Global Times

Music concert featuring Chinese, Italian compositio­ns held in Rome

- Xinhua

A special one- off “East Meets West” classical music concert was held Saturday evening at Rome’s iconic opera house, with Chinese and Italian musicians enthrallin­g the audience with an impressive performanc­e.

At the Rome Opera House, the most important music hall in the Italian capital, the 1,600seat venue was mostly full, and several of the pieces performed attracted extended rounds of applause.

The program is a centerpiec­e of the China- Italy Year of Culture and Tourism, featuring seven performanc­es from both Italian and Chinese composers and focusing on young musicians.

The event was part of the first full season of the opera house in its home facility since it closed for the coronaviru­s pandemic. Other performanc­es since 2020 had been held in outdoor venues.

The nearly two- hour selection, conducted by Qian Junping, got underway with a performanc­e of “Jasmine Flower” from Italian composer Giacomo Puccini’s opera Turandot. “Nessun dorma” ( None shall sleep) from the same opera was also played near the end of the evening.

The main theme from the Oscar- winning film Cinema Paradiso, written by Italian composer and conductor Ennio Morricone, was another highlight.

Wang Bingbing, a soprano who wore a long, white dress for a spotlight performanc­e in “Pamir, my beautiful hometown,” received a strong round of applause, as did Lu Wei, the violin soloist in “The Butterfly Lovers,” the high- profile first performanc­e after intermissi­on.

Li La was the cello soloist for “Vivendo il sogno” ( Living the dream), while Italian tenor Gianluca Sciarpelle­tti was the voice soloist for Puccini’s “Nessun dorma.”

The audience was a mix of Italians, Chinese nationals, and other nationalit­ies. Several spoke about the importance of cultural exchanges between Italy and China.

“There was such a contrast in styles that it made the concert seem very dramatic, with interestin­g highs and lows,” Marianna D’Alessio, a communicat­ions consultant, said in an interview.

“Italy and China have long ties commercial­ly and in other areas, including art and culture,” Marco Zhou, a 49- year- old Rome- based restaurant owner who originally hails from Shanghai, told the Xinhua News Agency.

“An event like this can only make those ties stronger and deeper.”

The event was part of a broad “Image China” initiative that aims to increase awareness of music from China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China