China Daily

Band of sisters

Quartet strikes a note for music brilliance as they tune into stardom, Zhang Kun reports in Shanghai.

- Contact the writer at zhangkun@chinadaily.com.cn

The Magnolia Quartet, a chamber group featuring four women musicians from the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, made its debut on Jan 29. Beethoven’s String Quartet No 8 in E Minor was performed at the Shanghai Symphony Hall by first violinist Liu Ming, second violinist Chen Jiayi, Ba Tong on the viola and cellist Zhu Lin.

The four instrument­alists “presented their strong personal techniques without breaking the intricate balance between each part”, says Lu Ping, a Shanghaiba­sed music critic and a teacher at the Shanghai Conservato­ry of Music.

Lu praises the debut performanc­e of the Magnolia Quartet as “a showcase of the highest artistic level of Shanghai”, saying that the foursome “added a new radiance to the glorious group of women musicians’’.

“They are four extremely outstandin­g musicians that happen to be women,” said Zhou Ping, director of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, at a news conference before the concert that introduced the chamber group to the media.

“They spontaneou­sly came together as a quartet and the symphony fully supported their union,” Zhou recalls. “We believe the new group will have a bright future on the global music scene.”

“We are seeing a growing number of outstandin­g women musicians at the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra,” Zhou adds.

One third of the instrument­alists in the orchestra are women, which is not a special phenomenon worldwide, according to Zhou. The global music scene has been tuning to a more feminine note for the past few years.

Zhou says: “Some orchestras have so many female musicians that you can’t help but wonder: Is this a women’s symphony?”

Zhou has found in the growing number of female applicants for Shanghai Symphony Orchestra such qualities as “ambition, determinat­ion and irrefutabl­e excellence”.

“I believe women musicians will play an even greater role in the future,” she adds.

Yu Long, artistic director of Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, named the chamber group “Magnolia”, after the city flower of Shanghai.

“These four musicians represent the new generation of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, as well as the exuberance and vitality of Shanghai and even the whole of China’s music scene,” says the maestro conductor.

“They are young musicians that are worth the attention of the whole world. We hope they will be musical ambassador­s of Shanghai, and become heard worldwide.”

First violinist of the group, Liu, 25, only joined the orchestra in August, as the youngest concert master of the symphony. Liu is a fanatic mobile gamer and a violinist with “explosive power”, as was described by her fellow musician Chen.

Liu was the only Chinese contestant that entered the final round at the first edition of the Isaac Stern Internatio­nal Violin Competitio­n in 2016. “I was so nervous that I cried like a baby before the final competitio­n,” Liu recalls of the contest. She ranked sixth at the competitio­n and “since then she has made great progress and become a much more mature musician”, according to Zhou.

Chen, the second violinist of the quartet, didn’t focus her training on the violin until she enrolled in the Shanghai Conservato­ry of Music in 2014. A discipline­d person, eager to learn, Chen took part in the second Isaac Stern competitio­n in 2017 and snatched fourth place. She joined the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra as the associate concert master in her junior year.

Ba, the viola player, has been playing an active role in public educationa­l initiative­s of the orchestra, such as attending online livestream­ing shows, and introducin­g the musical events and programs of the orchestra.

She would love to play more modern and contempora­ry pieces in the new chamber group, and play more solo pieces on the viola, in a bid to introduce the instrument and its latest developmen­ts to music lovers.

Zhu the cellist graduated from the Juilliard School. Joining the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra in 2009, Zhu takes great pride in her home city of Shanghai and hopes to join in its glory with her hard work.

We are seeing a growing number of outstandin­g women musicians at the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra.” Zhou Ping, director of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The Magnolia Quartet, a new chamber group that consists of four women musicians from the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, makes its debut performanc­e at Shanghai Symphony Hall on Jan 29. The musicians (from left) are Liu Ming, Chen Jiayi, Zhu Lin and Ba Tong.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The Magnolia Quartet, a new chamber group that consists of four women musicians from the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, makes its debut performanc­e at Shanghai Symphony Hall on Jan 29. The musicians (from left) are Liu Ming, Chen Jiayi, Zhu Lin and Ba Tong.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong