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    Tour done, but melody lingers on

    By Niu Yue | China Daily | Updated: 2015-09-18 11:06
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    It started at Carnegie Hall in New York on July 11, and the next day all 114 music students of the National Youth Orchestra-USA landed in Beijing for a seven-concert tour that gave them a 'whirlwind of eye-opening experiences', Niu Yue reports from New York.

    T he young musicians of the National Youth Orchestra-USA who toured and performed in China this summer haven't been able to stop talking about their time there.

    "NYO's 2015 tour of China was an incredible musical, social and cultural experience," said 16-year-old violinist Evan Falls Hjort of Fall City, Washington. "We had the privilege of sharing some of Asia's most renowned stages with dedicated colleagues and guest artists while also experiencing the beautiful traditions and icons of a country far older than our own."

    Tommy Lin, an 18-year-old bassist from Sammamish, Washington, said "the tour was a whirlwind of eye-opening experiences: musically, culturally and interpersonally".

    Matthew Chow, 19, a violinist from Los Altos, California, said the tour "afforded us the unbelievable privilege of experiencing how a professional orchestra travels and performs abroad, while allowing us to exercise the curiosity and energy that teenagers have so much of".

    Led by conductor Charles Dutoit, the NYO-USA, made up of 114 music students age 16 to 19 from 37 states, headed to China in mid-July for a seven-concert tour through Beijing, Shanghai, Suzhou, Xi'an, Shenzhen, Guangzhou and Hong Kong, ending on July 26. Chinese piano virtuoso Li Yundi toured as guest soloist.

    The group formally launched the tour with a performance at Carnegie Hall in New York on July 11 and landed in Beijing the next day.

    For most of the young musicians, it was their first time in a country of 1.3 billion people on the other side of the world.

    "Even though I understood how large China's population was before I boarded the airplane, I was nonetheless amazed by the sheer numbers of people I saw in the streets, in cars, and in buildings in China," said cellist Henry Shapard of Cleveland Heights, Ohio. "I was very impressed by the constant growth in all of the cities I traveled to - everywhere I looked, new construction abounded."

    Challenging moment

    One of the most challenging moments of the tour occurred soon after the first stop in Beijing.

    "Everyone was suffering from extreme jet lag and was exhausted from the 14-hour flight," said Hjort. "During the first half of the concert, orchestra members almost fell asleep!"

    Trying to re-energize themselves at intermission, they listened to pep talks, drank coffee or grabbed quick cat naps.

    "Remarkably, the orchestra pulled through, and the second half of the concert was a resounding success," said Hjort.

    "Aside from the jet lag, our accommodations, meals, and activities were overwhelmingly comfortable and easy to get used to," Hjort added.

    The audiences were overwhelming, too.

    "I don't think I've ever heard such loud cheers in my life," said French horn player Nivanthi Karunaratne, 19, of Gurnee, Illinois.

    "The performances went extraordinarily well," Shapard added. "In every city we played, the audiences were supportive and encouraging - it was fun to glance into the crowd and see their contented smiles."

    "Each performance in China was better than the last," said Hjort.

    For the first piece in the program, Tan Dun's Passacaglia: Secret of Wind and Birds, audience members downloaded a sound file to their smartphones and played it during the opening of the piece.

    "The effect was sensational and always sent an excited murmur through the crowd," Hjort said. "The energy only increased, and the audience went wild when Li Yundi walked onto the stage. He impressed audiences at every stop, and often received at least seven or eight curtain calls."

    But their last encore, the theme from the 2008 Beijing Olympics entitled You and Me, earned the most memorable response, Hojort recalled.

    The bassist Lin had never had an audience applaud during a piece before. "I had a huge grin on my face when it happened," he said. "The audiences throughout China gave us a great reception, and I was particularly impressed with the consistent, ubiquitous standing ovations."

    Lin also was impressed by the number of children in the audiences.

    "In my prior experience with orchestral performances, there aren't nearly as many young children as there were in the Chinese venues," he said.

    "From what I saw of the audiences in China, they were much younger than our audiences in America. I saw many young faces, and even children, at our concerts," Chow agreed.

