CHICAGO, Feb. 15 (Xinhua) -- The Chicago Symphony Center Sunday
unveiled the two-week Chinese Lunar New Year celebrations in
Chicago with an all traditional Chinese music concert.
An audience of more than 2,000 listened to the National Chinese
Traditional Orchestra performing a selection of Chinese folk music,
most of which is composed by Ma Jiuyue, a well-known Chinese
composer who participated in the Gala show for the 2008 Beijing
Olympics and China's Third Poem Festival.
The concert started with Chinese folk music "Dance of the Golden
Snake", and featured such Chinese well-known tones as "Horse
Racing", "Purple Bamboo Melody", "Fisherman Song at Eventide",
"Joyful Celebration", and "Elixir of Love." When members of the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the National Chinese Traditional
Orchestra jointly played "Huxuan Dance" composed by Ma Jiuyue, the
concert came to a climax with cheers and applause from the audience
lasting a long time.
The idea for a Chinese Lunar New Year concert began when Chicago
Symphony Orchestra President Jeff Alexander decided to bring a
little bit of China to Chicago.
"Different orchestras across North America are beginning to do
this, and in Chicago there was no Chinese New Year concert
presented by the Symphony Orchestra," he told Xinhua, "In one of
our planning sessions we decided just to give it a try. Obviously
it's going very well with the great attendance today and the great
guest orchestra."
Jeff plans to make the Chinese New Year concert an annual
event.
Wang Yong, acting consul general of China in Chicago told Xinhua
that he was excited to watch this excellent performance, "the
performance is a perfect combination of first-grade place,
first-grade ensemble and first-grade artists."
Wang noted that many of the audience at Sunday's concert are
people other than Chinese origin, saying "quality Chinese cultural
and artistic products are being accepted by more people in the
United States."
"I was absolutely overwhelmed, I didn"t know what to think,"
said Tony Karman, President of Expo Chicago, "The blend of the
traditional and the contemporary was really an ear opener, an eye
opener for someone that knows a little about Chinese music."
Steve Robinson, Executive Vice President of WFMT Radio Network,
thought this was an absolutely wonderful concert, saying: "I loved
everything, it's hard to pick a single piece."
Scott, from Chicago, told Xinhua: "I don't know the instrument
but there was a woman near the beginning who was playing a string
instrument that was spectacular. The excitement she had for playing
the instrument and her skill is spectacular. It was a wonderful
concert."
It was the first time for the Chicago Symphony Center to
celebrate a Chinese Lunar New Year by staging a Chinese Lunar New
Year Concert.
Chicago started to celebrate Chinese New Year in 2014. "This
unique event will grow and expand over time until it is the largest
in the North America," Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said. The
festivities in 2015 are planned to be on a much larger scale than
the previous year. Enditem