Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Soprano Returns, Bellini And Komitas In Tow

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Soprano Returns, Bellini And Komitas In Tow

    SOPRANO RETURNS, BELLINI AND KOMITAS IN TOW
    By Allan Kozinn

    New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/11/arts/music /11isab.html?ref=arts
    March 11 2008
    NY

    Isabel Bayrakdarian's latest major appearance in New York was to
    have been singing Susanna in the Metropolitan Opera's production of
    "Le Nozze di Figaro" in October. But Ms. Bayrakdarian, very pregnant
    at the time, bowed out. On Saturday evening, five months later and
    one child lighter, this Armenian-Canadian soprano, supported by her
    husband and pianist, Serouj Kradjian, was in fighting trim, or at
    least fine voice, in a recital at Zankel Hall.

    Ms. Bayrakdarian seems fond of balancing standard repertory with
    rarities. In a 2006 recital at the Morgan Library & Museum, she offered
    selections by Pauline Viardot, Rossini art songs and flamenco-tinged
    pieces by Fernando Obradors. This time, she retained elements of that
    formula. The Italian-opera-composer-as-miniaturist slot was given
    to Bellini. In place of Viardot, the underexposed curiosity was the
    Armenian composer Komitas. And Obradors was back, represented by a
    different group of works.

    Ms. Bayrakdarian began with an alluringly dark-hued rendering of
    Bellini's "Vaga luna, che inargenti," and more extroverted readings
    of "Per pieta, bell'idol mio" and "La Ricordanza." In the last,
    her dynamics were fluid, particularly in her upper range. She took
    risks, but they paid off: her performance, subtle on the surface,
    had an electrifying undercurrent.

    She also took an unusual approach to Poulenc's "Banalites," opting
    for bright timbres and crisp enunciation instead of the smoky, muted
    tone singers typically bring to 20th-century French music. Usually,
    the smoky approach works just fine; both the texts and the music seem
    to suggest it. But Ms. Bayrakdarian's altered perspective put these
    songs in a fresh light.

    She closed the first half of her program with two visions of
    Shakespeare's Ophelia. Jake Heggie's accessible "Songs and Sonnets
    to Ophelia" (1999) wraps a dramatic, shapely cloak around four poems
    by Edna St. Vincent Millay, and Ms. Bayrakdarian made them sound
    graceful and likable. But she did Mr. Heggie no favor by putting his
    work beside her thoughtfully shaped, trenchant account of Berlioz's
    "Mort d'Ophelie."

    Ms. Bayrakdarian made a strong case for five invitingly modal songs by
    Komitas, among them the pained "Call to the Sea" and a sweetly turned
    lullaby. She also did a lovely job of highlighting the folkloric
    accents within Ravel's "Five Popular Greek Melodies," and closed her
    program with five endearingly melismatic, sun-drenched Obradors songs.
Working...
X