Classical music stars such as Yo Yo Ma and Vanessa Mae have shown the public that China has some interest in classical music and have the technical skill and passion to play at the same level as their Western counterparts. Though both of these names are not really Chinese, as they were brought up and received training in Paris and Canada, the link is still there. In fact as peoples enthusiasm for classical music in all its grand forms is dying in the West there is a gradually building interest for this from of music in china.
England and Europe have always been known as the birth place of Classical forms of music, where people enjoyed taking in an evening concert, proud of the musical talent of their country folk. Times have changed and new forms of music have hit the publics’ eye, hip hop, RnB, Dance, trance and pop are the main staple of young minds today. Classical music still has its fans, but these groups of enthusiasts are getting smaller and older, professional musicians and composers are now beginning to worry for their own future and the future of their beloved music.
Several thousands of miles to the east China is enjoying a kind of classical music revolution, the world has been aware that this huge country is just now waking up from years of creative repression. The days of enjoying the odd Beethoven symphony on a small cassette tape late at night hidden away from the eyes of anyone that might report you are over. If you visit a park in the early evening you’ll find hundreds of people both young and old dancing to the sound of a small stringed quartet playing classic western pieces.
Apparently this excitement for classical music has been slowly building up over the past 15 or more years; there are roughly 10 million violin students and 30 million piano students all hoping to get a position in one of china’s top national orchestras. In the past the communist party sought to wipe classical forms of music out of society, but now it appears to have changed its mind and this age old art form is vital for the cultural advancement of China. Though even with all their talent they have a long way to go to get one of their symphony orchestras to rank with an American or European orchestra.
