Chinese orchestra hits high note in US debut
CHICAGO — A sold-out concert performed here last Saturday by China National Center for the Performing Arts (NCPA) Orchestra caught the attention of the whole audience by showcasing a unique combination of Western and Chinese music.
The concert, performed at the Symphony Center in Chicago, started with Chinese composer Zhao Jiping’s Violin Concerto No 1, with Ning Feng as the soloist.
Zhao’s piece was commissioned by the orchestra and just had its world premiere in Beijing a couple of weeks ago, said Lu Jia, music director and chief conductor of the NCPA Orchestra.
“Zhao’s music is fantastic,” Lu said, in praise of its harmonious combination of Western music with Chinese elements.
Zhao is one of the best-known composers in China. He gained his international fame for his music scores in films, such as Farewell My Concubine, directed by Chen Kaige in 1993, and Raise the Red Lantern and To Live, directed by Zhang Yimou in 1991 and 1994 respectively.
The concert also features the use of pipa, a four-stringed Chinese musical instrument, with Wu Man, a world-renowned pipa virtuoso, as the soloist. Wu played American composer Lou Harrison’s Pipa Concerto with String Orchestra, which was commissioned for her in 1997.
“I’m so thrilled to play it with China NCPA Orchestra in the United States,” she told Xinhua.
Wu said she had played Harrison’s piece hundreds of times with foreign orchestras in Europe and the United States, but last Saturday night’s concert marked her first time to play it with a touring Chinese orchestra outside China.
“I feel very honored,” she said, adding that the concert’s characteristic use of pipa made her feel “a major change” in her efforts in introducing traditional Chinese musical instruments to Western audiences.