By Florence Avakian
NEW YORK — It was a concert not to be missed. Two very young and very talented musicians wowed a sold-out audience at the Weill Recital Hall of Carnegie Hall with their musical gifts on Sunday, March 3, 20-year-old pianist Tigran Mardanyan, and 19-year-old composer and pianist Grigori Balasanyan, along with the Burbank String Quartet and trumpeter Tony Donatello.
Since the inception of the Musical Armenia series 42 years ago by the Eastern Prelacy, by then Prelate Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian, these creative and professional annual concerts have introduced many talented musicians, several of whom have advanced to international careers.
On March 3, Prelate Archbishop Anoushavan with the Musical Armenia Committee presented the 39th Musical Armenia concert with the prophetic words “music is in the immortal words of Vahan Tekeyan, ‘the earth from which the Armenian Church was raised stone-by-stone.’”
As pianist Tigran Mardanyan strode onto the stage, the capacity crowd greeted him with thunderous applause. He quietly paused for a minute in silence, then confidently presented Mozart’s three-movement Sonata No.4 in E-flat minor, a melodically beautiful and captivating classical composition.
He then followed it with Australian composer Carl Vine’s Five Bagatelles, a lyrical, somewhat jazzy, and intellectually engaging modern presentation, played with thoughtfulness.