    Said Shapard: "As young people, we are very eager to make connections to others, even if they do not speak our language, and we found that sort of collaboration very easy while we were in China."

    Despite the hectic schedule, each of the seven cities they visited impressed the young musicians, as did the people they met there.

    "I was pleasantly surprised by the fact that all of the public facilities - airports, concert halls - were in such great shape," said Shapard. "The new construction was impressive."

    "I was surprised by how much English I came across," said Hjort. "I was also pleasantly surprised by how actively helpful and polite everyone was."

    As an architecture student in addition to being a musician, Hjort's favorite part of China was the architectural diversity.

    "I loved seeing the traditional Chinese architecture side by side with cutting-edge modern skyscrapers," he said. "I was impressed to see buildings in almost every city designed by world-famous architects."

    Hjort said Shanghai was his favorite city of the seven. "It seemed so modern, almost futuristic. I enjoyed the Shanghai Tower and the raised sidewalks. It was vibrant and bustling, almost like a Chinese New York City."

    "My favorite city was Hong Kong," said Shapard. "I was fascinated by the intersection of British and Chinese culture and amazed by the natural setting in which the city is located. We played a wonderful last concert there, and I associate the city with the tight bonds I formed while traveling with the ensemble."

    The young musicians also got to meet local musicians during exchanges with local youth orchestras in Guangzhou and Hong Kong.

    "We had chances to rehearse side by side with and meet local youth orchestras," Chow recalled. "During our dress rehearsal in Guangzhou, the Guangzhou Symphony Youth Orchestra listened in, and afterward, we had a little meet-and-greet."

    "It was a wonderful disaster - our speaking butchered Chinese to them and their responding in butchered English," Chow joked.

    The horn sections of the Guangzhou Youth Orchestra and the NYO are actually still in touch. "We have an active group on the app WeChat," Karunaratne said."We exchange pictures, music and even questions and answers."

    As Tan, Oscar-winning composer for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, told the NYO-USA's tour: "Music, from ancient times to the future, is always a bridge between people."

    "It seems as though music is one of the best ways for countries that do not share a language to grow closer together," said Shapard.

    Eileen Moudou, 16, a violinist from Potomac, Maryland, told China Daily, "By the end of the tour, I came to the realization that, yes, they were different, as is liable to happen with a country across the globe from your own, but the similarities were too obvious and, quite frankly, comforting."

    Lin said: "Without a doubt. Not only did Chinese audiences get exposed to American musicians, but the exchanges and interactions we had with Chinese youth musicians helped build relationships between youth that we will carry into the future."

    Karunaratne added: "It can be easy to develop impressions and judgments of a culture without having experienced it, and these tours are crucial in dissolving that. Their impact extends beyond simply forming new friendships. They invite curiosity, and that, more than anything, promotes positive relationships,"

    "These tours bring foreign musicians from abroad and give Chinese audiences a chance to learn about a new culture, and give the inhabitants of that culture a small exposure to the world beyond," she said.

    Karunaratne talked about the misconceptions between different cultures.

    "It can be easy to develop impressions and judgments of a culture without having experienced it, and these tours are crucial in dissolving that," Karunaratne said. "Their impact extends beyond simply forming new friendships. They invite curiosity, and that, more than anything, promotes positive relationships."

    Shapard said he "would not be surprised if I end up spending a considerable amount of time in China in the coming years".

    "The market for classical music in China is rapidly expanding, and it seems like it will continue to be a destination for classical musicians during my lifetime."

    Hong Xiao in New York contributed to this story.

    Contact the writer at xiao.hongpolaris@gmail.com

     

    Conductor Charles Dutoit takes a bow with the young musicians of the National Youth Orchestra-USA 2015 in Hong Kong on July 26 during the orchestra's tour of China. Provided To China Daily

     

    NYO-USA cellist Henry Shapard takes a special bow in Suzhou after the orchestra's encore, You and Me, the theme song of Beijing's 2008 Summer Olympics.Provided To China Daily

     

    Members of the NYO-USA prepare for their concert in Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage at Carnegie Hall in New York on July 11. Provided To China Daily

    (China Daily 09/18/2015 page20)

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