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Canadian Soprano Reveals Little-Known Armenian Composer During Her R

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  • Canadian Soprano Reveals Little-Known Armenian Composer During Her R

    CANADIAN SOPRANO REVEALS LITTLE-KNOWN ARMENIAN COMPOSER DURING HER REMEMBRANCE TOUR
    Lloyd Dykk

    Canwest News Service
    November 5, 2008 Wednesday 04:59 PM EST

    VANCOUVER - She's used to lending her ravishing soprano to Mozart all
    over the world, but Isabel Bayrakdarian's new interest is a virtually
    unknown composer, at least to those outside her homeland of Armenia -
    Gomidas Vartabed.

    She's just got off the plane from her home in Toronto and checked
    into the hotel in Fresno, Calif., to begin a tour that includes
    Vancouver, San Francisco, Los Angeles, , Boston and New York's Carnegie
    Hall. Every concert will feature the songs of Gomidas, as arranged by
    her pianist husband Serouj Kradjian for the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra
    under its conductor Anne Manson. The concert comes to the Orpheum on
    Oct. 7 at 8 p.m.

    She says, "The program is woven around Gomidas and other nations and
    cultures that have suffered persecution," so expect references to
    Greece and Israel.

    It's called the Remembrance Tour. Dedicated to victims of all
    genocides, it's sponsored by the International Institute for Genocide
    and Human Rights Studies. The concert virtually duplicates her new
    Gomidas recording on the Nonesuch label with the Chamber Players
    of the Armenian Philharmonic and Kradjian. Though some material was
    recorded during the Soviet era, the release represents the very first
    time that Gomidas songs have been presented on an international label.

    I mention to Bayrakdarian that I've never heard Gomidas's music. "It
    may be a revelation," she says simply.

    Gomidas, sometimes spelled Komitas, had a tragic life, a fact that
    has no doubt gone into making him Armenia's national composer.

    He was born in 1869 to a musical, Turkish-speaking family, his mother
    dying when he was one and his father when he was 11. He was brought
    up by his grandmother. Educated in a seminary, he became a monk and
    established a monastery choir. About 30 years before Bartok did the
    same thing, he wandered about the countryside collecting the folk
    songs of his Armenian people, notating it on paper, not recording it
    like Bartok since recorders didn't exist.

    >From 1910 he lived in Istanbul. In 1915 at the beginning of the
    Armenian genocide, he was arrested and deported on a train to central
    Anatolia. He lived in concentration camp-like conditions for 15 days
    until the intervention of highly-placed friends had him released.

    In 1935 he died in a psychiatric clinic in Paris, having spent the
    last 20 years of his life like the walking dead. Bayrakdarian thinks
    it was caused by all the death and horrors he'd seen.

    He wrote far more music than that which exists and had planned to
    write an opera. Much of what he'd written was destroyed, she says. "His
    legacy went into obscurity. What's left of his songs resonates in the
    Armenian psyche. He seemed to capture the essence of Armenian music
    and for survivors, it seems to enforce in us the function of hanging
    on to our identity and our past."

    His music isn't complicated, Bayrakdarian adds. "They're folksongs, but
    very unique - about love, nature, children. We haven't reinterpreted
    them."

    Her favourite piece of all is a children's prayer with its haunting
    melody. "It was the last piece he wrote."
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