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Sinfonia Toronto's Series Presents Ani Batikian 12/11

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  • Sinfonia Toronto's Series Presents Ani Batikian 12/11

    SINFONIA TORONTO'S SERIES PRESENTS ANI BATIKIAN 12/11

    Broadway World
    http://toronto.broadwayworld.com/article/Sin ofonia_Torontos_Series_Presents_Ani_Batikian_1211_ 20091111
    Nov 11 2009

    Sinfonia Toronto is pleased to present Armenian violinist Ani Batikian
    in her Canadian debut on Friday, December 11. The repertoire: PUCCINI:
    Three Minuets; HOVHANESS: Violin Concerto; KHACHATURIAN: Masquerade
    Suite; STRAUSS: Die Fledermaus; BARTOK: Rumanian Dances.

    Hovhaness wrote his Violin Concerto in seven short movements. The
    titles of the movements are self-descriptive: a Pastoral, two
    movements titled Aria, a Hymn, a Recitative and Lullaby, a Presto
    and an Allegro. Throughout the piece the solo violin soars over a
    variety of complex accompaniments in which Hovhaness uses a variety
    of compositional techniques such as free polyphony, polyrhythm and
    polymelody, occasionally even using these techniques simultaneously in
    two different layers of the score. He obtains a great range of tonal
    colours as well, with imaginative use of special string techniques
    like pizzicato and tremolo.

    The concerto was given its Canadian premiere in 2002 by Sinfonia
    Toronto with violinist Jasper Wood and Nurhan Arman conducting. CBC
    Radio 2 broadcast the performance; one movement can be heard at
    http://www.jasperwood.net/

    American composer Alan Hovhaness (1911-2000) was an idiosyncratic
    musical pioneer who sought a musical reconciliation between East and
    West, spiritual and mundane, long before it was fashionable to do so.

    Born near Boston to an Armenian father and a mother of Scottish
    ancestry, his upbringing was "all-American". As a boy he composed
    in secret. "My family thought composing was abnormal, so they would
    confiscate my music if they caught me in the act." Jean Sibelius was
    an early mentor from whom Hovhaness acquired his love of long lyrical
    melodies. The composer's exposure to Armenian culture was around 1940
    when he became organist at an Armenian church in Boston. From that
    point forward, he composed works with Armenian titles or subject
    matter. In the 1950s Hovhaness' style became more Westernized, but
    some Armenian and also Indian influences remained prominent, such
    as his pioneering use of Indian cyclic rhythm concepts. Following
    extended visits to India, Korea and Japan from1959 to 1962, Hovhaness
    incorporated Indo-Oriental idioms throughout the 1960s. From the
    1970s, Hovhaness remained very prolific, reaching around Opus 450
    by the time of his death. His output comprises music in almost every
    conceivable genre, from large-scale oratorios, operas and symphonies
    down to piano sonatas and solo works for Oriental instruments.

    Armenian violinist Ani Batikian entered the State Conservatory in
    Yerevan, Armenia at the age of 15, the youngest student ever to study
    there and supported by a local scholarship. At the age of 19 she
    received her undergraduate degree and at the age of 20 a postgraduate
    diploma with honours. Her charismatic personality and artistry go
    hand in hand with her violin, making her performance impressive and
    unforgettable. Ani displays boldness in her choice of repertoire,
    which ranges from baroque to contemporary.

    For more information, please visit www.sinfoniatoronto.com.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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