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Bayrakdarian's Brahms Bound To Be Brilliant

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  • Bayrakdarian's Brahms Bound To Be Brilliant

    BAYRAKDARIAN'S BRAHMS BOUND TO BE BRILLIANT
    by Stuart Derdeyn

    The Vancouver Province
    December 1, 2011 Thursday

    Isabel Bayrakdarian and guests with Vancouver Symphony Orchestra Where:
    Orpheum Theatre, 601 Smithe St.

    When: Saturday/Monday, 8 p.m. (pre-concert talks 7 p.m. in the
    auditorium) Tickets: Various prices at van-couversymphony.ca or
    604-876-3434

    The last time soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian performed Brahms'
    career-changing "Ein Deutsches Requiem (A German Requiem)" was back
    in the days where words like "captivating," "charming" and "new"
    were used to describe her already astonishing, but as yet not fully
    under-stood, talents. When the singer meets the work this weekend
    with the VSO under Maestro Bramwell Tovey and guests baritone Hugh
    Russell and the Vancouver Bach Choir, it will be as the "incomparable,"
    "defining" and "glob-al" star she has become.

    "I was a light, lyric and inexperienced [singer] last time I performed
    it, over 13 years ago," says Bayrakdar-ian. "So it was as a notch in my
    belt more than coming into the challenge of this piece's vocal parts,
    which soar and joyfully exalt the spirit even in sadness.

    "Where requiems are usually some-thing more of a downer, this work
    is full of hope at the end of the struggle and rejoining those who
    are deceased at the end of your life and, ultimately, it is hopeful."

    First performed in Leipzig in 1869, Brahms began work on the requiem
    some 10 years earlier working through ideas for both a first symphony
    and parts did indeed become the first Piano Concerto.

    However, with the death of his creative mentor Robert Schumann and
    then his mother in 1865, he went fully into crafting a requiem in
    German using Martin Luther's German Bible as opposed to the far more
    common classical Catholic Mass used in most requiems. This instantly
    meant that the piece was imbued with the humanist views gaining favour
    at the time.

    Brahms was 35 at the time of the piece's premiere and, after a
    less-than-favourable first run-through, it truly established him as
    a heavy-weight.

    Some music historians have noted the various ways voices are used as
    key to the work's enduring appeal. Bayrakdarian disagrees with the
    sometimes stated "non-aria" qualities of the piece. She says that
    it is more how the words of the scripture are like a proclamation
    echoed by the chorus as a voice of angels than a more traditional
    call-and-response prayer. Somewhat different, but not completely
    different.

    "The chorus comes in to give credibility, sonority and validity to
    arias in a non-secular piece of say, a Rossini opera. And there are
    moments with the baritone where the chorus does, in fact, almost become
    as equals in the work. But I would call my two main pieces arias."

    She's the singer, so the wise ears defer to her interpretation. After
    all, this is an artist who has worked and recorded everything from
    the best-known Mozart operas to the classical folksong adaptations of
    Armenian composer Vartabed Gomidas working with her husband, pianist
    Serouj Kradjian. Bayrakdarian is certainly not afraid of the modern
    or put-ting her voice into different settings. Her recent concert
    series with cellist Stephan Isserlis at Wigmore Hall in London is a
    prime example.

    "I cannot compare that venue to anywhere else in the world, it
    magnifies the warmth in the voice to the point you are asking if it
    is really you. It was a great experience with Stephen, too because
    he chose such incredible new works for cello and voice, particularly
    Russian composers, that just worked so well."

    There may be a recording of the recital, but after the Brahms this
    weekend comes a production of Zem-linsky's Der Zwerg at the Gran
    Teatro del Liceu in Barcelona.

    "Barcelona in the winter sounded like a pretty good plan don't
    you think?"

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