The viola sings out: Reviews of recordings by Kim Kashkashian

Los Angeles Times, CA
Nov 1 2009

The viola sings out
Reviews of recordings by Kim Kashkashian, Yuri Bashmet, David Aaron
Carpenter, Eliesha Nelson and others.

David Aaron Carpenter is an up-and-comer. (Aline Paley)

By MARK SWED

Music Critic

November 1, 2009
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Google "viola joke" and you’ll be rewarded with thousands, an
afternoon’s worth of hilarity at the expense of one of the most
expressive sound producing machines ever conjured up.

Here’s a popular example: What’s the difference between a viola and a
trampoline? You take your shoes off to jump on a trampoline.

I learned that one from a violist who, like many of his colleagues,
collects the jokes and posts them online. Why shouldn’t he? He lives a
charmed life with a string instrument mellower than a violin and more
agile than a cello, a mechanism of magic, under his chin every day. He
has no need for insecurity.

Even so, violists have traditionally fought for the limelight and
seldom won, which may explain why the viola world has had its share of
unstable characters as well. Covered by the higher and lower strings,
the viola easily gets lost in the orchestra or a string quartet. The
instrument lacks the stellar solo repertoire for violin or cello. For
some inexplicable reason, such accomplished viola players as Mozart,
Beethoven, Mendelssohn and Dvorák seldom featured the instrument in
their scores. Of the handful of viola soloists who became famous, none
has been a household name to rival the great violinists and cellists.

That doesn’t mean we need pity the poor violist. Things began looking
up for the viola in the 20th century when notable viola concertos
began being written. Things are looking up even more in the 21st. We
now have several fine soloists on the scene, much new viola music
being written for them, and neglected earlier viola music is being
rediscovered. The viola has even become hip in the twentysomething new
music club crowd. And many recent CDs have come out to prove all of
this.

A strong contender for classical CD of the year and one that early
Christmas shoppers should begin stocking up on is the latest ECM
release featuring the extraordinary Armenian American violist Kim
Kashkashian. The disc is titled "Neharót," after a stunningly
beautiful and profoundly moving piece written for her by the Israeli
composer Betty Olivero.

"Neharót Neharót" was written in 2006 in the midst of Israel’s war
with Hezbollah in Lebanon. The title is Hebrew for "Rivers Rivers," an
allusion to the tears of women but also to nehar, which means ray of
hope. For viola, accordion, percussion, two string ensembles and tape,
it melds many sad songs, not only Jewish but Kurdish and North
African, into a rapturous whole; the viola (which has a range common
to the voices of women and men) is here the great healer.

Olivero’s piece is followed on Kashkashian’s CD by Tigran Mansurian’s
"Three Arias (Sung out the window facing Mount Ararat)," resplendent
works for solo viola and chamber orchestra by Armenia’s leading
composer. This disc concludes with another beautiful Israeli work —
Eitan Steinberg’s "Rava Deravin" for viola and string quartet — a
haunting prayer in muted but glowing colors that finds common
spiritual ground in Hasidic and Armenian song, the song of
Holocaust-scarred peoples.

A warning: Do not download this recording. Buy the CD and play it
through loudspeakers. This is music that embraces the world, and it
needs to radiate in a space far more expansive than your cranium.

A star violist may be on the horizon. David Aaron Carpenter is a young
American who makes his disc debut with recordings of a viola
arrangement of Elgar’s Cello Concerto and of Alfred Schnittke’s Viola
Concerto. Christoph Eschenbach, a champion of Carpenter, conducts the
Philharmonia Orchestra.

Elgar’s autumnal concerto floats on air in its viola arrangement, and
Carpenter has a robust sound and mercurial personality. Schnittke’s
concerto, which obsesses over cadences and short motifs while making
radical stylist shifts, was written for the Russian virtuoso Yuri
Bashmet, perhaps the most celebrated violist of our day. Carpenter
goes to town with the score.

