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ANKARA: Well-Attended Joint Concert Pays Tribute To Armenian Communi

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  • ANKARA: Well-Attended Joint Concert Pays Tribute To Armenian Communi

    WELL-ATTENDED JOINT CONCERT PAYS TRIBUTE TO ARMENIAN COMMUNITY
    Anne Andlauer

    Today's Zaman
    May 19 2008
    Turkey

    The least that can be said of the Å~^iÅ~_li Symphony Orchestra and
    its Swiss-trained conductor Serâ Tokay is that they do not lack
    artistic audacity. Only three years into its existence, the young
    ensemble has gained respect from critics for its musical endowment
    and endeavors. A concert held last Saturday provided another occasion
    to prove those critics right.

    The performance, on May 17 at İstanbul's Lutfi Kırdar Convention
    and Exhibition Center, was a joint concert by Ä°stanbul's Å~^iÅ~_li
    Symphony and the Vartanants Choir. The latter is an amateur choir
    conducted by renowned cantor and State Opera Chorus member AdruÅ~_an
    Halacyan. Some 1,000 people filled the concert hall on Saturday and
    were visibly filled with the artists' communicative passion.

    Tokay conducted both ensembles for two hours, through classical pieces
    by Mozart, Verdi, Bizet and Donizetti. The pieces included sequences
    from Mozart's "Requiem Mass in D Minor," Verdi's operas "La Traviata"
    and "Nabucco" and Bizet's famed "Carmen." Knowing the orchestra's
    affinity with Russian and Slavic composers, Saturday's program was a
    challenging one for the musicians and their chief. "We adapted to the
    repertoire of the choir and soloists," Tokay told Today's Zaman ahead
    of the performance. "Italian compositions have little in common with
    the Slavic soul that we like to express, but one also learns while
    dealing with the unfamiliar."

    The joint performance was a first for the young orchestra but also for
    the choir, which Halacyan has headed since 1985. "I had this dream of
    a partnership between the choir and a symphonic orchestra," Halacyan
    recalled. Å~^iÅ~_li Mayor Mustafa Sarıgul, who attended Saturday's
    concert, was the architect of Halacyan's encounter with Tokay and
    thereby of their collaboration, the choir conductor said. "The
    singers and I have been preparing for 23 years to perform music at
    a professional level."

    Halacyan has served the Vartanants Choir since childhood, starting
    as a cantor in the church. The 76-year-old ensemble is known for
    its wide repertoire of Turkish, Armenian and European pieces. "This
    concert is dedicated to the Armenian community but also reflects
    the cultural diversity of Å~^iÅ~_li Municipality," Halacyan said,
    observing that Armenian Ä°stanbul Patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan attended
    the performance as well.

    As a result, the program featured pieces by Turkish composer
    Dede Efendi and Turkish-Armenian artists Ara Bartevyan and Sirvart
    Karamanuk. The ensemble notably performed Karamanuk's symphonic poem
    "Ah!... Tamar," while Ä°stanbul State Opera soloists Zafer ErdaÅ~_
    (bass-baritone), Caner Akın (tenor), Aylin AteÅ~_ (mezzo soprano)
    and Ayten Telek (soprano) gave a remarkable demonstration of their
    virtuosity in half of the 18 pieces.

    "Karamanuk's symphonic poem, which is composed of one movement and
    lasts about 20 minutes, has only been performed three times since
    its creation. The first performance took place in Yerevan in 1968,"
    Tokay said. The orchestral conductor added that although she did
    not know the choir or the pieces beforehand, she accepted the offer
    immediately. "This was a new experience for me and my musicians and
    I hope we will repeat it. The main challenge was of course to conduct
    simultaneously the choir and the orchestra, as if it were one single
    ensemble or body," Tokay said.

    During their interview with Today's Zaman, Tokay and Halacyan engaged
    in a discussion about their respective positions. Tokay argued that
    a choir needed a conductor more than the orchestra did. "Of course,
    musicians have to pay great attention to the gestures and breathing of
    the conductor," she explained. "But once they know their score well,
    there is no need for the conductor to give a starting sign to every
    single group of instruments. Technique is the key to a successful
    instrumental performance."

    The choir, however, needs constant attention to and from the conductor,
    Tokay said. "Singers are much more sensitive to the instructions and
    attitude of the conductor. They need him or her in order to stay in
    tune, but also for their voice to express the right feelings. Inner
    parameters matter more than in the case of an orchestra."

    Halacyan nodded and added two ideas to the observations: "First,
    it is crucial for all the singers to know each other very well,
    much more than for the musicians. There needs to be a kind of fusion
    within the choir and with the conductor, so that a quick glance is
    enough for everybody to understand each other."

    The choir conductor also noted "the key importance of mediation or
    non-mediation." In the case of an orchestra, he said, the instruments
    come between the musicians and the conductor and technique is essential
    for the mediation to function. "But in the case of a choir, there is
    no mediation. The relation is one of immediacy and that explains why
    the conductor is all the more important for the singers to give the
    best of themselves."

    For that matter, Halacyan recalled that the Vartanants Choir
    was an all-amateur choir wherein 55 male and female lawyers,
    physicians, carpet traders and jewelers gathered to sing like
    real professionals. "Some of them didn't even know the music scale
    when they started singing with the choir. I think they became like
    professionals without even noticing it," Halacyan said. "They sing with
    their heart and that is how they improve." That, "and an outstanding
    choir conductor," Tokay added with a smile.

    --Boundary_(ID_cytlHYVlWWxNJX0Y0IDd6Q)--
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