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Sergey Khachatryan At Wigmore Hall

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  • Sergey Khachatryan At Wigmore Hall

    SERGEY KHACHATRYAN AT WIGMORE HALL
    Neil Fisher

    The Times
    March 20, 2009
    UK

    It's the hardest lesson to master, because it can't be taught. Sure,
    the musician has found out how to play Bach, Brahms or Beethoven,
    but has he found his own voice, too -- the one that ultimately draws
    the audience to come back to him?

    When it comes to Sergey Khachatryan, the answer is a huge, huge yes.

    There's a big, glossy heap of talented violinists at the moment,
    but what separates this young Armenian from the pack isn't just the
    rich sound of his Strad (the 1708 "Huggins", if you're interested in
    such things); it's how forcefully, how individually he deploys it. By
    the end of this recital, delivered with another Khachatryan (Lusine,
    his sister) at the piano, I felt so convinced that his way was going
    to be the right way that what the critical pen was scribbling on the
    critical notebook seemed pretty irrelevant.

    Perhaps the biggest surprise about Khachatryan is that his choices
    aren't the obvious ones: he's not one of those firecrackers who
    confuse pace and volume with energy and intensity. Opening with Bach's
    unaccompanied D minor Partita he shirked anything to do with lean,
    limber Bach and went for old-fashioned, spacious Romanticism. But there
    was a wealth of expressive detailling here: the Courante was driven and
    tense; an intimat e Sarabande breathed into life like a whisper in the
    dark. And then that mighty Chaconne, in Khachatryan's hands a restless
    search for beauty that felt like an epic but never felt overwrought:
    it drew you in, rather than reaching beyond Bach's natural austerity.

    Brahms's Violin Sonata No 1 came next, introducing a sibling
    partnership that clearly thought the same way: reflection over
    showmanship. Violinist and pianist handled it with rapt affection and
    the sort of noncholant, natural charm that could only mean hours in
    the practice room.

    Then, another demon of the repertoire, Beethoven's Kreutzer sonata,
    and another surprise. Its obsessive rhythms and repeated refrains
    normally scream high-octane drama, but it was the soulful tang of
    Khachatryan's Strad that led the way, and what stayed in the mind was
    actually the soft, middle movement, a tender set of variations served
    up with sprung, silken elegance. A spell-binding encore, an arrangement
    of Rachmaninov's Vocalise, rounded things off. By then, the notebook
    had long been abandoned: one for the personal archive instead.
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