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About GOMIDAS

On Gomidas Songs, the Armenian-Canadian soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian examines the legacy of Gomidas Vardabet (born Soghomon Soghomonian, Keotahia, Ottoman Empire, 1869), a well-traveled composer who made it his life's work to seek out, transcribe, and re-interpret the ancient liturgy, songs, lullabies, hymns, and folk dances of his Armenian homeland. Bayrakdarian will perform concerts that include Gomidas's music this fall, including an October 20 date at Carnegie Hall's Zankel Hall.

The album was recorded at the Aram Khachaturian Philharmonic Hall in Yerevan, Armenia, with the Chamber Players of the Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Eduard Topchjan. All of the songs were arranged and orchestrated by scholar and pianist Serouj Kradjian, Bayrakdarian's concert partner and husband - who also plays on the record. This recording was made possible by a generous contribution from the AGBU (Armenian General Benevolent Union) and Louise Manoogian Simone.

Bayrakdarian, who was born in Lebanon to Armenian parents, first performed Gomidas's music as part of the score to Canadian-Armenian director Atom Egoyan's 2002 Ararat - a multi-layered drama about contemporary filmmakers attempting to dramatize and come to terms with the Armenian genocide of 1915, which left Gomidas emotionally devastated and put an end to his life as a composer. (His name was changed when he took monastic vows; was ordained a "Vartabed," or celibate priest; and, as is the practice in the Armenian Church, assumed a new name, Gomidas.)

Isabel Bayrakdarian is highly regarded for her opera performances, on stage and on record - particularly as Cleopatra in Handel's Giulio Cesare and in Mozart works like Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute. Her voice, says Time, "combines lyricism with remarkable dramatic instincts," and the Chicago Tribune praised her "full, gleaming soprano and fine musical intelligence." Bayrakdarian made her Metropolitan Opera debut in William Bolcom's A View from the Bridge.

Gomidas Songs contains love songs, devotional songs, evocations of nature, children's songs, lamentations, and comic songs. Egoyan contributes liner notes to the album package, illustrating the importance of Bayrakdarian's undertaking: "The strength of any culture resides in its ability to preserve, cherish, reinvent, and grow. This was the gift that Gomidas gave to his people, and this is the gift which Isabel has revealed and brought to the world."

More information on Gomidas CD could be found at www.bayrakdarian.com

About Isabel Bayrakdarian

"A soprano voice that combines lyricism with remarkable dramatic instincts" - Time

Isabel Bayrakdarian burst onto the international opera scene after winning first prize in the 2000 Operalia competition founded by Placido Domingo. Since then she has performed in many of the world's major opera houses, most recently endearing herself to London's audiences in her Royal Opera House debut as Susanna in Mozart's Nozze di Figaro. The young Armenian-Canadian is admired as much for her stunning stage presence as for her exceptional musicality and has followed a career path completely her own. Her most famous roles are in Mozart operas, which she sang throughout the composer's 250th birthday year: Susanna, Zerlina in Don Giovanni, and Pamina in The Magic Flute have been her calling cards, along with Marzelline in Fidelio, Adina in L'elisir d'amore and Rosina in The Barber of Seville. Bayrakdarian also sang Euridice in Gluck's Orfeo to signature success at Lyric Opera of Chicago - and Cleopatra (Giulio Cesare), Romilda (Xerxes), and Emilia (Flavio) demonstrate her skills as a Handelian.

Bayrakdarian has been applauded for opera performances in Chicago, Dresden, London, Milan, New York, Paris, Salzburg, San Francisco, and Toronto and is renowned as well for her work in such remoter operas of the repertory as Berlioz's Benvenuto Cellini and Bolcom's A View from the Bridge, in which she made her Metropolitan Opera debut.

Bayrakdarian, often partnered by her husband, Serouj Kradjian, has also triumphed in recital at New York's Carnegie Hall, in Atlanta, Berkeley, Boston, Edmonton, Ottawa, San Francisco, Toronto, Vancouver, and elsewhere. They have toured Canada together and performed at New York's newest recital space - the Gilder Lehrman hall in the Morgan Library - and in Palm Beach, Toronto, Savannah, and Tokyo. Continuing her passion for a wide ranging repertoire, Bayrakdarian presented her first evening of tangos in a concert at Toronto's new Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts and participated in the world premiere performances of Jake Heggie and Gene Sheer's one-act opera To Hell and Back. Her co-star in To Hell and Back was Broadway star Patti LuPone, accompanied by San Francisco's Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, under its music director Nicholas McGegan.

Concertizing with orchestras in San Francisco, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Minnesota, and at home in Canada with the Toronto and Montreal Symphonies, Tafelmusik, Les Violons du Roy, the National Arts Centre Orchestra, and other major Canadian performing organizations, Bayrakdarian has performed with numerous groups in Europe as well.

Isabel Bayrakdarian sings on the Grammy Award-winning soundtrack of the blockbuster film The Lord of The Rings: The Two Towers, as well as in director Atom Egoyan's multiple award-winning film Ararat. Bayrakdarian's widely praised recording of songs by singer/composer Pauline Viardot-Garcia, brought her a third Juno award for Best Classical Album, Canada's highest recording prize. Her first solo CD, Joyous Light, presents Armenian sacred music. She has also recorded Mahler's Second Symphony with Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony. And now, with Gomidas Songs, she performs songs by Armenia's national composer, Gomidas Vartabed (1869-1935) with her husband and the Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra.

Isabel Bayrakdarian has received many grants and other awards in addition to the first prize in the Operalia: three Juno awards, the Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal, the 2005 Virginia Parker Prize from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Leonie Rysanek Award from the George London Foundation, and a Metropolitan Opera National Council Award in 1997.

Born in Lebanon of proud Armenian heritage, and a loyal citizen of Canada, Isabel Bayrakdarian moved with her family to Toronto as a teenager. Her earliest singing experience was at church, which remains - along with her family - the central focus of her life. She is the subject of a CBC-TV film, entitled A Long Journey Home, that documents her first trip to Armenia. She holds an honors degree in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Toronto.