
Armenian music is no exception to this rule. It is as singular a
construct as is Armenian, an orphaned Indo-European language born at the
borders of Orient and Occident. Like the national language, it is a
synthesising language that unites opposing sources, Eastern and Western,
folk and art. If the melodic and even harmonic archetypes of Armenian
music give a leading role to the augmented intervals and untempered
scales characteristic of the Orient, the great Armenian musicians’
compositional art is thoroughly anchored in Occidental technique and
know-how.
The founding father of Armenian art music was Komitas Vardapet.
Like Bartók, he was a great collector of folk melodies, which he first
faithfully transcribed as he heard them, then arranged, harmonised and
complexified them. The folk song arrangements played on this recording,
either by a solo piano or by small chamber groups, are therefore
already at one step’s distance from the original folk model, which would
be sung a cappella. Several decades later, the other great figure of
Armenian music, Aram Khachaturian, would use
these folk-derived elements and add to them that great orchestral
mastery so characteristic of many Soviet-trained composers.
Most of the folk songs set down by Komitas have touchingly simple
texts that express nostalgia, or even melancholy. Though humour and
derision are important elements of Armenian culture, the ordeals the
Armenian people have endured over the course of their lengthy history
ensure that the expression of grief is a constant feature.
This recording is released in the centenary year of the 1915
genocide. As this tragedy has never been recognised by those who
perpetrated it, the Armenian people has never been able to engage in the
necessary collective grieving process that must follow such a
calamity. On the contrary, the wait for an admission of responsibility
from Armenia’s neighbor does nothing but revive national anger against
an unacceptable case of historical revisionism. But even in the darkest
moments of its history, Armenia has always produced musicians and
music. The Armenians’ legendary optimism is an effective form of
struggle against obscurantism.
The pieces in this recital may be animated, contemplative, tender, or
solemn, but they are very rarely gloomy or woeful. A sort of trust in
the future characterises the “Armenian spirit”. Music is synonymous
with hope, it is a way of fighting against annihilation, a tool of
resistance. As I contemplate my ancestors who vanished a century ago, I
would like this recording to bear witness to the faith in justice that
has never fled my native land.
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