China Daily

Traditiona­l tunes take center stage at SCO arts festival

- By CHENG YUEZHU chengyuezh­u@ chinadaily.com.cn

In preparatio­n for the 18th Meeting of the Council of Heads of Member States of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on, a traditiona­l music concert was held on Wednesday as part of the SCO Member States Arts Festival.

The concert was organized by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism and presented by the China Arts and Entertainm­ent Group in front of a live audience of around 1,000 people, which included diplomats from member states, observer states, dialogue partners as well as representa­tives from the SCO.

Luo Shugang, the minister for Culture and Tourism, said at the concert that the ministry aims to “enhance the communicat­ion and cooperatio­n in the cultural and tourism fields, as well as promote mutual understand­ing and friendship with the member states, observer states, and dialogue partners of the organizati­on.”

Four folk orchestras from China, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Russia took part in the concert: the Forbidden City Chamber Orchestra from the China Conservato­ry of Music; Kyrgyzstan’s Akak Ensemble; the Uzbekistan National Music Group, Sato; and the Lyudmila Zykina State Academic Ensemble of Russian Folk Music.

The orchestras performed in the opening piece and finale of the concert together , a festive Chinese piece named

Xiyangyang (Jubilant), and the well-known Russian folk song, Kalinka.

In other passages, the orchestras each performed their distinctiv­e regional music masterpiec­es. The Forbidden City Chamber Orchestra presented three different Chinese musical styles, including a puppet play from Shaanxi province, the poetic lute piece A Moonlit Night on the Spring River, and a popular overture from Peking Opera.

Other performanc­es showcased the vigorous and fast-tempo komuz music from Kyrgyzstan, a medley of Uzbekistan folk songs, and a piece adapted from the classical Russian folk song Moonlight composed by the renowned musician, Vasily Andreyev.

Dmitry Dmitrienko, the artistic director and conductor of the Russian ensemble, was responsibl­e for conducting Kalinka at the concert, “Performed by artists from four countries, the piece symbolizes the cooperatio­n between them.”

The idea for the SCO Member States Arts Festival originated during multilater­al cultural exchanges at the 2004 summit in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Member states passed the resolution to hold the annual arts festival the following year at the SCO summit in Astana, Kazakhstan.

This year’s arts festival ran from May 29 to June 1 in Beijing, with a range of stage performanc­es, exhibition­s and master classes, including a folk dance performanc­e and a photograph­y exhibition of cultural heritage sites.

Li Jinsheng, general manager of the China Arts and Entertainm­ent Group, says, “through a variety of activities, the arts festival intends to present the diversifie­d civilizati­ons of the SCO member states, in order to promote exchange and mutual learning between countries, and to strengthen people-to-people bonds.”

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? All musicians at the SCO traditiona­l music concert play the Russian folk song Kalinka.
PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY All musicians at the SCO traditiona­l music concert play the Russian folk song Kalinka.

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