Music of Confucius Concert ReportJune 21,2009,Milpitas,CA |
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The North American Guqin Association (NAGA) presented a multi-disciplinary stage performance “Music of Confucius - Chinese Cultural Heritage Guqin Concert” on June 21, 2009 at the Milpitas Community Center. This exciting production featured various programs integrating guqin music with poetry recitation, dance, martial arts, Chinese Choengsam show and natural object music. The concert was NAGA’s largest production of the year, which involved over 50 performers and production staffs. It featured many famous artists and combined resources of several organizations and performance groups. The 300-seat venue was filled to its capacity. The audience also had a rare chance to listen to qin music played on an antique qin from the late Song Dynasty (approximately 900 years ago). Please see photo album by Wesley Zhang at: http://bayareachinese.smugmug.com/gallery/8645055_WiXuJ#570471421_wpiVQ Our show is featured in several media. Please check out the online version of those news coverage.
Classic guqin pieces were performed by Wang Fei in collaboration with artists who were also Zhi Yin of guqin music. The audience was transported back to the age of sages – when qin music and poetry were an integral part of a scholar’s education - through narration and recitation by Diana Ding and Victor Saberi in “Three Variations on the Plum Blossom” and “Three Variations on the Students from the NAGA 2009 guqin and poetry class also performed several qin pieces. Most of them started out as total beginners only 3-6 months ago. One student was in her 60s and some students were non-Chinese speakers, but they were able to sing and play ancient Chinese poetry after a short period of training. It was very encouraging to see the students perform so confidently, which proved that guqin is a very effective tool for learning Chinese culture. VIP guests who attended include: Paul Fong, California Assembly Member; Sun Jianhua, Cultural Consul of the Chinese Consulate; Shao Wei, Education Consul of the Chinese Consulate; Dr. Sanford Tom, North American Guqin Association Board Director; Professor Lindy Mark; Jose Esteves, Former Mayor of Milpitas; Kansen Chu & Daysi Chu, City of San Jose Council Member; Heidi Pham, Community Volunteer and Santa Clara County Employee; Craig Donnelly, District Office Director for Betty Yee - member of Board of Equalization; Aileen Kao, Former Saratoga Mayor; Sally Wu, Vice-Chair of Asian Americans for Community Involvement; Susie Nagpal, City of Saratoga Council Member;; Forrest Williams, Santa Clara County Commissioner and Candidate for Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors; David Quach, General Manager of Milpitas Ocean Supermarket; Mr. Thanh, Owner of New Tung Kee Restaurant. This concert is co-presented by US Chinese Women Cultural Organization and sponsored by City of Milpitas, Alliance for California Traditional Art, Silicon Valley Community Foundation and Arts Council Silicon Valley, beijingers.com,chineseculture.net, world channel TV, bayareadragon.com,99people.com,and Shanghai Association of N. California. NAGA would like to thank our production crew members and volunteers: Executive Producer: Wang Fei Producer: Rose He Director: Xiaopei He Gelb MC: Diana Ding, Vinie Miller and Victor Saberi Stage Manager: Daniel Lin and Stage Hands: Michael, Joseph, Sandra, Xiao Lian Sound and Lighting: CP Feng Program Design: Julian Joseph PR Manager: Chin Lin Special thanks to: Renee Lorentzen, Lily Kharrazi, Jenifer Kane, Audrey Wong, Sherwood Chen, Zhirong Wang, Peter Wu, Zhao Yan, Heidi Pham. North American Guqin Association
About the Artists |
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Leading Artist Wang Fei is considered one of the most experienced guqin artists of her generation. She is the founder and director of the North American Guqin Association and a council member of the China Guqin committee. She has given concert-level performances internationally and presentations on the guqin and related arts to both Chinese and Western audiences, in the US and overseas. She has won several awards in the field of Chinese music and lectured at many universities including Stanford, UC Berkeley, UCLA, UCSB, and UCSC. Her music has been included in an American K-12 textbook to represent Chinese music. For more information about Wang Fei, please visit her web site www.feiwang.com
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Guest Artist Xiaopei He Gelb is the principal dancer with the China Central Song and Dance Company of Nationality (one of the top song and dance companies in China), the Gold Medal winner of Japan Saitama International Creative Dance Contest 2003, and a member of the Chinese Dancer Association and the Chinese Ethnic Minority Dance Association. For more information about Xiaopei, please visit her web site www.xiaopeiart.com
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Guest Artist Diana Ding is an award-winning and innovative Program Director, radio and television personality. Diana is very active in the community and usually spends her weekends hosting large local events. For more information about Diana, please visit her web site www.dianading.com.
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Guest Artist Cheryl Leonard is a composer, performer, improviser and instrument builder. Over the last several years she has focused on creating music and instruments with found natural materials. Many of Leonard's works explore subtle textures and intricacies of sounds not generally considered musical. For more information about Cheryl Leonard, please visit her web site http://www.allwaysnorth.com. | ||||||||||||||||
About the guqinThe guqin, a seven-stringed zither, is China's oldest stringed instrument, with a documented history of about 3,000 years. It became part of a tradition cultivated by Chinese scholars and literati and has been associated with philosophers, sages, and emperors since the time of Confucius. Perhaps because of this illustrious history, the guqin came to be viewed as one of the "Four Evils" and was the only traditional Chinese musical instrument to be banned during the Cultural Revolution. As a result, the practice of playing the guqin and the instrument itself became endangered. More recently the guqin has enjoyed a return to favor with the government and was featured in the 2008 Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony. It has also been used in some popular movies such as Zhang Yimou's "Hero". However, despite the resurgence of interest in the guqin, today few people can play it and the instrument is very rarely seen even in China. Not all international institutions shared the Chinese government's past disdain for the guqin and in 2003 UNESCO declared the art of the guqin a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity. About NAGAThe North American Guqin Association (NAGA) is a nonprofit cultural arts organization dedicated to the public presentation and preservation of the art of the guqin, spreading community appreciation of Chinese culture through the traditional art of the guqin and building a bridge for cultural exchange and mutual understanding between the Chinese and American communities. PresentersNorth American Guqin Association & US Chinese Women Cultural Organization
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