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Narek Hakhnazaryan At The Colonial

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  • Narek Hakhnazaryan At The Colonial

    NAREK HAKHNAZARYAN AT THE COLONIAL
    By Clarence Fanto

    The Berkshire Eagle (Pittsfield, Massachusetts)
    October 16, 2008 Thursday

    PITTSFIELD -- The time-honored joke about how to get to Carnegie Hall
    -- "practice, practice, practice!" -- could use some updating in our
    multimedia era.

    For rising young Armenian cellist Narek Hakhnazaryan, entering and
    winning every competition in sight, acquiring a Web presence for audio
    and video samples, and being signed by Young Concert Artists (YCA),
    a management group that has launched many a stellar career, have been
    equally important. His launching pad is well-equipped for liftoff,
    subject to the vagaries of audience reaction and the imponderables that
    spell the difference between fame, obscurity, or something in between.

    Tonight at the Colonial Theatre, Hakhnazaryan, 19, will offer Berkshire
    audiences a first hearing of his upcoming recitals later this month
    at Carnegie's Zankel Hall and at the Kennedy Center.

    The performance at 7 is sponsored by Joseph and Mary Jane
    Handler. Piano accompanist is Noreen Polera, and the program includes
    music by Beethoven, Schumann, Paganini and Shostakovich, as well as
    brief works by contemporary Russian composer Rodion Shchedrin and
    Armenian composer Adam Khudoyan (1921-2000).

    Soccer ambitions

    During a telephone interview from the YCA offices in Manhattan,
    Hakhnazaryan confessed that even though his parents were musicians,
    "I didn't want to play any instrument when I was small, I just
    wanted to play soccer like everyone else. But of course, my parents
    wanted me to be a musician." One day, without warning, his mother,
    a pianist, enrolled him in a cello class at the Yerevan Music School
    in Armenia's ancient city, the republic's capital and now a bustling
    metropolis. "My father, who had wanted me to be a violinist like him,
    was very surprised but pleased," he recalled.

    "Everybody says I caught on very quickly, and that my hands were
    very good for the cello." By the time he was 11, Hakhnazaryan had
    won the Armenian Republic competition. After a summer of classes in
    Suzdal, near Moscow, he was invited to study at the Moscow Tchaikovsky
    Conservatory. He moved to the Russian capital with his mother, while
    his father stayed behind in Yerevan to continue playing in the Komitas
    Quartet, founded in 1924.

    The young cellist is now a third-year student at the Moscow State
    Conservatory; already, he has performed in the U.S., France, Germany,
    Austria, Greece, England and Canada.

    He launched his current tour at Saint Vincent College in Latrobe,
    Pa., where he found that listeners "didn't show their emotions at
    first, but they became warmer toward the end of the concert. Some
    audiences are very warm from the beginning; the differences are very
    interesting." He covets younger audiences because connecting with
    them is more challenging. "They like different music," Hakhnazaryan
    acknowledged, "but many people my age enjoy my concerts and come up
    to me afterwards."

    Although the prospect of performing recitals at Carnegie Hall or
    the Kennedy Center is nerve-wracking, "that's nothing compared to
    competitions. You don't know whether you are playing well in front of
    the judges." But nerves did not prevent him from scoring First Prize
    in the 2006 Aram Khachaturian International Competition in Armenia
    and Fifth Prize at the 2007 Tchaikovsky International Competition in
    Moscow, among others.

    Role models

    Cellists who have served as role models include Gregor Piatigorsky
    and Steven Isserlis, and favored composers range from Schumann and
    Shostakovich to Prokofiev and Bach. "It depends on my mood," he said,
    "but of course for me there is one composer always in my heart --
    Beethoven."

    In his down time, he enjoys Armenian folk music ("I can listen to it
    forever") and jazz, especially the late pianist Oscar Peterson. "I
    like all musicians who are talented, it doesn't matter which style
    it is," Hakhnazaryan stressed, listing Led Zeppelin and The Prodigy
    among his favorite rock performers.

    Future uncertain

    Apart from completing his conservatory studies in Moscow, his future
    plans are up in the air, except for a desire to live in the U.S.,
    where he finds New York City especially fascinating.

    "I'm not even thinking about it," he insisted. "I can see from my
    own experience that if I think about the future a lot, it's not
    happening. I'm just trying to do my best."

    After a foundation-sponsored performance in San Francisco in
    February 2006, Hakhnazaryan earned high praise from a reviewer for
    the San Francisco Classical Voice Web site -- "he gave an eloquent and
    fearless performance in some ways, gloriously old-fashioned. A young
    Piatigorsky would have been proud of such rhythms, such confident
    sound. His intonation was superb." Now he's under the aegis of Young
    Concert Artists, which helped launch the careers of Emanuel Ax,
    Dawn Upshaw, Richard Goode and other classical luminaries and has a
    "legendary track record of spotting the best new talent in classical
    music," according to The New York Times.

    Hakhnazaryan hopes this roll of the dice comes up sevens.

    In concert What: Cellist Narek Hakhnazaryan, with pianist Noreen
    Polera. Music by Beethoven, Schumann, Paganini, Shostakovich,Shchedrin,
    Khudoyan

    Who: Young Concert Artists

    When: Tonight 7

    Where: The Colonial Theatre, 111 South St., Pittsfield.

    Tickets: $12 (adults), $6 (students)

    How: (413) 997-4444; www.TheColonialTheatre.org ; at the box office
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