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Press
Releases
Golden
Chinese Classics of the 20th Century I&II
Golden Chinese Classics of the
20th Century I
Heroes, Heroines and Love: The Magic of Chinese
Folklore Retold in Music | The
highly narrative nature of Chinese music is highlighted in this selection, and
some of the best known figures in Chinese legend and folklore come alive through
the romantic interpretation of the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra: Let your heart
melt with the lilting strings of The Butterfly Lovers, or follow the adventures
of Hua Mulan, the brave young woman who took her father's place to join
the army by disguising herself as a man. Capture the colours of Peking Opera behind
In the Deep of the Night, or be transposed to the Great Wall where you
would have a panoramic vision of not only China’s magnificent landscape but
also of the historical figures associated with it in The Great Wall Capriccio.
The soloists for the evening are Ngai Kwun-wa, Lu Yunxia, Liu Yang, Wong Ching
and Wong On-yuen. Romantic or exuberant, muted or high-flung, Chinese instruments
are versatile and expressive. Feel them in your heart.
Four
of the winning selection of Ten Most Popular Solo and Orchestral Works give you
four totally different musical experiences. A sense of mystery permeates in In
the Deep of the Night. The acoustic interest of the drum solo passage and
the racy section in which the jinghu vies with the drum would be the new love
of all hi-fi aficionados! Add to this the soaring, expansive notes of The Great
Wall Capriccio, the variegated emotional nuances of Hua Mulan and the sustained
romanticism of The Butterfly Lovers, and you will understand why these
works are "evergreen". The
Jinghu, Jing-erhu and Gaohu These three belong to the bowed-string
family of the Chinese fiddle called erhu. They share the characteristic
features of having only two strings and are tuned to a fifth. The first jinghu
appeared around 1790 in the Qing Dynasty, mainly functioning as an accompanying
instrument for Peking Opera and Han Opera. Its round-shaped resonator and the
body are both made of bamboo. The jing-erhu and the gaohu are both
developed from the erhu. Except that they are smaller in size, they share
the same characteristic features as the parent instrument. The resonator and body
of the jing-erhu are made of wood. The resonator is either hexagon or octagon
in shape. It was first created by a musician in Peking Opera called Wang Shaoqing
(1899-1957) in the 1920s. The gaohu has a pitch that is higher than the
erhu by four to five octaves. It has a bright and clarion timbre. The resonator
is mostly in the round shape, but sometimes it can also be oblong or in the shape
of a flattened octagon. It was created by a Cantonese music artist, Lu Wencheng,
in the 1930s when he replaced the silken strings with metal strings and used it
as an accompanying instrument for Cantonese music, Cantonese Opera and operatic
arias. In performing, the player needs to hold the resonator between the knees
to control the volume and timbre. The thickness and fabric of the padding material
between the instrument and the knees therefore can have a direct bearing on the
timbre. 10.10.2003
(Fri) Jinghu & Orchestra In the Deep of the Night
Set Tune from Peking Opera Arr. by Wu Hua Jinghu: Ngai Kwun-wa Jing-erhu:
Lu Yunxia Erhu Concerto The Great Wall Capriccio Liu Wenjin
Erhu: Liu Yang Pipa Concerto Hua Mulan Gu Guanren Pipa: Wong
Ching Gaohu Concerto The Butterfly Lovers (Excerpts)
He Zhanhao & Chen Gang Arr. by He Zhanhao Gaohu: Wong On-yuen |  |
| Date:10.10.2003
Time: 8:00 pm | |
Venue:
Hong Kong Cultural Centre Concert Hall | |
$150,
$130, $110, $90 |
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A
celebrated huqin master, Wong is one of the most active performers of Chinese
music with great accomplishment and influence. He is currently the Concertmaster
and Assistant Conductor of the HKCO. -
The
albums he made has won the Gold Tripod Awards of Taiwan Government
Information Office for Best Performance and Best Recording in
1984 and 1987 respectively, and the Album of Best Performance
Award of Taiwan's China Times Evening Post in 1992.
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Born
into a musical family, Wong Ching entered the China Broadcast
Chinese Orchestra in 1976 and the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra
in 1987. Currently, she is the Section Leader of Plucked-strings
and Pipa Principal of the Orchestra.
