front of
    Dominion-Chalmers United Church two hours before the doors opened.

    The concert with Tango Notturno -- violinist Marie Berard, cellist
    Roman Borys, bass fiddler Roberto Occhipinti, clarinetist Shalom Bard,
    bandoneon player Fabian Carbone and pianist Serouj Kradjian -- was an
    all-tango affair, and as we know with tango -- as with all things hot
    and spicy -- less is more.

    Not, however, for Bayrakdarian. She and her excellent ensemble played
    16 short pieces, alternating vocals and instrumentals in the first
    half by Carlos Gardel and Rodriguez's familiar La Cumparsita and
    Gade's Jalousie -- two well-known tango classics that had the fans
    tapping their toes. But it was Bayrakdarian's superb acting skills
    that made Weill's Youkali soar to dizzying heights.

    I don't know if Bayrakdarian was feeling spent by a rather passionate
    performance in the first hour because her song selection clammed up
    tight after the intermission. She talked about the history of the
    tango and its universal appeal while performing a tango in German and
    another in Arabic, as well as familiar pieces by tango master Astor
    Piazzolla, leaving it to Tango Notturno to provide the fireworks in
    the second half. They didn't disappoint.

    While her coloratura voice didn't blow me away, it did grow on me. In
    the end, Bayrakdarian was brilliant, if a little uneven.

    Also worth mentioning was the easy-going and festive atmosphere at
    Dominion-Chalmers all night. Everyone from the concert emcees to the
    performers seemed to be in a friendly mood. And why not, after waiting
    two years for the Chamber Music Society to clean up all the bad blood
    that was shed after the festival's founder, Julian Armour, resigned
    last year.

    Now, finally, the Chamber Music Society seems to have settled much of
    the civil unrest it had been tangled up in.

    ---

    Isabel Bayrakdarian and Tango Notturno
    Chamber Music Festival
    Sun Rating: 4 out of 5
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