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Music: A 'Happening' Of Art, Music And Dance At The National Portrai

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  • Music: A 'Happening' Of Art, Music And Dance At The National Portrai

    A 'HAPPENING' OF ART, MUSIC AND DANCE AT THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY
    by Robert Battey

    The Washington Post
    May 21, 2012 Monday

    -Narek Hakhnazaryan

    Washington is fortunate to get regular visits from Armenian cello
    phenom Narek Hakhnazaryan, whose gold medal at last year's Tchaikovsky
    Competition added to a bulging trophy case. He has appeared here
    at least five times in recent seasons, and his recital on Saturday
    afternoon at the Library of Congress drew a vociferously appreciative
    audience.

    Hakhnazaryan's gifts on the instrument are manifest; his sound can
    turn from orotund power to a gossamer whisper in an instant, and
    he undertakes risky (but more expressive) fingerings with complete
    security. His intonation is mostly excellent, although it can drift
    when he plays fortissimo. His facility and clarity with the instrument
    are astonishing, and he attends carefully to the connections between
    notes, creating singing lines of satisfying logic.

    In short, Hakhnazaryan is a complete cellist. Is he a complete
    musician? Only 24, one would expect and hope for growth. This
    should begin with his repertoire; of the six works on the program,
    only one was by a composer who wasn't born between 1810 and 1840 -
    and, if memory serves, past programs here were similar. This will
    not do for much longer. He is at the level where he'll be compared
    with Weilerstein, Capucon and Gerhardt; offering Armenian folk-song
    arrangements as encores does not count as "range."

    As an interpretive artist, Hakhnazaryan is a work in progress; a year
    ago, he was a student at the New England Conservatory, and it might
    take time to develop his personal voice. It's fine to be transported by
    the music, as his performing demeanor often indicates, but top-level
    artists do more than react to the music - they re-create it and say
    something fresh and individual through it. There is nothing standing
    in this young virtuoso's way; with further experience and mentoring
    (life and musical), more chamber music and taking time to reflect
    about what he has to say, the sky's the limit.

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