Bashmet himself makes an appearance on a collection of Bartók
concertos on Deutsche Grammophon with Pierre Boulez conducting the
Berlin Philharmonic. This instant classic has Gidon Kremer playing the
First Violin Concerto and Pierre-Laurent Aimard and Tamara Stefanovich
tackling the Concerto for Two Pianos, Percussion and Orchestra.

The real highlight is the Viola Concerto. It is a problem piece, since
Bartók died before completing it and the final score was put together
by Tibor Serly from extensive sketches. For that reason — and just
violists’ luck — what surely would have been the greatest viola
concerto up to that time never fully materialized. But Bartók left
material enough for an eloquent score to be realized, and the three Bs
(Bashmet, Boulez and Berlin) elevate the composer’s final thoughts
probably as high as they can go.

Quincy Porter, an American composer who died in 1966, probably is
better known as an educator. He was also a violist, and if you are
viola conspiracy theorist, you might suspect that the instrument was
the reason for his being overlooked. Maybe it was. Much terrific
American viola music, including Morton Feldman’s "The Viola in My
Life" and John Harbison’s Viola Concerto, doesn’t get the attention it
deserves. But the viola revival and a splendid new generation of
American violists are about to change all that.

So all hail to Eliesha Nelson, a young African American violist from
North Pole, Alaska (really), who has taken a fancy to Porter and
recorded his complete works for viola on Dorian. She is a marvelous
player, and Porter’s is marvelous music.

Porter’s Viola Concerto, written in 1948, seems to flow and flow. Its
four movements are slow, fast, slow, fast, but the piece inhabits a
middle path, where slow feels ever moving and fast feels like there is
always time to stop and smell the roses. "Rivers, Rivers" could be a
Quincy Porter title as well, except he stayed away from poetic titles.
"Blues Lontains" for viola and piano was about as fancy as he got.

Nelson is a ravishing violist, and she is joined on the disc by an
impressively multitalented John McLaughlin Williams, who conducts
Northwest Sinfonia in the concerto, and he accompanies Nelson on viola
duos for piano, harpsichord and violin. This disc is a real find.

The Irish violist Garth Knox, formerly a member of the adventurous
Arditti Quartet, is now an adventurous soloist and composer in his own
right. Although he has long been associated with hard-core European
Modernism, he has branched out into early music playing the Baroque
viola d’amore, which has sympathetic vibrating strings, as well as
more folk-based new music. He put out a stunning solo CD last year
that was all over the map. He has followed that with a new one, "Viola
Spaces," on Mode that is also all over the map even though this time
he composed all the music.

In a series of eight etudes, he explores ways of producing sound on
the viola, using up to four different instruments. He then follows
that up with a series of variations on the music of Marin Marais, a
Baroque French composer. In addition he offers an entertaining viola
and tuba duet and a lovely fantasy for viola d’amore and five violas
based on Johannes Ockegham’s 15th century music.

The hipster in the bunch is Nadia Serota, who plays solo viola music
by fashionable young New York composers on "First Things First." The
disc is on New Amsterdam Records. At least I think they are
fashionable young New Yorkers. There are no program notes, which are
considered passé in downtown Manhattan and Brooklyn new music clubs
these days. The drink menu is thought the place for description and
intellectual rigor.

Nico Muhly is the featured composer on Serota’s program, and there are
additional works by Judd Greenstein and Marcos Balter. All the music
is facile, the products of composers in love with a few good ideas
worked into the ground. But there is a good time to be had, what with
these cocksure composers and Serota, who is an engagingly bouncy
violist, obviously in no mood to let a little lamentation wreck their
party.

The viola, they’re no doubt saying, is the future.

/arts/la-ca-viola1-2009nov01,0,4256543.story

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news

RA Security Service Ready For Border Opening

RA SECURITY SERVICE READY FOR BORDER OPENING

news.am
Oct 30 2009
Armenia

RA National Security Service (NSS) is ready for Armenia-Turkey border
opening. The Service will continue daily proceedings with the border
opening, NSS Deputy Director Felix Tsolakyan told NEWS.am.

