Tjeknavorian is Iranian 
                by birth. At one time, in the 1970s 
                into the 1980s, his exclusive contract 
                with RCA (now BMG) produced a prodigious 
                crop of LPs many of which have never 
                been reissued on CD. ASV-Sanctuary rekindled 
                his international recording career with 
                a large number of Soviet composer recordings 
                - many central Asian. As a composer 
                his presence was announced internationally 
                by several LPs on Unicorn - the label 
                for connoisseurs of the leading edge. 
                These included the ballet Simorgh 
                and the First Symphony (for percussion 
                ensemble, celesta and John Wallace's 
                trumpet). Lama coupled his first two 
                symphonies on their LP LAM001. This 
                included a new lease of life for the 
                Unicorn version of the First Symphony. 
              
 
              
The present disc is 
                on Tjeknavorian's own label and gives 
                us the two works in their authentic 
                versions with choir. 
              
 
              
The symphonies respectively 
                mark the 60th and 65th anniversaries 
                of the apocalyptic slaughter of the 
                Armenians in 1915. The First Symphony's 
                massively weighty clashing dissonance 
                and wailing massed choirs resounds and 
                thrashes with awesome Old Testament 
                barbarism. Mixed in we also hear a style 
                related to the furies unleashed by Penderecki 
                during the avant-garde 1960s. Textures 
                lighten for the stamping Requiem 
                third movement whose high-pitched writing 
                for woodwind and brass recalls Shostakovich. 
                A Middle Eastern sinuous wail appears 
                for the first time at 1.30 in tr. 4. 
                The exhaustion of emotion and physical 
                strength can be felt in the fifth movement 
                finale Lament-Protest. Here the 
                music rediscovers the gentle emotions 
                of healing and tenderness. This is one 
                of those works that, despite its brevity, 
                radiates a Brucknerian timelessness 
                and eternity. Uncomfortable listening 
                but salutary and ending with a great 
                savage scream of victory. 
              
 
              
After too short a pause 
                we move into the Credo Symphony 
                which explores the same subject. Its 
                four movements are played without pause 
                although tracked individually. Like 
                its predecessor Symphony the first movement 
                is entitled Menace. The whispered 
                quiet writing has some parallels with 
                Panufnik and with Stravinsky's Rite. 
                There is some truly magical writing 
                here including some in which a mildly 
                glowing canvas of sound is created (from 
                4.12). The seething fury-suppressed 
                textures of the Polish 1960s are again 
                in angry evidence. The Massacre 
                movement is a little more transparent 
                than its counterpart in the First Symphony. 
                The music seems to hold the door open 
                to some seething Gehenna but the infernal 
                scene quickly fades to be replaced by 
                a steely quiet tension. The Credo 
                finale arises like a benediction 
                - stronger and with more healing than 
                anything proffered by the First Symphony. 
                Through a ceaseless celebratory jangle 
                of bells, hammers and other 'metallica' 
                a noble Credo is sung by the 
                choir. About it there is something of 
                the Orthodox church's Easter benediction 
                as well as the seductive diaphanous 
                aural clouds released by Szymanowski 
                in King Roger. The sense of blessing 
                and sustained joy in processional also 
                reminded me of Paray's St Joan Mass. 
              
 
              
If you have the Lama 
                LP you will know the version of the 
                First Symphony for the London Percussion 
                Virtuosi with solo celesta and trumpet. 
                That stripped down instrumentation does 
                allow greater transparency while at 
                the same time accenting an unleashed 
                fury similar to the central panel of 
                Panufnik's Sinfonia Elegiaca. 
                This is very raw music. The Second Symphony 
                is performed on the Lama vinyl by the 
                Helsinki Philharmonic but without choir. 
                This recording sounds like a studio 
                inscription possibly made during Tjeknavorian's 
                visit to Helsinki for the concert premiere. 
              
 
              
The experience of meeting 
                these two works is like hearing first 
                and second thoughts on related material. 
                The symphonies meet unthinkable tragedy 
                on its own terms; there is no shying 
                away; no evasion. They make uncomfortable 
                listening but in the Second Symphony 
                the Credo brings balm without 
                washing away the memory. 
              
Rob Barnett