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"Two Souls" = Khachadurian: Violin Concerto In D Minor

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  • "Two Souls" = Khachadurian: Violin Concerto In D Minor

    "TWO SOULS" = KHACHADURIAN: VIOLIN CONCERTO IN D MINOR

    Audiophile Audition
    April 5 2013

    Barber: Violin Concerto in A Minor; Adagio for Strings - Mikhail
    Simonyan, v./ London Sym. Orch./ Kristjan Jarvi

    Youthful violin virtuoso Mikhail Simonyan displays his affection for
    two distinct characters in his musical make-up, Armenian and American,
    and Kristjan Jarvi adds his own passions.

    "Two Souls" = KHACHATURIAN: Violin Concerto in D Minor; BARBER: Violin
    Concerto in A Minor, Op. 14; Adagio for Strings, Op. 11 - Mikhail
    Simonyan, v./ London Sym. Orch./ Kristjan Jarvi - DGG B0016170-02,
    70:33 [Distr. by Universal] ****:

    Two souls reside, alas, within my breast, And each one from the other
    would be parted.

    The one holds fast, in sturdy lust for love, With clutching organs
    clinging to the world; The other strongly rises from the gloom To
    lofty fields of ancient heritage.

    -Goethe, Faust I, Scene 2, lines 1112-1117.

    Armenian violin virtuoso Mikhail Simonyan has recorded (30 May - 1 June
    2011) the Khachaturian and Barber concertos to express his dual nature
    that he shares with conductor Kristjan Jarvi, the latter raised as a
    protege of "Uncle Aram," the composer Khachaturian, who had befriended
    father Neeme Jarvi. But since Simonyan studied with Victor Danchenko -
    a famed David Oistrakh pupil - at the Curtis Institute, his own Russian
    heritage has the direct benefit of the Oistrakh tradition as well as
    the American temperament. Simonyan toured the United States early, age
    thirteen, as soloist with the American Russian Young Artists Orchestra,
    so his "divided" personality runs deep with currents of both worlds.

    In order to "authenticate" his version of the 1940 Khachaturian
    Concerto, Simonyan commissioned Artur Avanesov to write a new cadenza,
    one "with a strong feeling of Armenian church music. . . .our deep,
    ancient and unique church-music tradition. This element brings a
    whole new color to the concerto." Simonyan plays with the lightning
    facility we know from both Oistrakh and Leonid Kogan in this compound
    of virtuosic and eminently lyrical elements. Simonyan likes to lean
    into the phrases for emotional emphasis, and the LSO supports his
    singularly emotional outbursts with a panoply of colors. Conductor
    Jarvi does not stint on the sudden, convulsive thrusts forward,
    the often ravishing flights of fancy accompanied by strings, harp,
    gurgling winds, and percussion that might remind us of rattling
    sabers. The cadenza itself proves a mixed blessing, having shed
    Oistrakh's bravura contribution for a series of modal colors in the
    form of broken chant-like figures whose reliance on harmonics sounds
    less idiomatic than we might prefer. Sounds like an unaccompanied
    sonata by Schnittke or derivative Ysaye? With the return of the
    orchestra, the familiar fireworks flame up once more, and we feel
    grateful for home ground, though it be "merely" virtuosic.

    The songful Andante sostenuto rocks dreamy, like a variation on
    Satie's first Gymnopedie, here become a plaintive lullaby in Armenian
    colors. Certainly touches of Khachaturian's affinity for the ballet
    insinuate themselves into the melodic contour, which several times
    hints at the Adagio from Spartacus. Suave and polychromatic, the
    last movement Allegro vivace hustles through its motions with fleet
    assurance, a real joie de vivre. Simonyan loves to use a slight
    rallentando at the end of phrases coupled with a subito diminuendo
    to underline his poignant affection for this ceaselessly energetic
    tribute to the Armenian spirit and its first purveyor, David Oistrakh.

    The Barber A Minor Concerto, curiously, moves us a continent westward
    spatially, but the music (1939) speaks contemporaneously with
    Khachaturian, though a world of syntax away. Applying his zestful,
    singing tone to the Barber, Simonyan projects the same ardor of
    expression as in the Khachaturian piece, again leaning into phrases
    with the effect of increasing our sense of poignant melancholy. The
    LSO under Jarvi responds with lovely, transparent colors, quite
    resonant and idiomatic. Lovers of the Barber Andante movement will
    easily savor Simonyan and Jarvi's sympathetic approach, rife with
    the yearning sense of the American heartland that informs portions of
    Knoxville, Summer of 1915. Jarvi and Simonyan deliberately choose to
    slow down the otherwise frenetic pace of the final movement, Presto
    in moto perpetuo, the very bravura of which had at first pronounced
    the concerto unplayable. With the tympani and sudden strings in the
    background, the music perhaps gains a country hoe-down character that
    undaunted speed would not have revealed. The woodwinds and horns
    add their portion of mustard seed to the mix, and the accumulated
    energy galvanizes to a colossal peroration. The last pages play like
    a martial confrontation which ends with a decisive thud.

    Yet another Adagio for Strings joins a long list of slow drawn-out
    readings, loving and deeply valedictory. Does anyone recall that
    Barber lifted this tune from Torelli? But with recent politics of
    our old nemesis in North Korea, the tragic sentiment expressed for
    the film Platoon is perhaps not unwarranted.

    -Gary Lemco

    http://audaud.com/2013/04/two-souls-khachaturian-violin-concerto-in-d-minor-barber-violin-concerto-in-a-minor-adagio-for-strings-mikhail-simonyan-v-london-sym-orch-kristjan-jarvi-dgg/

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