"There will be no serious processes after the border opening, as it
does not mean people will cross it back and forth. The customs and
frontier control points will be set up with Turkey as well as other
states," said Tsolakyan.

RA Government introduced to the Parliament 2010 budget draft bill,
offering to reduce NSS budget by 15%. However, according to Tsolakyan,
that is sufficient for the implementation of service objectives and
after border opening the amount might increase.

Yerevan State University: Witnessing And Shaping The Restoration Of

YEREVAN STATE UNIVERSITY: WITNESSING AND SHAPING THE RESTORATION OF ARMENIAN STATEHOOD

Noyan Tapan
30.10.2009

This year marks the 90th anniversary of the Yerevan State University
and the fact that the idea of creating the university was born after
the restoration of Armenian statehood says it all.

The creation of the Armenian alphabet led to the rapid development of
the educational system and the creation of the schools for scribes,
which reached high levels of development especially in the 10-13th
centuries.

In medieval times, the large centers for Armenian scribes were
the Universities of Sanahin, Gladzor and Tatev. After the loss of
statehood, Armenians began to create educational centers beyond the
borders of the Homeland. The Mekhitarist Congregation of Venice
was created in 1717, the Aghababyan School of Astrakhan in 1810,
the Lazaryan Seminary of Moscow in 1815 and the Nersisyan School of
Tbilisi in 1824. It was thanks to these schools that Armenians living
in Diaspora Armenian communities were able to preserve their national
identity in the absence of statehood.

After the restoration of Armenian statehood in 1918, Armenians once
again felt the need to create an educational institution of higher
learning. On May 16, 1919, the Council of Ministers of the Republic
of Armenia took the decision to establish a university in Yerevan
and the opening ceremony was held in the building of the school of
commerce in Alexandrapol (modern-day Gyumri) on January 31, 1920.

After ninety years, the words recited by the first university rector
Yuri Ghambaryan (July 1919-December 1920) during the opening ceremony
are still current today. Graduate of the Law Faculty of the University
of Moscow, Professor Yuri Ghambaryan states: "The recognition of
our independence gives us individual freedom and the benefits of a
democracy that are as necessary for enlightenment as true enlightenment
is for a fair democracy. Long live our non-absolute, non-religious,
non-aristocratic, but free, mundane and democratic University that
is called for developing science and virtue without which democracy
would either be a hoax or a meaningless word."

Catholicos of All Armenians Gevorg Chorekchyan V gave his blessings
on the occasion of the opening of the university.

In the first academic year, there were 262 students and 32 professors
at the Faculty of History and Linguistics, which was the only
faculty of the university. Through efforts of the first rector,
Yuri Ghambaryan, in the first year of establishment the university
invited notable educators and scientists from abroad to lecture at the
university, including Manuk Abeghyan (Universities of Yena, Laiptzig,
Berlin and Paris), Hrachya Atcharyan (University of Sorbonne),
Alexander Tamanyan (Art Academy of Peterbourg), Leon (A. Babakhanyan,
Shushi) and others.

After the establishment of Soviet order in Armenia, on December 17,
1920, Armenia’s University was renamed the People’s University of
Yerevan by the order "On Restructuring of Yerevan’s University" by the
People’s Commissar for Enlightenment of the Armenian Soviet Socialist
Republic, Ashot Hovhannisyan. By the decision of October 20, 1923,
the People’s University was renamed the State University. In 1991,
the university that started with one faculty already had 17 faculties
with 32 professions. Today there are 20 faculties with 13,000 students.

The university has had 21 rectors in the 90 years of its existence.

Correspondent of the RA National Academy of Sciences, PhD in History,
Professor Aram Simonyan became the 22nd rector of the university on
May 15, 2006.

