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21-Year-Old Pianist Shows Mature, Magnificent Artistry

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  • 21-Year-Old Pianist Shows Mature, Magnificent Artistry

    21-YEAR-OLD PIANIST SHOWS MATURE, MAGNIFICENT ARTISTRY
    By Alan Becker

    South Florida Classical Review
    http://southfloridaclassicalreview.com/2010 /03/21-year-old-pianist-shows-mature-magnificent-a rtistry/
    March 24 2010

    Nareh Arghamanyan is not a name familiar to most concertgoers,
    but just wait. The 21-year-old Armenian pianist has garnered many
    impressive awards and recognitions. They include the Gina Bachauer
    international Junior Piano Competition, the 1997 International Chopin
    Competition in Yugoslavia, and the 2008 Montreal International Musical
    Competition. In 2004 she was the youngest student admitted to the
    University for Music and Performing Arts in Vienna and graduated in
    2008 with highest honors.

    >>From what was heard Tuesday night at the University of Miami's
    Gusman Concert Hall, Julian Kreeger and Friends of Chamber Music of
    Miami deserve our gratitude for bringing this exceptional artist to
    the Miami audience, since this young pianist demonstrated talent and
    musicianship of the highest order.

    Arghamanyan opened with three of Domenico Scarlatti's sonatas, all
    in D minor. They formed a most satisfying triptych and the playing
    ranged from the most refined tones, barely sounding forth, to the
    electricity of rapid passagework with lightning repeated notes to
    take one's breath away.

    This refinement was matched in Schumann's rarely played Humoresque,
    in which the composer puts his two personalities---Florestan and
    Eusebius--clearly on display in six sharply contrasting sections. The
    contrasts between Schumann's passionate and introspective side were
    manifest in this performance, realized to the fullest in Arghamanyan's
    supple yearning, and powerful fleet-fingered technique. It was a
    remarkable achievement, and further pointed out what a first-rate
    work Schumann has given us.

    Franz Liszt's Ballade No. 2 dates from 1853 and is a substantial work
    that tells the adventure of a melody, much as the composer has done
    in his Piano Concerto No. 2. It is chock full of Lisztian rhetoric,
    but the melody itself has a gentle character in most all of its
    variations. Once again this young aritist was able to encapsulate
    all of its moods and passions with great feeling and depth.

    After the preceding challenges, taking on Rachmaninoff's
    knuckle-busting Etudes-tableaux, Op. 33 would almost seem to be
    a cruel and merciless challenge. Needless to say Arghamanyan was
    well-suited temperamentally to this music, and gave us performances
    of great passion, rhythmically stunning contrasts, and great beauty
    in all of Rachmaninoff's yearning vocalise-like lines. This reviewer
    would be hard pressed to recall another performance of the set quite
    as outstanding as this one.
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