Subscribe to free Email Newsletter

 
  Info>View
 
 
 

Passion for the piano

2013-12-30 14:09:26

(China Daily Europe) By Chen Yingqun

 

A contestant in the 77th Steinway & Sons International Children and Youth Piano Competition (6th China Regional Competition) in Xiamen. Provided to China Daily

More young Chinese are taking piano lessons but are they doing it for love or because their parents tell them to?

Wearing a tailored black suit and white shirt, Wu Junlin bowed courteously to the appreciative audience, just like any other international pianist.

But up close backstage, he looked his age, a youthful 17. His young face was flush with excitement and covered in perspiration after receiving congratulations from piano teachers he admires.

This was the biggest day of the teenager's life, as he had just won an opportunity to play in the Steinway International Festival in Germany next year, where he will be able to meet many of the West's best musicians.

Wu had just defeated more than 6,000 contestants from 25 cities in China to win the final of the 77th Steinway & Sons International Children and Youth Piano Competition (6th China Regional Competition) in Xiamen, Fujian province.

"I started learning piano when I was 6, and have been learning Western melodies and techniques ever since," Wu says. "I think Western music has many varied elements, and I'm very excited about learning from some of the best musicians."

Although Westerners' passion for playing the piano has declined in recent years, mainly due to the prevalence of electronic instruments, the Internet and a range of other leisure activities, Chinese children and young people have developed such great passion for the instrument that China has become the most dynamic piano market in the world, says Feng Yuankai, deputy secretary-general of the China Musical Instrument Association.

The association says that in 2012, China made 380,000 pianos, which was 77 percent of global production and worth 6.8 billion yuan ($1.12 billion; 814 million euros). The country imported 106,800 pianos in 2012, which was a year-on-year increase of about 16 percent on 2011, and it exported only 50,000 pianos.

"China has about 5 million children and youths learning the piano, and about 80 percent of the pianos sold in China each year are for them," Feng says.

Production has been stable for the past few years, but demand for high-quality pianos has increased, he says. In 2007, the average price for a piano in China was about 13,000 yuan, but in 2012 it was 18,000.

Imports of higher-quality pianos - mainly from Europe, the United States and Japan, have increased. By the end of the third quarter of this year, China had imported 88,525 pianos, a year-on-year increase of 11.8 percent and 2.5 times the number in 2007.

"Some parents spend millions of yuan on a piano, to make sure their children get the best sound from the beginning," Feng says.

 We recommend:

Ancient abacus down for the count Winter travels in Anhui are colorful and enjoyable Huang Jun calligraphy exhibition opens in Beijing
1 2



8.03K

 

 


 
Print
Save