World-famous scientists started their scientific career from the
Yerevan State University. The first color television experiment was
conducted by Hovhannes Adamyan in one of the laboratories of the
university in 1925. Among other renowned scientists who implemented
their scientific research at the university were Victor Hambartsumyan,
Abraham and Artem Alikhanyan, Sergey Mergelyan and others. Writers
Hovhannes Shiraz, Silva Kaputikyan, Paruyr Sevak, Vahagn Davtyan,
Gurgen Mahari, Nairi Zaryan and many others have also graduated from
Yerevan State University.

Yerevan State University was traditionally one of the first that
responded to the changes taking place in society such as the national
renaissance in the 1960s following the Stalin dictatorship and in the
1980s. It is known that the first renaissance laid the foundation for
the movement for recognition of the Armenian Genocide, the claims,
and the second was the Artsakh movement. It is not by chance that
university professors Vazgen Manukyan, Babken Ararktsyan and David
Vardanyan were among members of the "Karabakh" committee, while nearly
30 university student soldiers fought and died on the battlefield
without being able to enjoy the fruits of victory.

The president of the Republic of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan is also
a graduate of the university and chairman of the Board of Yerevan
State University.

"The university has over 100 graduates and I am certain that this
is the most significant achievement. The graduates have had an
enormous contribution to different spheres of public life, including
politics, economy, science, education and culture," Sargsyan said
in his congratulatory address to the students of YSU. He emphasized
that the university’s important mission is to prepare intelligent
experts with vast thinking abilities in order to serve the state,
the nation and the field of science. "The students endowed with those
virtues are the ones who will continue to shape Armenia and the YSU
and the ones who have the honor of being called "students of YSU","
as stated in Sargsyan’s address.

Armenian Genocide Should Be Only Examined At International Court, Me

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SHOULD BE ONLY EXAMINED AT INTERNATIONAL COURT, MEMBER OF NATIONAL COUNCIL OF ARMENIANS OF WESTERN ARMENIA CONSIDERS

Noyan Tapan
Oct 29, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 29, NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenian-Turkish protocols
signed on October 10 pose much danger for Armenians living in Armenia,
as well as abroad. Armenak Abrahamian, a member of the National
Council of Armenians of Western Armenia said at an October 29 press
conference. In his words, with those protocols Armenia recognizes
Turkey’s territorial integrity and thus violates the rights of
Armenians of Western Armenia. A. Abrahamian rendered it more clear
saying that by saying "Armenians of Western Armenia" he means both
Armenians currently living in the territory of Turkey and heirs of
Western Armenians living in various countries worldwide. He added
that the real border of Armenia and Turkey is the border drawn by
former U.S. President Woodrow Wilson and not Araks River, which is
factually the separating line of Eastern and Western Armenias.

"Today UN has a separate commission on protection of native peoples’
rights," A. Abrahamian said. According to him, Western Armenians are
considered one of Turkey’s native peoples and have a complete right
to demand their due from the state having committed a genocide.

A. Abrahamian classed "inadmissible and dangerous" the idea of creating
an Armenian-Turkish intergovernmental subcommission.

"Discussing the fact of Genocide is a senseless occupation. Genocide is
a criminal phenomenon and should be only examined at the international
court," he said.

Superpowers Will Be Responsible For Consequences Of Protocols After

SUPERPOWERS WILL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR CONSEQUENCES OF PROTOCOLS AFTER RATIFICATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.10.2009 17:17 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Superpowers will be responsible for the consequences
of Armenian-Turkish protocols after their ratification, according to
Tigran Pashabezyan, coordinator of Oukht Ararati organization dealing
with former prisoners, members of ASALA.

The main goals of the organization are prevention of ratification
of the protocols, restoration of Armenia’s independence and its
development as a democracy and formation of common Armenian defense.

"We are planning to change the power through rallies and protest
actions. The organization will support all forces which make such
initiative," Pashabezyan said, adding that the organization backs
ARFD’s opposition to ratification of protocols.

Government Allocated AMD 500 Million For Paying Check Bonuses

GOVERNMENT ALLOCATED AMD 500 MILLION FOR PAYING CHECK BONUSES

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.10.2009 18:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In an October 29 session, Government passed decision
to allocate AMD 500 million to State Income Committee for paying
check bonuses.

