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CD Review: Tigran Hamasyan: New Era

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  • CD Review: Tigran Hamasyan: New Era

    TIGRAN HAMASYAN: NEW ERA

    All About Jazz
    http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?i d=28615
    March 10 2008
    PA

    At twenty-one, pianist Tigran Hamasyan has already done much to
    launch his name into the world of emergent young lions. He has toured
    throughout Europe, moving beyond his native Armenia to take prizes
    in jazz competitions from Moscow to Monaco. And, after winning
    the prestigious Thelonious Monk Jazz Piano Competition in 2006,
    he studied in the United States before returning to Paris, where he
    recorded his first album, New Era.

    Hamasyan's predicament is a common one. Like many young jazz musicians
    releasing their first records, he tries to prove his place in jazz
    with a few standards, while also working overly hard to showcase his
    range as a performer through originals and atypical tunes. The result
    is an album that tries to do too many things, and leaves the listener
    without a singular sense of the musician's voice.

    The suite that opens the album illustrates this problem. The first
    part, "Homesick," is an energetic romp, carefully structured to
    let the trio work through a series of hits on the melody, before
    Hamasyan takes off with an up-tempo solo that hovers over harmonies
    in the manner of Keith Jarrett's trio work. "Part 2: New Era" borrows
    a single tumbling fragment of the earlier melody and expands it into
    a vamp, with Hamasyan doubling on piano and keyboards.

    Both sections of the suite would make for nice compositions on their
    own. But in the end, the relationship between these two parts is so
    tenuous that one wonders why Hamasyan wanted to draw them together as
    a suite. And the fact is that the young winner of the Thelonious Monk
    Jazz Piano Competition can actually perform any of the aesthetics
    that he samples on New Era. He simply needs to choose which one he
    will devote himself to for the time being.

    Naturally, the most arresting sounds that come off this record are
    the ones that make the most use of Hamasyan's unique background. In
    addition to the spate of jazz originals, New Era features two
    Armenian folk songs. "Aparani Par" and "Zada Es" not only fill out
    the album-they give it depth, nuance, and a unique character. This
    development is largely due to Vardan Grigoryan, who plays a series of
    Armenian woodwinds on these tracks. The narrow, often oriental sounds
    of the duduk and the shvi, wailing above the melody on "Aparani Par,"
    are not easily forgotten.

    The world of young jazz pianists is disturbingly broad, and it's easy
    to get lost within it, even if one so clearly exhibits the talents
    and potential of a Tigran Hamasyan. Where this player will be able to
    come to the fore is in the characteristics that make him an original.

    Too many others will release first records with "Well, You Needn't" and
    "Solar" on them as proof of validity, but a song like "Gypsyology"
    could be found nowhere else. It has all the gaudy bravado of an
    Eastern European folk dance, and it's frequently hilarious, with its
    constantly rising chords and unstoppable backbeat. But it's also
    devoid of self-consciousness, and it's the kind of song that one
    can't help but listen to.

    If Tigran Hamasyan can bring together his virtuosic understanding
    of past piano masters with this taste for the folksy and dramatic
    to create a singular voice out of them, he has a long and exciting
    career before him.

    Tracks: Part 1: Homesick; Part 2: New Era; Leaving Paris; Aparani Par
    (The Dance Of Aparan); Well, You Needn't; Memories From Hankavan And
    now; Gypsyology; Zada Es; Solar; Forgotten World.

    Personnel: Tigran Hamasyan: piano, keyboards; Francois Moutin:
    acoustic bass; Louis Moutin: drums; Vardan Grigoryan: duduk (4,8),
    shvi (4), zurna(8).
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