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Have Fun with Chinese Music - a Concert for the Family


Young Chinese Music-makers
in Concert
Sing Out! Let Chinese Music
be Your Song!

This is a concert for the entire family: whatever your age, you will find the performance by our youthful performers touching your heart's chord.

There will be two groups from the Hong Kong Children’s Choir singing for us - the younger aged between 6 and 8, and the older, aged between 9 and 17. A cultural ambassador of Hong Kong for the last thirty-five years, the Choir has traveled all over the globe to perform.

Also on stage will be another young musician group - the Junior Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra, which is celebrating its first anniversary at the end of 2003. They have only given their inaugural concert in early August this year, and for this family concert, they will be represented by the Erhu Section (age 8-13), the Guzheng Section (age 10-17) and two percussionists (age 15 and 16).

These children will be joined by two young artists: 23-year-old erhu soloist Sun Huang from Shanghai, Champion of the Youth Section and winner of an Outstanding Award for Performance at the
2nd Dragons Music Cup Award in China; and Guzheng Champion of the same competition, Yuan Sha, acclaimed "an angel of music from China" in her many overseas performances.

Conducting the Choir will be their Music Director Kathy Choi, who was a winner of the Texas State Music Scholarship for six consecutive years during her undergraduate years.

And conducting the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra will be Chew Hee-chiat, talented composer, conductor, and Assistant Conductor of the Orchestra since June 2002.

This is an impressive cast indeed, as we can see how music is our best friend, no matter in what age or stage of life we are. From childhood days to youth, and from amateur to professional performances, music gives us the chance to express ourselves and to explore our potentials. While the children in the audience will bear the remarkable imprint of what other children can do in music long after they have walked out of the concert hall, their parents will definitely be impressed by the high standard of the performance. This promises to be a unique and remarkable experience for those attending the concert, as they will be invited to sing along and feel the vibes of making music together!


Programme Highlights:

The programme is designed to introduce the audience (the children in particular) to the wonderful world of Chinese music. The emotionality of the traditional Chinese instruments is given full play in the zheng tunes, such as Song of the Mulberry Fields by Zhou Yanjia and Spring of Liang Shan by Xu Xiaolin. The former has the characteristics of Shaanxi folk music, filled with nostalgia for home and sanguine hopes for a bright future; the latter demands the player to show adept skills in depicting the folksy colour and rhythm of the Yi tribe living in the Liang Shan mountain.

Action is enhanced in Chen Yaoxing's Battle-Horses in Stampede: horses charging at quick speed, their neighing, and the sound of battle on the filed are vividly recreated through music by the skilful use of the erhu bow on the two strings. On a more lyrical note, the erhu can replace the violin and the dombra of the Xinjiang people in creating the same versatile effects in The Sun Over Taxkorgan. These two pieces are excellent vehicles to show what the erhu can do.

The Hong Kong Children's Choir will be singing The Suite of Hong Kong and A Medley of Chinese Folk Songs, with accompaniment by the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra. But even more interesting may be the interpretation of the medley of songs from The Sound of Music by the Chinese orchestra.

Other items on the concert programme are The Joyous Chili Village by Chen Maojian, a Chaozhou tune Yi-Dian-Jin, The Ox Fighting the Tiger by Wang Guojie and the Uighur folksong from Xinjiang, Love Song of the Wagon-driver. Each is outstanding in its music motifs and lyrical melody.

 

Know your Chinese music:

Is there truth in the saying that "children who learn music will not be bad"?

It does sound rather too subjective and sweeping, because we grow up in life exposed to all kinds of influence along the way.
But there is scientific ground in saying that "music can enhance children's intelligence".

Back in 1986, a scientific research team in Chicago University picked one hundred subjects for test among outstanding achievers in sports, mathematics and piano playing, and conducted an in-depth research on them. It was discovered that they also had parents who loved music, art and sports, so they were able to grow up under the influence of music. The findings, therefore, were that music can stimulate children’s senses and cerebral growth. As stimulants are secreted into the blood, they bring about wholesome health and a sense of well-being, and train motor skills. "Music makes children smarter" is, therefore, a valid saying and not conjecture and assumption.

One thing to note, though, and that is children need "music”, not "sounds", to stimulate cerebral growth – in other words, they need music that appeal to the ear and to the inborn sense of aesthetics in us.