The sums to be withdrawn from RA Reserve Fund will be paid to natural
persons who collected relevant quantity of checks for the third
quarter of 2009

Armenia Overcomes Critical Point: Finance Minister

ARMENIA OVERCOMES CRITICAL POINT: FINANCE MINISTER

ARKA
Oct 28, 2009

YEREVAN, October 28, /ARKA/. Armenian Minister of Finance, Tigran
Davtian, said today there are clear indications that the economy is
back on recovery track.

Speaking at a news conference he said the lowest GDP fall was
registered in July, while beginning from August the economy began to
show signs of recovery.

Armenian GDP fell by 18.5% in January-July, 2009, dropping to 1.417
trillion Drams or $3.789.6 billion.

According to the minister, the totals of August and September inspire
some optimism and there are hopes that stabilization period will be
replaced soon by the period of economic growth. In January-September
the economy slashed by 18.3%.

Armenians In Cyprus Against Ratification Of RA Turkish Protocols

ARMENIANS IN CYPRUS AGAINST RATIFICATION OF RA TURKISH PROTOCOLS

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.10.2009 21:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian community in Cyprus and traditional Armenian
parties – ARF-Dashmaktsutyun, Ramkavar Azatakan, and Social-Democratic
Hnchakyan Party, have organized a protest action in Nicossia against
Protocols on normalization of Armenian-Turkish ties.

The three parties stressed their resoluteness about Hay Dat objective
of achieving international community’s full and official recognition
of Armenian Genocide

Which Way Will Turkey Turn, East Or West?

WHICH WAY WILL TURKEY TURN, EAST OR WEST?

Deutsche Welle
,,4835495 ,00.html?maca=en-en_nr-1893-xml-atom
Oct 28 2009
Germany

Turkey makes no bones about its aspirations to act as a bridge
between East and West, but a string of recent events have left the
West wondering how stable any such construction might be.

The problems began earlier this year when Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan stormed out of a panel discussion in Davos over
the Israeli offensive in Gaza. Since then Isreali-Turkish relations,
traditionally very strong, have been on a steady downward curve which
culminated in Ankara excluding Israel from a recent NATO exercise.

Then this week, ahead of a two-day visit to Iran, Erdogan dismissed
Western worries over Teheran’s controversial nuclear program as
‘gossip’ and accused the perpetrators of hypocrisy.

"Although Iran doesn’t have a weapon, those who say Iran shouldn’t
have them are those countries which do," Erdogan told Britain’s
Guardian newspaper.

His comments were welcomed by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
who called on his neighbor to strengthen existing bi-lateral ties.

"Iran-Turkey cooperation would benefit both countries, the region and
the whole world," state broadcaster IRIB quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.

Good local relations

But is that the kind of partnerhsip into which Erdogan wishes to
enter? Guelay Kizilocak, deputy chairwoman of Germany’s Center for
Studies on Turkey, says the picture is much broader.

"Turkey wants to have its say in the Middle East," she told Deutsche
Welle. "And in order to help shape the region, it wants to improve
relations with all those countries in it."

Indeed, Ankara’s ‘zero problems with neighbors’ policy of the past few
years has resulted in the abolition of visa requirements for Syria,
a breakthrough in the country’s difficult relations with Armenia and
closer ties with Teheran.

"Iran is part of the overall package," Kizilocak stressed. "It is an
important country in the region, so if Turkey wants relations with
Syria and Iraq, it has to have them with Iran as well."

Protecting its own interests

Cemal Karakas, a Turkey expert with the Peace Research Institute in
Frankfurt says Ankara has been trying to enhance its profile in the
Middle East for some time.

"Turkey is no longer a neutral observer in the region, sticking rigidly
to the NATO doctrine," he told Deutsche Welle. "It’s foreign policy
is more active and has Turkey’s interests at heart."

