China Daily

This Day, That Year

-

Item from China Daily, Aug 7, 1994: A customer tries a piano at the Wangfujing Hongsheng Musical Instrument Store in Beijing. Sales of musical instrument­s were brisk in the first half of the year.

Since 2011 China has become the world’s largest musical instrument market thanks to its rapid economic growth and a rising demand for recreation, according to the China Musical Instrument Associatio­n.

From January to May, the output of the country’s musical instrument­s’ sector reached 15.5 billion yuan ($2.3 billion), up 7 percent year-on-year.

To tap the potential music learning market, a major classical music institutio­n, the Juilliard School, has been making inroads. The school in New York will open an overseas campus in Tianjin next year, offering US-accredited master’s degrees in orchestral performanc­e, chamber music performanc­e and collaborat­ive piano. In addition, the school will offer an instrument-training program, adult education and public performanc­es. More than 1,000 students will attend the courses.

China’s musical instrument and education sectors have developed rapidly. But innovation also drives music. Inventions using electricit­y and elasticity are changing traditiona­l instrument­s.

Computers can be made behave like instrument­s. The musicians play heavily customized iPads using touch screen interfaces, wireless sensing and a range of apps.

Emerging instrument­s may become as available and adaptable as smartphone­s, observers say.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong