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A Groban Look-Alike, A Brooding Violin

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  • A Groban Look-Alike, A Brooding Violin

    A GROBAN LOOK-ALIKE, A BROODING VIOLIN
    David Patrick Stearns

    Philadelphia Inquirer
    http://www.philly.com/inquirer/magazine/20090416_ A_Groban_look-alike__a_brooding_violin.html
    April 16 2009

    Inquirer Classical Music Critic

    In a world of concert violinists that's increasingly crowded with the
    young and the charismatic, Sergey Khachatryan stands apart: He looks
    as young as any but seems almost too old to be alive.

    A brooding, slightly pained presence, the 24-year-old winner of
    Belgium's famous Queen Elisabeth Competition seems to submit to
    the great violin concertos as much as he plays them - doing so with
    truth-probing tempos and intimacy of expression, he seems to speak
    through the violin as if it were a first language. Seen on the street,
    he's a skinny kid in a hoodie, with Josh Groban eyes. With a violin,
    he's a musical lightning rod.

    "The only place my emotions are coming out is on the stage - in
    my whole life," he explained on Tuesday, having arrived here for
    this week's concerts with the Philadelphia Orchestra tomorrow and
    Saturday at the Kimmel Center. "Maybe God made me like that. Maybe
    my emotions are so strong onstage because it's the only place I can
    show them. . . .

    "To be on the stage is a completely different world. For example, if
    you have some pain in your body, when you step on stage, everything
    goes. I've played concerts when ill. I had a temperature of 38 Celsius
    [100.4], which is kind of high. . . . But the stage is a miracle
    place where you forget everything but being in the music. And this
    gives you a lot of energy."

    Sometimes he has more energy than conductors can keep up with. That's
    reportedly what happened when he was in the final movement of the
    Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto with the Philadelphia Orchestra in Saratoga
    last August. That's also true in Shostakovich's Violin Concerto No. 1
    (which he plays this week in Philadelphia) as seen on YouTube. No
    wonder he plays only 50 to 55 concerts a year - each one leaves him
    so empty, he says, "I need to refill everything. I don't want to do
    this as an everyday job."

    What could be mistaken for an iconoclastic manner is, in fact,
    his commitment to making music live in the moment. That's why his
    Philadelphia performances are philosophically bound to be different
    from his 2007 recording of the Shostakovich concerto (in which he
    collaborates with the same conductor, Kurt Masur). Added to that
    is a concrete difference from past performances: It's Khachatryan's
    first with a new violin: His prescribed four years with the "Huggins"
    Stradivarius as part of the Queen Elisabeth prize ended; the Nippon
    Foundation has now loaned him the "Lord Newlands" Strad.

    That instrument offers a narrower range of possibilities - put it
    under physical pressure and sound quality suffers - but Khachatryan
    doesn't necessarily feel restricted. He frequently talks about comfort
    as being dangerous: He'd love to take up conducting - but no, it's
    too comfortable. He also rejects the conventionally fluid fingerings
    when playing violin. Growing up in a family of pianists, he conceived
    phrase readings in purely musical terms, not violinistic ones.

    "The violin isn't comfortable for the human body in general, that's
    why we've sacrificed a lot in the way of phrasing, because it has
    to be comfortable for us," he says. "You don't hear a big difference
    between violinists anymore because you're used to that comfort."

    Much about Khachatryan is explained by his being Armenian -
    seriously Armenian. He talks about his country's ancient alphabet
    and civilization. He's one of the few who dislikes David Oistrakh's
    classic recordings of the Khachaturian Violin Concerto because there's
    so little sense of Armenian folklore.

    The fact that his father gave him a violin when he was 5 - and he
    didn't give it up amid teenage rebellion - reflects a distinctively
    Armenian faith in and respect for family. Thus, when the family
    moved for job-related reasons from Yerevan, Armenia, to Frankfurt,
    Khachatryan got solid German training, and at age 15 was the
    youngest-ever winner of the Jean Sibelius International Competition.

    His American presence began when he placed in the 2002 Indianapolis
    Violin Competition (three years before his career-making Queen
    Elisabeth win), and continues as he makes his other home with his
    parents in Glendale, Calif., a city dominated by such a large,
    close Armenian community that even the non-Armenians speak bits of
    the language. Through that, he also acquired a green card, essential
    for cutting through post-9/11 red tape to which so many non-American
    musicians are subjected.

    When he made his 2006 New York debut at the Mostly Mozart Festival with
    the monumental Beethoven Violin Concerto, he audaciously played, as
    an encore, the other great violin monument, Bach's 16-minute Chaconne
    in D minor for unaccompanied violin. A youthful flight of ego? No,
    an Armenian family thing: Both parents had birthdays and this was
    their present. (He also asked the orchestra's permission to do so two
    days in advance.) His recital partner is his sister, Lusine. He says,
    "I can say nowadays that these are the only people I really trust."

    But is there life beyond family and violin? Since he plays only a
    third the number of engagements once played by Maxim Vengerov (now
    a retired case of burnout), he has time to be a gearhead: He loves
    his Subaru rally car in Frankfurt, even improving it with his own
    automotive-engineering innovations. No significant other is on the
    scene. His musical world has yet to include opera. But he refers to
    jazz greats like Ella Fitzgerald by first names.

    This other life is another reason why his approach to Shostakovich
    has undergone a major shift. His recording was made amid a passionate
    infatuation with the music. "That's wonderful for the player," he says,
    "but for the listener, it's not so great.

    "How to explain this? Whenever you're burning about something, when
    you're emotionally completely inside the piece, it just stays there. It
    doesn't go out. You have to see the whole thing. If you're standing
    in front of a van Gogh painting close up, you can never understand
    what he has to say. Now, I can see the music more globally."
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