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Review: Violinist Lights A Fire With Khachaturian Concerto At Oaklan

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  • Review: Violinist Lights A Fire With Khachaturian Concerto At Oaklan

    REVIEW: VIOLINIST LIGHTS A FIRE WITH KHACHATURIAN CONCERTO AT OAKLAND
    By Cheryl North

    San Jose Mercury News
    http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_1 4264468
    01/25/2010 12:40:52 PM PST

    Siberian-Armenian violinist Mikhail Simonyan will play Aram
    Khatchaturian's Violin Concerto with...

    Armenian-Siberian violinist Mikhail Simonyan strode onto Oakland's
    Paramount Theatre stage last Friday evening, tucked his violin under
    his chin, and proceeded unabashedly to win over his capacity audience
    with his exposition of the fascinating beauty and intensity of the
    music of Armenia.

    The 23-year-old, who looks like a younger version of the Russian
    Federation president, Dmitri Medvedev, played with the flair of
    a 19th-century virtuoso idol - the sort that habituated the great
    stages of Europe.

    But instead of St. Petersberg's Mariinsky Theater, Vienna's Musik
    Verein Hall, or some princely palace in Prague, Simonyan temporarily
    ruled over the stage of the Paramount movie palace during the Oakland
    East Bay Symphony's "Notes from Armenia" concert. Michael Morgan
    conducted with his usual warmth and elan - and as though he too had
    a bit of Armenian blood in his veins.

    Simply put, Simonyan produced one of the most seductive string tones
    I've ever heard as he wielded a steady bowing arm artfully over the
    strings of his 1769 Giuseppe Gagliano violin. His was a tone that
    seemed to resonate with all the colors and gradations of the sonic
    rainbow. Whether at pianissimo levels or racing through cascades of
    virtuosic double-stops and cadenza passages, it penetrated through
    the hall with laser clarity.

    Reaping the benefit of all this vaunted versatility was the D major
    Violin Concerto composed by Armenia's Aram Khachaturian in 1940.
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