-
Wong
is a versatile pipa artist with a rich repertoire that
comprises works by different composers, in different styles
and at different times. Noted for her pure tone colour and artistic
appeal, she is praised by critics as "musical, also artistically
and technically proficient".
-
Ngai
Kwun-wa learned a wide range of the huqin family under the late huqin master,
Liu Mingyuan, when he was young. Later he studied at the Department of Chinese
Music of the China Conservatory of Music in Beijing and the Department of Composition
of the Shanghai Conservatory of Music. Ngai is currently a gaohu musician of HKCO,
while teaching at The Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts and Hong Kong Music
Institute and the School of Education of Hong Kong. -
Ngai
gave a successful huqin recital in Hong Kong in 2001. He has
many solo albums to his credit, including In Celebration
of a Victory (the banhu solo), The Military and the People
Join Hands for Production, The Crescent Moon at Dawn and
Brothers of the Red Army Is Back.
-
Currently
an erhu musician with the HKCO. Lu Yunxia started to learn the erhu at
the age of five. In 1990, Lu entered the secondary school affiliated to the Central
Conservatory where her teachers included Professor Wang Yi, and the Conservatory
proper in 1996. She graduated with a Bachelors degree in 2000. -
Lu has performed
on many important occasions, including the annual Shanghai Spring
Music Festival, the 1999 Fortune Forum held in Shanghai, and
the performance for world leaders who attended the APEC 2001
and the Convention of Mayors of the World.
-
Liu
Yang learned to play the erhu at a young age under his father. He gave
his first solo recital in 1990. In 1991, he entered the Central Conservatory of
Music to study Folk Music, and was taught by Professor Liu Changfu. In 1999, Liu
came top at the Tianhua Cup National Competition for Young Erhu Artistes. Liu
is at present an erhu musician with the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra and
an executive committee member of the Erhu Society under the Chinese Musicians'
Association. -
In
2000, he went on tour to Korea and Japan as part of a Korean-Japanese-Chinese
delegation, the Asian Orchestra, performing as a principal. He gave a solo recital
in Beijing in the same year, and performed as a solo at the One Hundred Years
of Erhu concert series in 2001. | |
Golden Chinese Classics of the
20th Century II
Heaven, Earth and Mankind: Humanity in Chinese
Music | For
music created by Man, it has been a long process of moving from the simple to
the complex. The symphonization movements and the ever-growing size of the orchestra
stand testimony to this effect. This is not only the result of Man's growing urge
to satisfy his aural experience, but also because the complexity of music and
the orchestra allows for more dynamic changes that give better expression of the
internal as well as external world of the Modern man, while satisfying their ever-rising
expectation of acoustic sounds and music. The
programme of this concert perhaps provides an answer to these expectations. It
allows a modern, full-scale Chinese orchestra to give full play to its dynamic
capabilities and maintain a balance between acoustic range and musicality. The
agrarian origin of Song of the Fishermen of the East Sea finds contemporary
relevance, when battles on the high seas remind us of battles in life in the modern
city. Similarly, there is eternal truth in mankind's yearning for peace, as depicted
in Terra Cotta Warriors Fantasia. Fortunately, one finds solace in the
picturesque tranquility of Moonlight over Spring River, or in the affirmation
of love in fairytales like The Seventh Fairy Maiden Fantasia. Be ready
to tackle life's issues on an evening like this music, or Chinese music,
has more dimensions than what you assume it to have.
The
three ensembles of the evening were among the Top Ten Favourites in Chinese Ensemble
Music of the worldwide poll. They explore the expressive capabilities of a modern
Chinese orchestra from different angles. Song
of the Fishermen of the East Sea is in four sections. It incorporates the
ethnic colours of the gong-and-drum music of eastern Zhejiang with unique percussion
instruments such as the conch and the dafeng drum to create a tone poem of glorious
colour and animated scenes. The perennial favourite, Moonlight over Spring
River, is like a Chinese scroll painting, with the lyrical introduction unfolding
onto ten scenes of great beauty. Many
listeners have been moved by the epic appeal and symphonic texture of Terra
Cotta Warriors Fantasia, including the western audience at the HKCO's concert
at the Goldenersaal in Vienna. The Seventh Fairy Maiden Fantasia, another
winner in the worldwide poll, is a successful rearrangement, giving the erhu
and the gehu new expressiveness within the framework of a double concerto.
