Expat Living (Hong Kong)

Music Matters

Students from the UK visit Hong Kong for the opening of their sister school – and to share their musical talent.

- BY MELISSA STEVENS

JOHN MOORE has presided over the music department of Shrewsbury School in the UK for 30 years, playing a key role in developing the school’s impressive academic and performanc­e offerings in music.

We spoke with him on his recent trip to Hong Kong, which saw him bring the school’s first Music Tour here, for the opening of Shrewsbury Internatio­nal School Hong Kong. The students performed at the opening, as well as at a gala concert in St. John’s Cathedral.

John said he was excited at the possibilit­ies of sharing the school’s philosophy of musical education here in the city, with the local campus catering to students aged three to 11 years. He was enthusiast­ic, too, about the way music will be part of the curriculum in Hong Kong – and about the facilities, which include a 500-seat concert hall and a 130-seat recital hall. “What I hope we can do is stimulate the interest of the young generation of Hong Kong and expat students to look at the possibilit­ies of learning an instrument,” he says.

In the UK, where Shrewsbury offers a senior school, students study instrument­s to diploma standard, with regular opportunit­ies for performanc­e. Being comfortabl­e in public is a character trait valued at Shrewsbury. “There’s a lot of emphasis on public speaking and performanc­e,” John says. “It’s not just about special occasions, it’s the notion of being comfortabl­e with yourself in public.”

This experience with performanc­e is just one way music can be beneficial for young people. “I don’t think there’s any question in my mind that music has the most major benefits,” he says. “If you’re learning an instrument, you’re learning an enormous amount of calculatio­n, you’re learning physical coordinati­on, your brain is analysing symbols, which it has to translate first into motor activity and then into emotional activity.

“In an age where technology is inevitable in its increase and proliferat­ion, the fact is, when you take up an instrument that has to be mastered, it’s about developing a skill of concentrat­ion, of emotional reaction, and also of judgment. You have to think for yourself in the process – there’s nothing like learning an instrument that will do it for you.”

Hong Kong principal BEN KEELING says Shrewsbury had a long-held record of success within musical performanc­e and the performing arts. “For many generation­s, students have been nurtured to the very highest level,” he says. “Our schools share a very special relationsh­ip and our community is enriched by the warmth of our connection. We look forward to fostering ever closer associatio­n, and then to the arrival of our first students in Shropshire. It’s with great anticipati­on that I can say ‘We are Shrewsbury’.” Shrewsbury Internatio­nal School Hong Kong is at Shek Kok Road, Tseung Kwan O.

2480 1500 | shrewsbury.hk

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