 

Programme

12-13.12.2003(Fri, Sat)

Ensemble Love Song of the Wagon-driver
Uighur Folksong, Xinjiang
Arr. by Chew Hee-chiat

Erhu Ensemble The Joyous Chili Village Chen Maojian
Arr.by Li Shek-um
Performed by the JHKCO

Drum Duet The Ox Fighting Tiger Wang Guojie Arr. by Zhang Lie
Performed by the JHKCO

Choir and Orchestra The Sound of Music Medley
Performed by The Hong Kong Children’s Choir

Spring of Liang Shan Xu Xiaolin
Arr. by Yan Huichang
Song of Mulbery Fields Zhou Yanjia
Guzheng Solo: Yuan Sha


Intermission


Ensemble Yi-Dian-Jin
Chaozhou Folk Tune From the notation of Guo Ying
Arr. by Sun Wenyan
Performed by the JHKCO Zheng Group

The Suite of Hong Kong
Performed by The Hong Kong Children's Choir

Erhu and Orchestra Battle-Horses in Stampede Chen Yaoxing
Erhu and Orchestra The Sun over Taxkorgan
Arr. by Chen Gang
Re-arr. by Liu Changfu
Orch. by Chen Ning-chi
Erhu: Sun Huang

A Medley of Chinese Folk Songs
Performed by The Hong Kong Children's Choir



Terry Bear Kingdom

Present the couple in House Program to enjoy "Buy One Get One Free" for Entry ticket.

 

Date: 12-13.12.2003
Time: 8:00 pm
Venue:
Hong Kong Cultural Centre
Concert Hall
$150, $130, $110, $90


Kathy Choi/Conductor

  • Awarded a six-year Texas Government Music Scholarship, Choi obtained her B.M. degree in Composition and M.M. degree in Choral Conducting from the University of Houston, USA in 1990 and 1992.
    After returning to Hong Kong in 1995,
  • Choi joined the Hong Kong Children's Choir and conducted one of the senior choirs from 1995 to 1997. Choi became the full time Music Director of the Hong Kong Children's Choir in October 1997. Choi was selected as an awardee of the Hong Kong Ten Outstanding Young Persons Selection in October 2001.


Chew Hee-chiat/Conductor

  • Currently the Assistant Conductor of Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra since June, 2002, Chew has been the Music Director of Professional Cultural Center Orchestra of Malaysia since 1996.
  • Also an active composer with an interest to explore the interstice between traditional Chinese and "Western" orchestrations. His works include Orchestra Suite No.1, Orchestra Suite No.2, The Third, and Fantasy Dance.


Yuan Sha/Zheng

  • Yuan began her formal training in guzheng under Liu Miao and Li Meng. She was exempted from the admission examination to enroll in the master's degree course of the Central Conservatory of Music in 1999.
  • Yuan has given tours to many countries and regions in Asia and Europe. She also shared the stage with Liu Shi-kun, the piano virtuoso. A Swiss critic described her performance in such terms, "she could make such brilliant, unsurpassed sounds that one cannot help feeling amazed at the beauty and lyricism coming from such an ancient Chinese instrument".


Sun Huang/Erhu

  • Sun was born in 1981 in Shanghai, she was under the tutelage of Lin Xinming, Wang Lili and Liu Changfu. She also trained in banhu under Li Hengxiu . She has been on tour to overseas and won the name as "an angel of music from China".
  • She has been a winner of ten Class One Awards in major Chinese music competitions since 1988. They include a Class One Award at the Tianhua Cup. National Junior Erhu Competition (1995) and the First Prize (Youth Section) as well as an Outstanding Performance Award for Traditional Repertoire at the 2nd Dragons Music Cup Award International Folk Instruments Competition – Erhu (2002).


The Hong Kong Children's Choir

  • The Hong Kong Children's Choir was founded in 1969 as a private non-profit-making charitable organization. Today, over 4,500 boys and girls receive choral, instrumental, dancing, arts and craft training from the Choir. Each year, tour groups are invited to give performances overseas. The Choir has been well received and applauded in over 54 cities, gaining an international reputation as "one of the best children's choirs in the world" and "the Little Goodwill Singing Ambassadors from Hong Kong".
  • For the past thirty-four years, the Choir has made tremendous contributions towards children's arts education in Hong Kong, not only cultivating children's interest and talents in the arts, but also helping them develop their inter-personal skills and cultivate their sensitivity to appreciate culture and the virtues of excellence.


Junior Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra

  • The Junior Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra was set up by the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra with the purpose of providing the young people of Hong Kong more opportunities to come into contact with or to have a closer understanding of the rich and age-old long music culture of China. On 1 August, 2003, the Orchestra made its debut at the performance of "A Precious Little Baby", playing Dance of the Golden Snakes.
  • The Junior Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra was set up in January 2003, with a current establishment of 109. The instruments of the Orchestra include the erhu, cello, double bass, liuqin, pipa, yangqin, zhongruan, dizi, sheng, suona and percussion. The structure and the size are close to those of a full-scale Chinese orchestra.