
FAR
BEHIND
I LEFT MY COUNTRY
KLEZMER
AND EAST EUROPEAN FOLK MUSIC
ARRANGED AND
COMPOSED BY
EDMOND
AGOPIAN
UCALGARY
STRING QUARTET
Edmond Agopian
first violin
Adriana
Lebedovich
second violin
Dean
O’Brien viola
Beth
Root Sandvoss cello
$14.95 ~
MS1276
It
is perhaps the inherent spiritual experience of all immigrants to a new country
to have a deep felt, soul-stirring nostalgia for their native land. The country
I left behind is Romania, and in particular, my native city, Constantza - a port
city on the western shores of the Black Sea. An ancient city, it was founded by
the Greeks, around 550 BC, for commercial exchanges with the local Daco-Getic
populations. Perhaps its most famous and colourful citizen was one of the great
Roman poets, Ovid. He was exiled to Constantza, then called Tomis, in 8 AD by
the Emperor Augustus, for writing Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love), a set
of erotic text books.
At
the crossroads between West and East, Constantza and its surrounding region were
traversed and settled by a myriad of nationalities including Tatars, Magyars,
Ukrainians, Russians, Jews, Armenians, Greeks, Bulgarians, Gypsies and many
others. For over four hundred years (1419-1877) the region was under Ottoman
Turkish rule. As a port city, throughout its history Constantza has been a place
of commerce, where merchants of different nationalities and religions lived and
worked side by side. Old churches, synagogues, and mosques are a testament to
the rich, multicultural history of the place.
The
program on this recording is a reflection of the musical styles and musical
languages of different ethnic origins, which have coexisted and have
cross-fertilized over the course of history in Constantza, and throughout
Eastern Europe. The musical vocabulary ranges from material based on Middle
Eastern influenced scales, which incorporate quarter-tone altered pitches, to
paraphrases from the Classical music repertoire, to improvisational sections.
Klezmer is a Yiddish term which means musician in general, and more
specifically, instrumentalists of folk music. Klezmer music denotes the folk
musical traditions of Jews from Eastern Europe, in particular Romania, Ukraine,
Poland and Russia.
With
the exception of My Old Homeland, all selections on this recording are
based on folk tunes. My Old Homeland is an original
composition/improvisation, which incorporates folk like melodies and folk
rhythms. The rough tone and dissonances in the introductory rhythm imitate the
sound of an instrument found in Romania and other parts of Eastern Europe,
called Buhai (bull). In Romania it is used to accompany carolers during New Year’s
Eve celebrations. The instrument consists of a small bottomless barrel covered
with skin. The gruff sound, like the roaring of a bull, is produced by pulling a
tuft of hair through the middle of the cover.
My
first violin teacher, Constantin Anghel, was a Romanian Gypsy who was able to
walk comfortably in two musical cultures: the stringent, methodical, Classical
violin school, and the "play by ear" folk tradition. It is these two
schools of violin playing and musical vocabulary, always a part of my own violin
playing, which have inspired these arrangements.
The
title of this recording comes from the title of an old Hungarian song, sung by a
Hungarian peasant and recorded by Bela Bartok in 1906, on a wax phonograph
cylinder in the far reaches of the countryside. In 1940, because of the pro-Nazi
takeover of the Hungarian government, Bartok decided to leave his country. At
his last concert and public appearance at the Music Academy in Budapest, before
he left the stage for the final time, in his farewell speech he declared:
"I would rather break away from the soil that has nourished me, than remain
a witness to its destruction." During the spontaneous applause that
followed, someone in the audience started singing this old Hungarian song and
soon, the whole audience joined in:
I
set off from my homeland
From
famous little Hungary,
I
looked back when I reached half way
And
the tears spilled from my eyes,
I
looked back when I reached half way
And
the tears spilled from my eyes.
*
* *
The
UCalgary String Quartet
Edmond
Agopian,
first violin, is a Professor at the University of Calgary, and is Music Director
of the Calgary Youth Orchestra, Mount Royal College Conservatory.
Adriana
Lebedovich, second
violin, is a member of the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra and is in her final
year of a Bachelor of Music degree in Violin at the University of Calgary.
Dean
O’Brien, viola, is a
viola and chamber music instructor at the University of Calgary and Mount Royal
College Conservatory, and is Principal Viola of the Red Deer Symphony.
Beth
Root Sandvoss, cello, is
a cello and chamber music instructor at the University of Calgary and Mount
Royal College Conservatory, and is a member of the award winning Land’s End
Chamber Ensemble.
The
University of Calgary’s resident string quartet was formed in 1994 with Edmond
Agopian and Olga Kotova, violins, Christopher Sandvoss, viola and Amanda
Forsyth, cello. Its repertoire covers a wide spectrum of music. Presently, the
quartet is in the process of performing and recording the entire Beethoven
string quartet cycle. It is only recently that the quartet has embarked on
performing arrangements of Klezmer and East European folk music, and this disc
constitutes its first recording of music of this type.
The
quartet has performed nationally and internationally and has been recorded by
CBC Radio for regional and national broadcasts. It has collaborated with many
distinguished artists, and has commissioned and premiered works by University of
Calgary Composition faculty, graduate students and alumni. The Quartet is
currently supported by the John Peter Lee Roberts Distinguished Professorship in
Fine Arts award, conferred upon Professor Agopian in 2005. The award is made
possible by University of Calgary alumnus and donor, Mr. John Lefebvre.
www.ucalgarystringquartet.ca