Special to the Fresno Bee
By Steven E. Gilbert
The final installment of this years Philip Lorenz Memorial Keyboard Concerts at
Fresno State, jointly sponsored by the universitys Armenian Studies Program and the
Hamazkayin Armenian Cultural and Educational Society, had the added significance of
coinciding with the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. It featured Vardan
Mamikonian, a remarkable pianist born 26 years ago in Yerevan, Armenia, who now lives
in Paris.
At the center of the program were the complete Gaspard de la Nuit of Ravel and
an entire opus of Chopin etudes. Neither is an everyday occurrence; the quality of the
performance was even rarer. The Ravel, fiendish in subject matter as well as pianistic
difficulty, communicated an eerie excitement-suppressed fistfuls of notes in Ondine,
the sinister, evenly repeated gallows motif in Le Gibet, and the wicked scamperings of
Scarbo.
Chopins second set of 12 etudes, Op. 25, includes several that are often played
singly, perhaps as encores, but it takes a certain command and concentration to play the
whole dozen in succession.
Each was executed brilliantly, with control and bravura in all the right, respective
places. The performance was marred only by insistent rounds of applause from half the
audience, which kept missing the cue from the other half that the place for ovation was at
the end of the set.
That there was, and a standing one, even though Mamikonian had another piece to
play. This, the Andante Spianato and Grand Polonaise, also by Chopin, was a perfect
built-in encore, just as Debussys Estampes provided the perfect prelude.