Subscribe to free Email Newsletter

 
  Chinese Way>Life
 
 
 

The youth sounds out

2013-12-20 10:22:46

(China Daily)

 

Chen Zuohuang, NCPA's music director and chief conductor of the NCPA orchestra, agrees: "Symphonic music needs good conductors, soloists and audience, but the foundation is the composer."

Chen Zuohuang says: "From Bach to Mozart to Beethoven, every generation of great composers received tremendous support from all walks of society. Today's composers badly need support, too. NCPA has the ability and has also realized the responsibility to do the job."

The conductor says that when the NCPA orchestra rehearsed, the musicians freely discussed the new works they were playing. Some nodded with enthusiasm while some scoffed that a piece was "bullshit".

"No matter whether comments are good or bad, the critical attention is all support. Please don't assume these works will be classics one day. The real judge is the audience and time."

In the first competition, seven jurors selected eight works from 74. The ultimate winner Du Wei's work was performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra and MDR Sinfonieorchester Leipzig. While Xiao says he failed last year, his Flowers Deep Hidden actually made it to the final round.

For this second edition of the competition, organizers started to accept entries in April 2012 and received 61 works by composers younger than 40. After a pre-selection, 24 scores were sent to 10 judges. Then 12 of the 24 were played at formal concerts by the NCPA orchestra and the Beijing Symphony Orchestra. The NCPA also recorded the 12 works and sent them to the jury.

The jury includes composers, conductors and soloists, because Chen Qigang believes each has different views toward a work. Plus, conductors and soloists could do more to promote new works.

To increase the program's international impact and create a worldwide stage for the young composers, the NCPA invited Radio France, Vale of Glamorgan Festival in Wales and MDR Sinfonieorchester Leipzig to join this year's program.

John Metchlf, artistic director of the Vale of Glamorgan Festival, says his event has particular interest in presenting living composers from ancient countries with new energy - like China. He voted for Xiao and will bring his work to the festival in May.

To ensure fair play, the 10 judges did not meet before the final concert on Dec 16.

"No discussions, no suggestions," Chen Qigang says. "We hope everyone will vote from his own heart and not expect to agree with each other. One asked me, if two works got the same score, whether I could decide the winner. I said no. We would vote again."

"Which to choose? It's really difficult," says Paul Meyer, the French clarinetist who served on the jury for the second time. "I try to be open-minded to feel what the score means to me."

French composer Philippe Schoeller, who came to China for the first time to be a juror, says he was impressed by the musical language and the fresh messages in the scores.

"It's not exactly a competition, which is for sports. The program is a way for the young composers to learn, to share knowledge and experience," Schoeller says.

Conductor Kristjan Jarvi shares that view, saying the program is "a bit of encouragement for the young composers and an inspirational example to follow".

"In such a hard time for classical music, it's difficult or impossible for young, unknown composers to find orchestras to play their works," he says.

Judge Tan Lihua, conductor of Beijing Symphony Orchestra, was pleased that he and his musicians played three concerts to present the applicants' works. "A musician's career always starts from being discovered, supported and promoted. When I was young, I received support from many established musicians. Now it's my duty and responsibility to help support others," Tan says.

Judge Xu Shuya, composer and president of the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, says the young composers' scores are full of passion and remind him of his youth studying in France.

"To me, styles and techniques are not the criteria. I would see the message they try to convey, the creativity and whether the work would inspire the future," Xu says.

Joel Bons, founder and artistic director of the Nieuw Ensemble, says the six final works have a wide variety in styles and musical languages.

1 2 3



8.03K

 

 


 
Print
Save