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Album brings Baroque Bach

By Chen Nan | China Daily | Updated: 2023-01-04 08:11

Harpsichord player and organist Jiang Yushan with his instrument. He has just released a new album featuring seven musical works by Johann Sebastian Bach. [Photo provided to China Daily]

When he was a child, Jiang loved going to bookstores, influenced by his parents who both love to read.

"I still remember that I saw Bach's name in Chinese on a music score in a bookstore when I was a little boy. I could only read the first part of his name in Chinese but I didn't know the second, so I asked my father how to read it," recalls Jiang, who was born in Tianjin.

Like many children in China, Jiang started to learn to play modern piano at the age of 6. His parents hoped that the piano lessons would rein in Jiang's energetic and noisy temperament. He played Bach's music and read about the composer and the keyboard instruments that he wrote music for.

At the age of 13, he performed Edvard Grieg's Piano Concerto in A Minor, Op 16, with the Tianjin Symphony Orchestra and then, at 15, went to Moscow to further his musical studies.

After graduating from the Central Music School at the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory, Jiang went on to seek further education there, as well as at Folkwang University of the Arts in Germany and Zurich University of the Arts in Switzerland, where he trained in harpsichord and organ with eminent teachers, including German organist and harpsichordist Christian Rieger and Swiss organist and harpsichordist Jean-Claude Zehnder.

"It's not purely about presenting music works which were written for old instruments like harpsichord. It is more about reimagining a piece of music over the notes on the page," says Jiang.

In 2014, over the course of nearly three months and 29 concerts in Zurich, Jiang played all the keyboard works of Bach. In the summer of 2016, in Duisburg, Germany, Jiang, with his teacher Rieger, played the works composed by Bach and his sons for two harpsichords.

He founded the Baroque ensemble, Z Leonis, in 2012, whose members are Chinese musicians specializing in baroque that live in Europe. As Jiang says, playing beautiful music with talented people is always an amazing experience.

Away from the harpsichord, as an organist, Jiang is particularly an expert in works from the late Renaissance to Baroque periods. He is one of the few organists able to perform large organ recitals in China.

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