Reinterpreting Disney music
AS The Walt Disney Company celebrates 100 years, pianist Lang Lang is set to release The Disney Book, which contains 27 songs from the entertainment giant’s iconic films.
In a recent online interview, Lang Lang said the project took him several years as he and his production team tried to make sure the new arrangement would be on par with the music of great composers like Chopin, Liszt, Debussy, Rachmaninoff and so on.
“I always wanted to do an animation album, but it was very challenging because everyone already knows the tunes and the images associated with them.
“So to redo it on the piano was not easy. I didn‘t want it to turn out to be elevator music,” he said.
The music on the album, to be released on Sept 16, has been newly arranged specifically for Lang Lang by top arrangers, including Stephen Hough, Natalie Tenenbaum and Randy Kerber, and offers solo piano and piano with orchestra performances of hit songs from Snow White, Encanto, Beauty And The Beast, Frozen, Cinderella, Pinocchio and many more.
The album also features special collaborators from across the globe including Andrea Bocelli for You’ll Be In My Heart from Tarzan, Sebastian Yatra for Dos Oruguitas from Encanto and Jon Batiste for his own score from Soul with It’s All Right.
Lang Lang’s wife Gina Alice sings When You Wish Upon A Star in English and in Korean.
Lang Lang offered a sneak peek of how the new arrangements were done.
For instance, Bare Necessities from The Jungle Book is rearranged in a modern jazz style; songs from Lion King and Dumbo will remind the listeners of Debussy while Frozen is in Rachmaninoff style, according to Lang Lang.
The Disney Book is a continuation of Lang Lang’s commitment to music education.
Much like his 2019 album Piano Book, which brought together some of Lang Lang’s favourite pieces as a way to encourage budding young musicians, The Disney Book aims to inspire people of all ages to explore classical music.
“Seeing so many children who want to achieve the same dream as I did – becoming a pianist – we started the Lang Lang Foundation.
“Over the years, we realised that it’s not enough to help kids who have already been exposed to music and exhibit budding talent. There are so many kids who are really at a disadvantage without any music education,” Lang Lang said.
“Since music changed me, I know that music can inspire one to become the best version of themselves,” he added. – The Korea Herald/Asia News Network