#
Hi-fi aficionados are well familiar with Song of the Fishermen in the East
Sea and Terra Cotta Warriors Fantasia because of their voluminous sound
effects. But acoustic qualities aside, they are also people's favourites because
of their emotionality. So, when you open your ears, remember to open your heart
as well. What
is used to cover the resonators of the Chinese fiddle? The clue
lies in the nomenclature, right? If "erhu" means "fiddle with two
strings", and "gaohu" means "fiddle with a higher register
than the "erhu", then "banhu" should mean the resonator is
covered with "ban", meaning "board", and "gehu",
with "ge", meaning "skin". Are these answers by deduction
correct? (Look at the answer by turning the page upside down.) Answer
The resonator of the Chinese fiddle family of huqin is mostly mounted with
snake skin. But some are exceptions: the banhu, yehu and tuhu (an
instrument of the Zhuang ethnic minority of China) are covered with boards of
the Chinese parasol tree. And although the gehu and the bass gehu
are mounted with snakeskin, the sheer size of the resonator of these bass instruments
requires the skin of the python. However,
the variation in thickness of the skins yields different sound qualities. Snakeskin
is also easily affected by the humidity in the air. Another point that deters
the use of python skins is the preservation of endangered species. All these lead
to the need to replace snakeskin with wooden boards. In a seminar on Chinese music
conducted by the HKCO in March 2003, the Instrument Improvement Group of Xian
Conservatory of Music gave a demonstration using a qinhu mounted with board
instead of snakeskin, created by Chak Chi-wing, and the effect was found to be
rather satisfactory. 11.10.2003 (Sat)
Ensemble Song of the Fishermen in the East Sea Ma Shenglong
& Gu Guanren Double Concerto for Erhu and Gehu The Seventh
Fairy Maiden Fantasia Wu Hua Erhu: Hsin Hsiao-hung Gehu: Lo Chun-wo
Pipa and Orchestra¡@Moonlight over Spring River¡@Ancient
Melody Arr. by Qin Pengzhang & Luo Zhongrong Pipa Lead Player: Wong
Ching Dongxiao Lead Player: Sun Yongzhi Ensemble Terra Cotta
Warriors Fantasia Peng Xiuwen | |
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As
a renowned huqin performer and one of the awardees of Ten Outstanding Young
Persons 2002 (Hong Kong), Hsin Hsiao-hung is currently the Erhu Principal of Hong
Kong Chinese Orchestra. She has a passionate style that is at the same time endowed
with subtlety, and her interpretations have full of a moving quality that plucks
at her listeners' hearts. -
She
gave a highly successful performance with Yo Yo Ma and Hong Kong Philharmonic
Orchestra in the Hong Kong Arts Festival 2002 and won wide acclaim. Recent years,
she added pop, jazz and east-meet-west music to her repertoire. She has cut an
album with jazz artist, Dave Parker, and hi-fi critic Leo praised her performance
as "refreshing, exquisite, with a scenic panorama that is almost tangible.
Definitely worth hearing." -
A
prize-winning cellist and gehu soloist and teacher, Lo Chun-wo is the recipient
of the Outstanding Performance Award at the National Cello Competition in China.
He joined the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra in 1997, and is currently Assistant
Gehu Principal. -
Lo
was, at various times of his career, Principal Cello with two professional orchestras
in China, a full-time teacher at the Department of Music of the Beijing Central
University for Nationalities, a part-time associate professor in music at the
Sichuan Institute of Film and Television in China and a part-time instructor of
the Music Office of Hong Kong. -
Born
into a musical family, Wong Ching entered the China Broadcast Chinese Orchestra
in 1976 and the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra in 1987. Currently, she is the Section
Leader of Plucked-strings and Pipa Principal of the Orchestra. -
Wong is a
versatile pipa artist with a rich repertoire that comprises works by different
composers, in different styles and at different times. Noted for her pure tone
colour and artistic appeal, she is praised by critics as "musical, also artistically
and technically proficient". | |