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Hamasyan's Fable : Armenian-Born Musician Goes Solo On New Release

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  • Hamasyan's Fable : Armenian-Born Musician Goes Solo On New Release

    HAMASYAN'S FABLE : ARMENIAN-BORN MUSICIAN GOES SOLO ON NEW RELEASE
    By STEPHEN COOKE

    The Chronicle Herald
    http://thechronicleherald.ca/artslife/60823-hamasyan-s-fable
    Feb 9 2012
    Halifax, Canada

    BY A WEIRD coincidence, this week began with a show by Deep Purple and
    it wraps up with an artist who lists the British heavy rock legends as
    a prime influence, yet their music couldn't be more sharply contrasted.

    Even so, Tigran Hamasyan can generate as much drama from a lone grand
    piano as his early idols can with 10,000 watts of sound, which he'll
    demonstrate on Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Peggy Corkum Music Room,
    formerly known as simply the Music Room, on Lady Hammond Road.

    "Yeah, all these bands, Deep Purple, Nazareth, Black Sabbath and
    Led Zeppelin, those guys were my heroes when I was a kid," says the
    Armenian-born musician over the phone from Los Angeles, sounding a
    bit disappointed to learn that original Purple keyboardist Jon Lord
    has been sidelined by injury and illness for the past few years.

    There is no trace of rock and roll overkill on Hamasyan's Verve
    Records debut A Fable, just imaginative dexterity and a feel for
    atmosphere and visual suggestion that can launch a flood of visual
    images on What the Waves Brought and The Legend of the Moon.

    At times, it feels like a soundtrack in search of a silent movie
    with settings like a village carnival or the deepest, darkest woods
    imaginable. It seems virtually impossible for two people to hear A
    Fable in the exact same way, and it's surprising to learn that this is
    Hamasyan's first solo recording, after a handful of combo recordings.

    "You grow up playing alone; even with a band, most of your time is
    spent at home by yourself practising or creating music," he explains.

    "Playing solo is one of the most natural things for any musician,
    and I've been meaning to record solo because I've been playing solo
    concerts for a while, and it seemed like the right time.

    "It's a challenge, you know? Because it takes time until you feel that
    you can say something playing by yourself. There are so many solo piano
    records out there, for over a century there's been all this amazing
    piano music, so it's a big challenge to come up with something new."

    Don't be surprised to hear echoes of solo piano work ranging from
    Erik Satie to Keith Jarrett in Hamasyan's performance, but he also
    has a realm of influence that's just as important in the folk tales,
    songs and medieval hymns from his native Armenia.

    "For example, I was inspired by the work of these fabulists that lived
    in the 13th century, and they wrote an extensive number of fables,
    and they were also political figures.

    "It was amazing when I rediscovered them, and I realized that the
    fables they were writing related to their everyday lives, and I related
    to them as well. They're about the exact same values, and you can
    see how people in the world haven't changed. It's pretty remarkable."

    The concept of fables spans the Bible - What the Waves Brought
    reminds me that the Ararat mountain range, the final resting place
    of Noah's ark, is in Armenia - to Walt Disney. Snow White's Someday
    My Prince Will Come takes on a tone that's more dark than wistful:
    "Be careful what you wish for," it seems to say.

    The album's closer, Mother, Where Are You?, is a medieval Armenian
    hymn that brings everything back to Earth, and sums up centuries of
    the nation's hardships and persecution in a few succinct lines.

    "I've always been meaning to arrange that song, because I thought it
    had one of the most amazing melodies I've ever heard," says Hamasyan,
    who feels the meaning comes across even if the listener doesn't know
    the background.

    "It's challenging to express myself in a way that people can understand
    it, but I keep getting great feedback. I think all types of folk
    music and religious music are part of something that's universal and
    it doesn't matter what nationality you are.

    "Whatever kind of folk music it is, you can understand it."

    Tickets for Hamasyan areavailable at jazzeast.com/tigran-hamasyan or
    by calling 492-2225.

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