About the Bagpipes and Cello, Horn and Waltz, Vocalise and Variations, Vivaldi, Verdi and Wagner : Moscow State Philharmonic Society

    About the Bagpipes and Cello, Horn and Waltz, Vocalise and Variations, Vivaldi, Verdi and Wagner

    January 23, 2010

    Tchaikovsky Concert Hall

    directions to the hall
    Narek Hakhnazaryan (violoncello)

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    The Popular Musical Encyclopaedia

    Performers:

    Author and lecturer–Artyom Vargaftik

    State Symphony Orchestra the New Russia

    Conductor–Alexander Sladkovsky

    Ensemble the Academy of Old Music

    Soloists:
    Narek Akhnazaryan (cello)
    Vladimir Lazerson (bagpipes)
    Gleb Karpushkin (horn)

    Narek Hakhnazaryan

    Since winning the Cello First Prize and Gold Medal at the XIV International Tchaikovsky Competition in 2011 at the age of 22, Narek Hakhnazaryan has inspired audiences with his artistry, securing a reputation as one of the world’s foremost cellists. Hakhnazaryan has performed with orchestras across the globe, earning praise from critics as “dazzlingly brilliant” (The Strad) and “nothing short of magnificent” (San Francisco Chronicle). In 2014, Hakhnazaryan was named a BBC New Generation Artist, and, in August 2016, made his BBC Proms debut to critical acclaim.

    Highlights of Hakhnazaryan’s 2021/22 season included performances in Madrid with the Orchestra of Santa Cecilia and Antonio Pappano, at the Dvořák Prague Festival with Tomáš Netopil, Pisa Festival, Helsinki Philharmonic and Residentie Orchestra with Nicholas Collon at both The Hague and Concertgebouw Amsterdam. He also toured Australia and New Zealand. In 2020/21 he made his debut with the Vienna Radio Orchestra and Marin Alsop in the opening concert of their season at the Musikverein, and with the Barcelona Symphony Orchestra receiving an immediate re-invitation. He was invited for a residency with Finnish Radio Symphony and Hannu Lintu, performing two televised concerti and a solo recital. 

    The cellist’s 2019/20 season featured several notable debuts, including the Philharmonia Zurich with Gianandrea Noseda and the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra with Manfred Honeck. Return engagements included Beare’s Premiere Music Festival (formerly Hong Kong Chamber Music Festival), BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, and Essen Philharmonic with Netopil.

    Hakhnazaryan’s commitment to new and rarely heard repertoire is evident in his recent European and American programs. In Warsaw, at the Eufonie Festival, he performed the late Andrej Panufnik’s Cello Concerto, and in Washington, DC, Hakhnazaryan appeared with PostClassical Ensemble in fellow Armenian Vache Sharafyan’s Cello Concerto No. 2, alongside acclaimed visual artist Kevork Mourad for Armenian Odyssey, a world-premiere multimedia production in the Great Nave of the Washington National Cathedral.

    Hakhnazaryan was previously named one of the Vienna Konzerthaus’s Great Talents, and has performed in the Austrian capital with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra led by Jakub Hrůša, as well as at the Musikverein with Daniil Trifonov and Sergei Dogadin. In the summer of 2019, Hakhnazaryan joined longtime collaborator Trifonov for Shostakovich and Rachmaninoff sonatas at the Verbier and Rheingau Festivals. In 2018/19, Hakhnazaryan took part in a residency at Wigmore Hall, offering a series of fascinating programs of classic and lesser-known solo repertoire. A distinguished international orchestral soloist, Hakhnazaryan has appeared with the Baltimore, St. Louis, Seattle, Toronto, London, WDR, Frankfurt Radio, Sydney, New Zealand, and NHK Symphony Orchestras; the Royal Stockholm, Czech, Seoul, Netherlands, and Rotterdam Philharmonics; the Utah Symphony; Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; Orchestre de Paris; and Teatro dell’Opera in Rome. He has collaborated with acclaimed conductors such as Alsop, Bělohlávek, Gergiev, Guerrero, Neeme Järvi, Koopman, Lintu, Pletnev, Robertson, Sarasate, Slatkin, and Sokhiev.

    An eager chamber musician and recitalist, Hakhnazaryan has performed in New York’s Carnegie Hall, San Francisco’s Herbst Theatre, Washington DC’s National Gallery of Art, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Salle Pleyel Paris, Berlin Konzerthaus, Oji Hall Tokyo, Shanghai Concert Hall, and esteemed festivals such as Ravinia, Aspen, Piatigorsky, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Kissinger Sommer, Robeco Summer, Beethovenfest Bonn, Mikkeli, Pau Casals, Lucerne, and Verbier, among many others.

    Hakhnazaryan has received scholarships from the Rostropovich Foundation and the Russian Performing Arts Fund, and won awards including First Prize in the 2006 Aram Khachaturian International Competition in Armenia and First Place in the 2006 Johansen International Competition for Young String Players. As First Prize winner in the 2008 Young Concert Artists International Auditions, Hakhnazaryan debuted at Carnegie’s Zankel Hall and in Washington, DC. In 2017 he was named an Honored Artist of Armenia, by then-President Serzh Sargsyan.

    Narek Hakhnazaryan was born in Yerevan, Armenia, into a family of musicians: his father is a violinist and his mother a pianist. Mentored by the late Rostropovich, Hakhnazaryan received an Artist Diploma from the New England Conservatory of Music in 2011 where he studied with Lawrence Lesser, following studies at the Moscow Conservatory with Alexey Seleznyov and at the Sayat-Nova School of Music in Yerevan with Zareh Sarkisyan. Hakhnazaryan plays the 1707 Joseph Guarneri cello and F.X. Tourte and Benoit Rolland bows.