27 May 2000, 8 pm, Shenzhen, China
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Jie Li and Yameng Wang are both students of Prof Zhi Chen at the Beijing Central Conservatory.
Li won Third Prize at the 1998 Second Hong Kong Guitar Competition and had performed for many major artists who had come through Beijing over the years. |
The two shared the stage as Li took the first half and Wang the second. The program was impressive: Li did Malats' Serenata Espanola, Andrew York's Sunburst, Barrios' Estudio de Concierto No.1, Tarrega's Gran Jota, Paganini's Caprice No.24, and Domeniconi's Koyunbaba. While Wang tackled Barrios' Un Sueno en la Floresta, Domeniconi's The Bridge of Birds, Regondi's Reverie, and Sor's Gran Solo.
Li had the unenviable task of breaking in the audience, which was difficult even for a seasoned performer, let alone a "novice" stage performer like Li. Cell phones constantly went off. Someone was always mumbling and hushing because someone else was sitting in his/her seat. And a lot of the audience never had a second thought about talking in the middle of the performance.
All that was compounded by the fact that Li does not have a big tone--the acoustics of the hall isn't bad--but she was never able to capture the audience's full attention. Inexperience showed--Li never waited for the audience to settle down before she started a piece.
Despite all that Li's talents were obvious, as much as one was able to hear her under those circumstances. Her technique is fluent and she was more than competent with her program, but unfortunately people can't help but make comparisons between the first and second halves.
Yameng Wang's second half showed why Classical Guitar raves about her. Her tremelo is among the best in the business, which comes in handy with Barrios' Sueno. But most importantly was her command on stage--the way she captured the audience after a few bars of music. The comparison between Li and Wang was rather obvious as both used the Smallman guitar, the two instruments John Williams left behind after hearing Xuefei Yang and Yameng Wang in Bejing a few years back. Wang was able to get the full potential of the instrument, an aspect that Li is still struggling with.
Domeniconi wrote The Bridge of the Birds, according to Prof Zhi Chen, after he heard Wang in Germany. The music evokes images and makes use of gestures of the Chinese zither, the qin. Wang was very thorough with the delivery but one was left with the impression that maybe more colors and layers could be unearthed in this music.
Both the Regondi and the Sor are present on Wang's CD and the delivery was again impeccable.
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