The Arizona Republic

Guest conductor, PSO ‘just clicked’

- By Ed Masley Reach the reporter at ed.masley @arizonarep­ublic.com or 602-4444495. Twitter.com/edmasley

Mei-Ann Chen, who guest conducts the Phoenix Symphony this week, is living what she calls an impossible dream.

“I’ve wanted to be a conductor since I was 10 years old, playing in the orchestra for the first time as a shy violinist,” Chen says. “When I saw the conductor on the podium, this person, hopefully, doesn’t make too much sound but is connected to everyone in the room, and when he moved, it created the biggest sound. When I went home, I told my parents I wanted to be a conductor.”

Born and raised in Taiwan, Chen was studying piano and violin at the time “because my parents loved music and never had the chance themselves,” she says. “But I told them I really wanted to be a conductor because I saw that as a form of communicat­ion and I knew it was a calling,” she said.

Today she’s an acclaimed conductor who serves as music director of the Memphis Symphony Orchestra and the Chicago Sinfoniett­a. Thrilling symphony crowds with her energetic approach with the baton, she was chosen in 2012 for the prestigiou­s Helen M. Thompson Award by the League of American Orchestras.

“Some might think that I have too much energy on the podium,” she says. “But what I do is not for show. It may look entertaini­ng to the audience, but this is the origin of why I conduct the way I conduct. No one would give me a chance to audition as a conductor, but I held onto my dream. In order to stay in this the country.”

That ties in nicely to the Elgar piece, Chen says, because that was the English composer’s response to World War I “as he was coming to terms with how the world was becoming while also going through a personal struggle in terms of his own health.

“For him to somehow, through all his life’s struggles, be able to come up with something as beautifull­y written and as moving as the Cello Concerto, oftentimes, when life doesn’t go the way we want, it’s a blessing in disguise,” Chen says. “And this compositio­n represents that for me.”

The Dvorak piece, which debuted in 1885, may be less well-known than his celebrated New World Symphony. But to Chen’s ears, “a lot of the best Dvorak music is in the works that don’t have fancy titles. Not to say New World isn’t a great work. But No. 7 is a hidden jewel.”

“And he was also grasping the concept of nationalis­m in terms of Czech culture,” she continues. “It’s not so much, ‘OK, I’m going to put in the folk element here because I’m Czech.’ He was actually struggling with how can our nation come together against political oppression. And there’s melancholi­c yearning in the lower strings, in the minor key. One of my colleagues puts it beautifull­y. He said it’s the happiest minor-key music he has ever heard. You can hear the little bit of hope.”

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