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Canadian Sopranos Explore Exotic Songs

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  • Canadian Sopranos Explore Exotic Songs

    CANADIAN SOPRANOS EXPLORE EXOTIC SONGS
    by Bradley Bambarger, [email protected]

    The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
    Monday October 06, 2008, 4:19 PM
    NJ

    Soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian is featured on the new CD "Gomidas
    Songs.">"Gomidas Songs." Isabel Bayrakdarian, soprano; Gevorg
    Dabaghyan, duduk; Serouj Kradjian, piano; Armenian Philharmonic
    Chamber Players, Eduard Topchjan, cond. (Nonesuch). Four stars

    Gomidas Vardapet (1869-1935) is the patron saint of Armenian classical
    music. (His church name -- he was born Soghomon Soghomonyan --
    is usually transliterated for recordings as Komitas.) He collated
    thousands of traditional Armenian songs and dances; he also composed
    new secular and sacred works threaded with the tradition's haunting
    melodic flavor. Although he survived the Armenian genocide of 1915,
    he was a broken man after that.

    The music of Gomidas has been recorded by artists from violist
    Kim Kashkashian and pianist Grigory Sokolov to Djivan Gasparyan,
    master of the Armenian national instrument, the oboe-like duduk. But
    this labor-of-love disc by Canadian soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian, of
    Armenian descent, may receive the most attention. A charming artist
    with a warm, gleaming voice and up-and-coming opera career, the
    34-year-old Bayrakdarian sounds utterly authentic in these piquant,
    touching songs. (She first sang Gomidas for Atom Egoyan's "Ararat,"
    a 2002 film about the Armenian genocide; the director wrote an
    introductory note for her album.)

    The apt pianist is Bayrakdarian's husband, Serouj Kradjian, who also
    wrote the subtly ornamental string-and-wind arrangements, with the
    duduk's apricot-wood timbre a primary color. The music sounds very
    Eastern and minimalist, and mostly sad; only a Rossini-influenced
    number strikes a false note. Highlights include the heartbreaking
    "Oror" (Lullaby), the sighing romantic lament "Karoon" (Spring)
    and more dramatic "Andooni" (Without a Home), a favorite of Debussy
    when he heard Gomidas in Paris. Bayrakdarian will sing these songs
    at Carnegie's Zankel Hall on Oct. 20.

    Messiaen: "Chants de Terre et de Ciel." Suzie LeBlanc, soprano;
    Lawrence Wiliford, tenor; Laura Andriani, violin; Robert Kortgaard,
    piano. (Atma). Four stars

    The records marking the centenary of French modernist Olivier
    Messiaen (1908-1992) have been disappointingly thin, being mostly
    multiple versions of his "Quartet for the End of Time." So, this
    thoughtfully conceived, beautifully realized recital disc does a
    great service. Featuring French-Canadian soprano Suzie LeBlanc, the
    program highlights the songwriting of the young Messiaen, when he
    was enraptured with his first, short-lived wife and under the spell
    of Debussy.

    There is an ecstatic quality to the cycles "Trois Melodies" and
    "Chants de Terre et de Ciel" (Songs of the Earth and Sky), all
    swooning lyricism and moonlit atmosphere. These are deeply French,
    high-art songs, crafted like jewels. But they also have an effortless
    naturalism, especially with a singer like LeBlanc. The soprano,
    in her mid-40s, has specialized in Baroque repertoire, but she has
    also explored the folk tunes of her Acadian heritage. Her tone is
    silvery, clear and floating (with the barest vibrato), her phrasing
    intimate like she's singing just for you. These qualities are ideal,
    as Messiaen's songs are about romantic faith and spiritual love.

    The piano parts are rich, with Messiaen giving impressionistic harmony
    a modernist update. The composer's first wife was a violinist,
    and he wrote several pieces for her, including the ravishingly
    lyrical "Vocalise" for violin and piano, played lovingly here by
    Laura Andriani. Also included is the melodious "Theme et Variations"
    for violin and piano, with Andriani taking it at flowing pace while
    managing the most poetic close.

    The rarity here is "La Mort du Nombre," a dramatic mini-cantata for
    soprano, tenor, violin and piano by the 21-year-old Messiaen that shows
    the influence of Wagner's love music through the prism of Debussy's
    "Pelleas et Melisande." Lawrence Wiliford may sound a bit callow next
    to LeBlanc, but they entwine intensely enough, the piece ending with
    shimmering, love-struck piano.
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