Culture

Pop goes the symphony under master's direction

By Xu Jingxi in Guangzhou ( China Daily ) Updated: 2013-12-06 07:53:28

Pop goes the symphony under master's direction

Rhinoceros makes a play for the US audience
Pop goes the symphony under master's direction
Top 10 Chinese music festivals
Chen Qing, head of Guangzhou Symphony Orchestra, hopes that Li can help promote symphonic music among Chinese.

"The repertoire for a symphonic concert in China is still dominated by Western works because only a few Chinese orchestral pieces have been well-received by the public," Chen says.

"People are unable to enjoy the music if they find the melody strange and difficult to understand. So it's easy for people to remember Li's symphonic music because its melodies, based on his pop classics, are familiar to the audiences, like those popular orchestral works such as The Butterfly Lovers Violin Concerto and The Yellow River Piano Concerto."

Pop symphony is well developed in the US. For example, the Boston Pops Orchestra, founded early in 1885 as a popular exponent of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, has successfully drawn the public to orchestral music. John Williams, one of the greatest film composers of all time, has displayed the charm of orchestral music in his scorings for films such as Star Wars, Jurassic Park and Schindler's List.

"I hope that through long-term collaboration, Li and Guangzhou Symphony Orchestra will polish the brand of the Eagles Symphony and thus encourage more Chinese composers, especially young ones, to supply the country's want for pop symphony," Chen says.

Li played an important role in Guangdong's rise as the center of pop music in China in the 1990s. He composed many original Chinese pop hits, with which singers including Yang Yuying, Mao Ning and Han Lei rode to nationwide fame.

The golden time for Guangdong's music industry ended at the end of the decade, when many recording companies went bankrupt because copyrights were not well protected. Many musicians moved to Beijing, where original music was on the rise.

Li was one of them: For the past 14 years, he has mainly worked in Beijing, the capital of classical music in China. More than 10 orchestras thrive in the market and a lot of professionals are returning from overseas.

However, when he decided to make an attempt at pop symphony, Li chose to return to Guangzhou to work with the local orchestra.

"I hope pop symphony can make a good start in Guangdong and boom across the country, like how Chinese pop songs grew in Guangdong."

"Joy is what keeps me doing music, not a thirst for fame with my compositions. I think I will be learning something new about music when I'm 70 years old, which is fun."

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

 
Editor's Picks
Hot words

Most Popular
 
...
...