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Sergey Khachatryan, First Prize of Queen Elizabeth Competition

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  • Sergey Khachatryan, First Prize of Queen Elizabeth Competition

    Results

    1st prize
    Sergey KHACHATRYAN

    2nd prize
    Yossif IVANOV

    3rd prize
    Sophia JAFFÉ

    4th prize
    Saeka MATSUYAMA

    5th prize
    Mikhail OVRUTSKY

    6th prize
    Hyuk Joo KWUN

    Laureates
    Alena BAEVA
    Andreas JANKE
    Keisuke OKAZAKI
    Antal SZALAI
    Kyoko YONEMOTO
    Dan ZHU


    More at

    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

  • #2
    Good for him =)

    Comment


    • #3
      I just saw him comment on his performance; he impressed with his modesty and real love for Music.
      Contrasting with Yossif Ivanov's - second place - "show!"
      What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

      Comment


      • #4
        I wish I could have seen it

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by LadySilver
          I wish I could have seen it

          An ersatz!





          SIBELIUS: Violin Concerto in D minor, Op. 47. KHACHATURIAN: Violin Concerto in D minor
          Sergey Khachatyran, violinist; Sinfonia Varsovia/Emmanuel Krivine, cond.
          NAÏVE V 4959 (F) (DDD) TT: 69:53



          The Armenian violinist Sergey Khachatryan - no indication whether he's related to the second composer in the headnote - won the International Jean Sibelius Competition in December, 2000, when he was all of fifteen years old, but he waited until last year to make this recording at the ripe old age of eighteen. Like the rest of the flock of violinistic whiz-kids, he commands a formidable technical artillery, like that of so many other young virtuosi, encompasses a feel for dramatic gesture (as in the rubato double-stops at 13:31 of the Sibelius first movement) and a twinkling, starlike delicacy (the first-movement cadenza of the Khachaturian). The soft, running broken octaves at 5:33 of the Sibelius Adagio sound a bit nervous, but the louder ones in the Finale are fine. Khachatryan's outstanding asset, however, is a vibrant legato, which, coupled with his spot-on intonation, avoids the polar extremes of severity and cloying sweetness. In more incisive and aggressive passages, his tone goes ever so slightly out of focus (though the tuning as such remains impeccable), but he can melt on a dime into his beguiling cantabile mode.

          And, unlike many of his prodigious contemporaries, Khachatryan has a distinctive musical personality with something to say. His direct, unfussy phrasing eschews imposed rhetoric, instead relying successfully for expressivity on nuances of color and dynamics. Conductor Krivine seconds him, in a true collaboration. Their Sibelius is taut rather than lush. The opening string ostinati immediately bring an anxious undercurrent. In the Adagio, the violin stoically intones its themes over the searching, duetting woodwinds. Yet, for all the grim austerity, there is sufficient arching buoyancy to suggest the score's epic sweep. A similarly forthright, no-nonsense approach to the Khachaturian, the rhythms of its folklike themes strongly marked, builds to big, powerful climaxes while avoiding cheesy "movie-music" glamour.


          What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

          Comment


          • #6
            how can i get it?!

            so how can or may i ask were i could download this cd?
            even that is not what i preforme i would like to hear this
            so can some one help me a littel help!

            Comment


            • #7
              armenian artist's

              would any one help me to get some armenian artist's i preforme artist that sing in armenian language


              messiah33

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