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Oakland Symphony's Tribute As Varied As Armenia

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  • Oakland Symphony's Tribute As Varied As Armenia

    OAKLAND SYMPHONY'S TRIBUTE AS VARIED AS ARMENIA
    Joshua Kosman, Chronicle Music Critic

    San Francisco Chronicle
    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cg i?f=/c/a/2010/01/24/DDB61BML77.DTL#ixzz0dc2LrXBs
    M onday, January 25, 2010

    A concert program devoted to the music of one national tradition
    is likely to follow several easily foreseen tracks. There will be
    works that have made it into the mainstream repertoire, there will
    be expressions of fervent and often folk-tinged nationalism, and
    there will be music that would never have been undertaken if not for
    the theme.

    Friday's concert by Michael Morgan and the Oakland East Bay Symphony
    hit all those bases without fail.

    The title of the program at the Paramount Theatre was "Notes From
    Armenia," and except for the opening ringer, Mozart's "Prague"
    Symphony, all of the music drew on Armenian subjects. Aram Khachaturian
    - still the most prominent Armenian in the classical canon - was
    represented by his Violin Concerto and an encore performance of his
    famous "Saber Dance."

    The nationalist angle was represented by two excerpts from "Armenia:
    Symphonic Panels" by Ghazaros Saryan and a pair of patriotic anthems
    by Edgar Hovhannisyan. And for pure special pleading, there was Edvard
    Mirzoyan's Symphony for Timpani and String Orchestra, a prodigiously
    dull creation whose presence on the program was otherwise inexplicable.

    If the evening overall did not add up to a clear and coherent portrait
    of musical Armenia, perhaps that is to be expected in connection
    with a culture as diverse and unclassifiable as any. But there were
    pleasures to be had along the way.

    Khachaturian's concerto, though scarcely a model of subtlety or
    tact, provides a pretty foolproof vehicle for pyrotechnics, and the
    young Armenian violinist Mikhail Simonyan took advantage of every
    opportunity. He zipped through the first movement at a breathless pace
    (sometimes, in fact, racing ahead of the orchestra) and dispatched
    all of the ferocious passagework with fearless precision.

    There were some mild tuning problems here and in the even faster
    finale, but they vanished in the slow movement, where Simonyan
    delivered a soulful and sweetly shaped account of the songful main
    melody. Morgan conducted with robust clarity, just as he had in
    the Mozart.

    The Armenian novelties on the second half culminated with the
    appearance of the Seemorgh Ensemble, supplemented by singers from other
    local choral groups, to raise the rafters with two populist anthems:
    "Yerevan Erebooni," a hymn to the Armenian capital, and "Sardarapat,"
    about the 1918 battle that prevented Ottoman forces from completely
    overrunning the country.

    Like most such expressions of national pride, these proved crude
    but undeniably stirring - which was far preferable to the crude but
    soporific writing in Mirzoyan's 1962 opus. Stretched out over four
    brutally repetitive movements, the piece was a morass of chunky chords
    and drab string textures, leavened only by the muscular interjections
    of timpanist Tyler Mack and one beautiful and all-too-brief violin
    solo by concertmaster Dawn Harms.

    As if to draw a cruel contrast, Morgan followed that with "Garni," the
    first movement of Saryan's painterly suite. Its vivid and inventive
    writing for strings alone showed what could be done with those
    textures, and the finale, "A Sunny Landscape" - a brisk, brightly
    scored gallop dominated by a trumpet solo - proved equally engaging.

    The smart move, surely, would have been to include that piece in
    its entirety.

    E-mail Joshua Kosman at [email protected].

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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