And one of those is fuel. Turkey is a poor country and relies heavily
not only on Azerbaijan but Iran for energy supplies.

In pursuing it own interests, however, Turkey does not necessarily walk
in step with the West, and thereby potentially damages its chances
as occident – orient go-between. But Karakas isn’t convinced that
Turkey is up to the job of mediator.

"A country can only propagate peace to the outside world if it is
peaceful itself," he said with reference to Turkey’s treatment of
Kurds and religious minorities. "There has been progress, but not
enough to meet EU standards."

Keeping options open

The question many commentators are asking is whether, in light of
recent gestures to the East, Turkey still wants a place in Brussels.

Kizilocak says it does, but says the euphoria Turks once felt at the
prospect of membership has been quelled by the reality that the EU
is keeping them at arms length.

As it stands, the earliest they could join is 2015, but in terms of
politics that is a long way off, and it is conceivable that by then,
interest will have waned altogether.

Karakas says that even if Brussels did decide to let Ankara in, it
would not open the door as wide as it has to other members. "The EU has
outlined a series of protection clauses," he said, citing conditions
which would limit the free movement of people and restrict financial
support for farmers.

"These things are making their way into the debate and people are
starting to wonder why they should make the effort to take the
necessary steps it they are not going to be treated the same as
other countries."

So although Turkey will continue with its accession negotiations, it
is realistic enough not to put all its eggs in the European basket. It
is actively pursuing other options, a third path, as Karakas puts it.

And that might ultimately see it drawn deeper into the Middle East
fold or holding hands with fuel-rich Russia.

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0

Sergey Kapinos: Not A Single Big Ecological Problem Can Be Solved Wi

SERGEY KAPINOS: NOT A SINGLE BIG ECOLOGICAL PROBLEM CAN BE SOLVED WITHOUT PARTICIPATION OF THE SOCIETY

ArmInfo
2009-10-27 16:13:00

ArmInfo. Within the frames of the "Arevordi" ("Sunchild") environmental
festival, a roundtable on global climate changes was held in Yerevan,
Monday. Representatives of the Armenian Environment Ministry and
international organizations took part in the event.

Head of the OSCE Office in Yerevan Sergey Kapinos told ArmInfo
correspondent that not a single big environmental problem can be
solved without participation of the society. No matter how concerned
the governmental structures are, nothing can be done without the
involvement of the society and its support, and if it is possible to do
anything, the effect will not be strong enough, Kapinos said. Thus,
the settlement of global problems directly depends on the active
position of the civil society. Kapinos also stressed the significance
of regular events on environmental problems. Such events attain their
goals only when followed by other events, Kapinos said.

Climate changes and global warming are the most defining issues
nowadays. Specialists say the 2-degree rise of temperature in
Armenia may increase desertization 33%, reduce sediments 10%, and
reduce the quantity of mammals – 28-33%, and harvest – 8-14%. In
addition, Alpine zones will decrease 22% and landscapes zones –
100-150 meters. The annual river flow in the country will fall 15%
and Lake Sevan evaporating capacity will fall 13-14%. Specialists
say global warming will give a rise to malaria and cholera as well
as to cardiovascular diseases. Weather anomalies have already been
observed in the country.

Thus, the temperature in the winter of 2002 in Ararat Valley was 32
degree Celsius below zero, whereas in July of 2006 the temperature
rose to 43 degree Celsius above zero. Earlier such anomalies did not
last so long. Snow, rain, hails and frosts have reached a dangerous
level especially in Ararat Valley. Operative Hydrometeorology Center
forecasts that average annual temperature in Armenia for the coming
50 years will rise 1 degree. UN Human Development Report Fighting
Climate Change: human solidarity in a divided world forecasts 1.8-4
degrees increase of temperature in average and even by 6.4 degrees in
isolated regions on the Earth by the end of the 21st century. Experts
say this will lead to more frequent weather anomalies such has extreme
heat and heavy sediments, tropic cyclones, typhoons and storms.