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Armenian Cellist Narek Hakhnazaryan Captivates At Strathmore Mansion

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  • Armenian Cellist Narek Hakhnazaryan Captivates At Strathmore Mansion

    ARMENIAN CELLIST NAREK HAKHNAZARYAN CAPTIVATES AT STRATHMORE MANSION

    armradio.am
    25.02.2012 14:29

    The Strathmore Mansion on Thursday was chock full of patrons (including
    cellists and other string players) to hear the 23-year-old Armenian
    cellist Narek Hakhnazaryan give a phenomenal account of some musical
    thrillers by Cesar Franck, Frederic Chopin, Dmitri Shostakovich and
    Mstislav Rostropovich. Franck's late Sonata in A, the evening's opener,
    and Shostakovich's Sonata in D minor, Op. 40, call on every dimension
    of a performer's technique and expressive means.

    Hakhnazaryan impresses you with a degree of freedom that comes
    hard-won from discipline of the highest order. And he had a brilliant
    pianist, Noreen Cassidy-Polera, to support that level of artistry,
    The Washington Post writes.

    The cellist won first prize at last year's International Tchaikovsky
    Competition in Moscow. He is already a seasoned performer in first-rate
    concert halls with major orchestras around the world.

    "Hakhnazaryan's talent was obvious from the opening phrase of
    Franck's late Sonata (originally for violin). Whether pianissimo or
    triple forte, his bow was ever emphatic, and his emotive power and
    subjective intensity captured the listener immediately, never letting
    go. The whole thrust of the piece - especially the third movement -
    is a monumental fantasia, requiring the cellist to hurl through its
    wavering thematic transformations while seeming to improvise.

    Shostakovich's Op. 40 demands control and fortitude from both players.

    On Thursday it was all there with both players evenly matched. Op. 40
    is a marvel of alternating passages of sublime, liquid lyricism with
    depths of astringent harmony and textures. Throughout the sonata, the
    musicians underscored the music's overwhelming sense of inevitability.

    This was most obviously felt in the driving pulse of the outer Allegros
    and most subtly in the Largo, charging forward with the epic breadth
    of the Russian steppes. The finale's jaunty contrapuntal interplay
    erupted into a blazing firestorm, as if endlessly toying with a
    listener's expectations.

    Chopin's Introduction and Polonaise Brillante, Op. 3, and
    Rostropovich's Humoresque, Op. 5, aren't simply display pieces,
    though they both leave the performers to tackle every technical trick
    of the trade at a whirlwind pace," the paper writes.

    Hakhnazaryan's two blazing encores weren't enough for the audience,
    who clamored for more.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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