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Notes of poetry

2013-11-29 09:42:26

By Lucy Cheung

 

CHINA DAILY

Cigar in mouth, dressed in traditional Chinese clothing, he talks in an intelligent manner. When he plays the piano, his controlled, soft touch delivers poetic thoughts and feeling thought the keys. This is the impression Fu Cong (also known as Fou Ts'ong) often gives to music lovers.

The legendary 79-year-old "poet of the piano", son of the late great translator Fu Lei, will bring Haydn, Mozart, Schubert and Beethoven back at the National Center for the Performing Arts in Beijing on Dec 1.

Fu says he has felt closest to Schubert's music in the past decade, as he feels the composer's transparency and cosmic sense share a spirit with those in traditional Chinese culture.

Speaking of Beethoven's later composition Bagatelles, Fu says there is sharp contrast within the six-piece work, which feels like "from heaven to Earth".

One of Fu's hands is suffering from tenosynovitis due to his exercises and performances over the decades, but he still practices every day at least for eight hours on the piano.

A romantic at heart, Fu says with modesty that he feels "ashamed" that he only started to like Haydn's music when he was 70 years old.

Fu's career kicked off half a century ago, when Fu amazed his professors at the Warsaw Conservatory with his intuitive grasp of the mazurka rhythm. He was the first Chinese pianist to win the special Mazurka Prize at the 1955 International Chopin Piano Competition. The late laureate of Nobel Prize in Literature Hermann Hesse once proclaimed Fu to be "the only true performer of Chopin's works".

Fu was a member of the Queen Elisabeth Music Competition's jury in 1991, 1999 and 2007. Three years ago, Fu played Chopin to commemorate the composer's 200th birthday at the NCPA. But Chopin is not in the program of the upcoming recital.

Born in Shanghai in 1934, Fu first studied piano with Mario Paci, the Italian founder of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, whose mentor was a disciple of the legendary composer Franz Liszt. Fu went on to study in Europe in the 1950s, and has been living in London since the 1960s.

Among Fu's friends at that time were fellow musicians Jacque du Pre and Daniel Barenboim, whose friendship and partnership began with an introduction by Fu.

Pianist Martha Argerich is one of Fu's closest friends. "Her musical technique is dazzling," Fu says. "What convinces you the most is not her musical depth but rather her unique radiance. The whole world admires her."

Fu also has a lot of respect for Barenboim, the music activist: "One who dares to criticize his own country is a great man. He is a true Humanist now."

Based in London, Fu has been giving recitals every year during the last decade all around China, and he also teaches at the Shanghai Conservatory one or two months each year.

He says that it is enjoyable listening to his students play music as well as teaching them, but he admits to feel that "independent thinking still needs to be encouraged in this country. However, the world of spirituality is declining worldwide. I'm doing what I can to help, but I'm not confident in the result of it".

Fu sees music as his "bible", adding that "music is always difficult to grasp, as it is high up in the sky, and we spend our whole life climbing up toward it". He regards his teaching as a "missionary's job".

Playing Bach's music is regarded by lots of pianists in the world as the ultimate achievement, yet Fu has never played any Bach in concerts.

"The mountain of Bach's is a little out of the world for me, I don't think I am able to make it there," he explains with a hint of sarcasm.

"Bach is a Protestant, his music often seems like preaching to me. I'm a bit sensitive to it."

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