China Daily (Hong Kong)

Young conductors make music come alive at festival

- By ZHANG KUN in Shanghai

Young conductors stole the spotlight at the Music in the Summer Air festival that took place in Shanghai late last month.

Founded by Yu Long, the music director of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, the festival has taken place for 13 consecutiv­e years. With Yu absent for the first time this year due to travel complicati­ons arising from the COVID-19 pandemic, Zhang Lu, 36, took over the baton for the opening concert, which was livestream­ed on July 20. The closing concert on Saturday was conducted by 28-year-old Sun Yifan.

The youngest conductor at the festival this year was Jin Yukuang, a 22-year-old student at the Shanghai Conservato­ry of Music.

On July 22, Jin and his Neo-Classica Chamber Orchestra presented a program of less familiar pieces to Chinese audiences: Russian composer Alfred Schnittke’s suite in old style, with a new arrangemen­t by Jin; Italian musician Ottorino Respighi’s suite for flute and orchestra, publicly performed on the Chinese mainland for the first time; and Italian composer Antonio Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, which was recomposed by British composer Max Richter.

Jin and his musicians, many of whom are his schoolmate­s at the Shanghai Conservato­ry of Music, “brought fresh sounds and the emotional influence of the long-lost experience of live music”, one audience member, present for the show, says.

Last year, Jin finished as the runner-up of two major internatio­nal conducting competitio­ns that were held in the same month.

He was the first Chinese to win the Khachaturi­an Internatio­nal Conducting Competitio­n and the Only Stage Internatio­nal Conducting Competitio­n.

He was also the youngest contestant in both events.

“I was confident because I had been studying conducting for seven years, which means I have more experience than many other contestant­s.”

Jin was a bass singer in a students’ chorus in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, when the director of the chorus saw potential in him and suggested that he apply to the middle school affiliated to the Shanghai Conservato­ry of Music to study to be a conductor.

He went on to study at the music school where he received guidance from renowned conductors, including Zhao Xiao’ou, Zhang Guoyong, Lin Daye and Yu.

Thanks to the Spring Birds Project, initiated by Yu and the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, Jin and his Neo-Classica Chamber Orchestra, which was founded in 2020, had the opportunit­y to hold concerts and take part in music festivals all over China.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Jin Yukuang, a 22-year-old student at the Shanghai Conservato­ry of Music, is the youngest conductor at the Music in the Summer Air festival held last month.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Jin Yukuang, a 22-year-old student at the Shanghai Conservato­ry of Music, is the youngest conductor at the Music in the Summer Air festival held last month.

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