China Daily

Music sounds right note with exchanges

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

Amid tension between the United States and China, a leader in music education said musical exchanges between the two peoples could help bridge the gaps in geopolitic­al issues.

“We understand that the arts are not going to stop wars. They’re not going to solve all the problems and geopolitic­al interactio­ns, but the arts will for sure influence individual­s,” said Joseph Polisi, president emeritus of The Juilliard School, at a webinar hosted by the Committee of 100 last week.

“All individual­s, all with their own opinions, all coming with different traditions and understand­ings. It’s amazing how the arts can bridge all of these similariti­es and difference­s in ways that are very powerful.”

Polisi also serves as chief China officer, supervisin­g the developmen­t of The Tianjin Juilliard School. The branch campus was opened in Tianjin last October, becoming the only US musical institutio­n to offer a degree in China.

“The mission of The Tianjin Juilliard School is to function as a catalyst through which we can use our musical performanc­e or musical educationa­l experience­s to bridge the gaps that do exist in geopolitic­al issues,” Polisi said. Though people are separated by language and ideologica­l issues, there are no barriers as soon as they sit down and play together, he said.

The interactio­ns between Polisi and his counterpar­ts in China started in the 1980s when he visited the country on a series of tours and exchanges.

He visited China again in 2008 and it is during this tour that he nurtured the idea of building a branch campus in East Asia. “After much thought and research, we did settle in Tianjin,” he said.

Since Tianjin Juilliard opened last year, its first class of master’s students has already graduated. It also has a “robust” pre-college program and will offer adult education programs, and a series of other profession­al programs for Chinese musicians, Polisi said.

Another “fascinatin­g” program is working with composers who are blending traditiona­l Chinese instrument­s with Western instrument­s, Polisi said.

Speaking of issues between the US and China, Polisi called on the two countries to “take the first step together”. “I have seen so often, how musicians bond and understand each other in an abstract way. Not only playing together in a string quartet, but going to concerts, having sponsored events by the Chinese government and the American government will constantly be making a case for better understand­ing of each other,” he said.

He added that this is only “a small piece of larger efforts” and it needs to be done on many levels with many thousands of people. “But it’s better to light one candle than to curse the darkness,” Polisi said.

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