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2012年10月27日 星期六

Catching up on my concerts.

I do not know why, music seems to have a mysterious ability to move the human soul in a way that no other form of human art can. It seems to have the ability to turn the key on an invisible lock hidden deep somewhere within the niches of our unbelievably intricate neural circuits and in a trace let fly all our fears, despair, hopes and exhilaration and all other kinds of moods in between. Nowhere has this truth become more blindingly obvious to me than when I attended a concert of the HKPO on 29th September, 2012. The resonances are still with me even as I write.

The program that evening was quite varied. First we had a piece completely new to me. It was composed by an extremely talented young American-born Chinese Conrad Tao who had been giving piano concerts since age 4 and is now doing a joint program by Columbia University and Juillard School in New York where he is learning the violin. He wrote a piece called Pangu, a Chinese myth about the creation of our universe. According to this myth, the earth began with the hatching of an egg which took some 18,000 years after which another 18,000 years was required to separate light from darkness, the earth from the sky. Our universe is the literal embodiment of Pangu: his eyes are the sun and moon, his breath the wind, his voice the thunder and his body is our mountains and valleys. It was a very innovative piece and unlike some of the other "contemporary" composition, not completely devoid of melodic motifs which are repeated from time to time. There is some very original use of percussions to create the moods and rhythms of creation. Even my usual concert companions whose taste cannot be described as "universal" like it!

The second piece was a by now very "classic" work done by Chan Gang and Ho Yim Ho in the early days of the new China, the one movement Butterfly Lovers violin Concerto. What surprised me was the way it was performed by Lin Neng, another rising star from the PRC who came from Sichuan and has since won a number of important international prizes, including the Paganini prize for violin playing. I like the way he handled the violin, always with restraint and sensitivity and yet perfectly natural and unforced, a bit like Nathan Milstein. I like in particular the way he uses the bow to give some almost erhu like sound of Chinese strings which makes the piece peculiarly Chinese in feel.

The last piece of the evening was a completely different matter again. It was Beethoven's Symphony No. 7, written at a time when Beethoven has lost the greater part of his hearing. It was in a way a very rousing piece with a very insistent first movement which gives the mood to the entire symphony, a second movement which is very soft, slightly grim and yet calm and not completely hopeless, with a very Slavic rhythm and feel. Its third movement is something different again. There is a certain lightness which quickly developed into something rather more forceful. We can actually feel Beethoven's stubborn will to life and to create. Then in the final movement, we find Beethoven bursting forth in his strident march towards the climax. The HKPO under Jaap van Zweden gave an excellent performance.  As expected, it drew a very well deserved ecstatic applause from all and sundry. I'm so glad I didn't miss the concert. It was an unforgettable experience.   


10 則留言:

  1. 一熊
    [版主回覆10/27/2012 22:30:26]Hope you enjoyed the music. Have a relaxing weekend!

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  2. hAPPY sUNDAY
    [自由熊回覆10/28/2012 11:18:20]冇啦. .not yet 太傷心.. 抖抖先
    [版主回覆10/28/2012 11:14:40]Same to you. Have you bought new turtles?

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  3. Butterfly Lovers is my favorite love story. Romeo and Zhu Yingtai is a beautiful pair.
    [版主回覆10/30/2012 00:14:22]Beautiful but sad or sad, therefore beautiful?

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  4. I see Li Chuen Wan in Itzhak Perlman.
    [Peter回覆10/30/2012 11:01:26]It doesn't matter. Maybe the two all rolled into one.
    [版主回覆10/30/2012 10:53:22]Or is it the other way round?

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  5. Once again, a standing ovation for Li Chuen Wan. Such a moving performance. It literally brought warm tears to my eyes.
    Thanks to you for the sharing.
    [版主回覆10/31/2012 12:49:26]The sound of the wind instruments etc are as good as that of the strings and the performers are all Chinese so they really understand the relevant emotions. Perhaps that's why they are so moving.

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  6. I'll never got tired of these masterpieces! Thanks for your sharing!
    [版主回覆11/01/2012 09:04:30]You're right. That's why they're called "classics". You always hear something new each time you listen to them again; some neglected passages, themes, motifs, some hidden nuances you did not previously notice !

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  7. 梁祝協奏曲每次聽都很感動。
    是梁祝故事動人吧。 ^_^
    [版主回覆11/01/2012 16:58:40]But that's also because the music seems to have caught the mood of the lovers!

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  8. 有聽過梁祝的二胡版嗎?
    [版主回覆11/05/2012 23:19:08]Not yet. Who played it and with which orchestra?

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  9. 一首淒美委婉動人, 一首雄偉振奮激昂;我比較喜愛梁祝多些。
    [版主回覆11/05/2012 23:20:38]Yes, the Butterfly Lovers is certainly more moving perhaps because we know the story and can identify with the lovers more.

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  10. I love the Butterfly Lovers violin concerto which really plucks at the heartstrings! Have you heard the Dou Jun-Yi/Central Philharmonic Orchestra/Han zhong-Jie and Takako Nishizaki/Shanghai Conservatory Symphony Orchestra/Fan Chengwu versions?
    [版主回覆11/05/2012 23:21:51]No. Must go and listen to them for comparison. Thanks for the tips.

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