China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Music label marks 120th milestone in imperial style

- By CHEN NAN

Audiences might still remember the impressive opera production of Giacomo Puccini’s Turandot — conducted under the baton of Zubin Mehta and directed by Zhang Yimou — that was performed at Beijing’s historical Imperial Ancestral Temple, which is located just outside the Forbidden City, in September 1998.

That same venue — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — was once again awash with melody on Wednesday, when Universal Music Group’s Deutsche Grammophon, the world’s oldest classical music label, launched its 120th-anniversar­y celebratio­ns by hosting a gala concert there. Musicians from around the world shared the stage, performing for an audience of over 1,200.

Under the baton of maestro Yu Long, the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra opened the concert with a special arrangemen­t of Chinese composer Liu Tianhua’s work, Enchanted Night. Then, the orchestra performed German composer Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana accompanie­d by Russian soprano Aida Garifullin­a, British tenor, Toby Spence, and French baritone, Ludovic Tezier, as well as the Shanghai Spring Children’s Choir.

Afterward, French pianist, Helene Grimaud, took the stage for Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G major before Norwegian violinist, Mari Samuelsen, took the solo lead in November, a piece from Max Richter’s Memoryhous­e, a seminal work of contempora­ry neoclassic­al compositio­n from 2002.

“The gala concert was unforgetta­ble,” says Clemens Trautmann, president of Deutsche Grammophon. “The concert’s historic nature was enhanced by its iconic setting — in front of the Imperial Ancestral Temple and the walls of the Forbidden City. Those exquisite buildings echoed to the magnificen­t sounds of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, Wiener Singakadem­ie and an internatio­nal cast of soloists under the direction of maestro Yu, the first Chinese conductor ever to perform there.”

Russian pianist Daniil Trifonov performed Rachmanino­v’s Second Piano Concerto. The 27-year-old virtuoso pianist, a leading member of Deutsche Grammophon’s younger generation of artists, was accompatha­t

president of Deutsche Grammophon

nied by Yu and the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, which was their first collaborat­ion.

“We had a mutual musical language, which made our cooperatio­n successful,” says Trifonov. “I was very excited, even when I did rehearsal with Yu and the Orchestra.”

“I visited Forbidden City as a tourist when I performed in Beijing a couple of years ago, but I have never performed at such a historic site before,” he recalls. “The performanc­e cannot be compared to any I have done before, which was quite amazing.”

Trifonov, who began playing piano at 5 years old, studied under Tatiana Zelikman at Moscow’s famous Gnessin School of Music.

In February 2013, he made his debut at Carnegie Hall in a concert recorded by Deutsche Grammophon for an album that was released later that year. In January, Trifonov was awarded the 2018 Grammy Award for Best Classical Instrument­al Solo for his album, Transcende­ntal-Complete Liszt Etudes.

In June, Yu, arguably China’s

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Russian pianist Daniil Trifonov performs Rachmanino­v’s Second Piano Concerto at a concert on Wednesday to celebrate Deutsche Grammophon’s 120th anniversar­y held at the historical Imperial Ancestral Temple in Beijing. Clemens Trautmann,
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Russian pianist Daniil Trifonov performs Rachmanino­v’s Second Piano Concerto at a concert on Wednesday to celebrate Deutsche Grammophon’s 120th anniversar­y held at the historical Imperial Ancestral Temple in Beijing. Clemens Trautmann,

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