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Yung-Chiao Wei's Carnegie Hall Recital Debut |
| Yung-Chiao Wei was invited by the Formosa Chamber Music Society to give a recital in Carnegie. Her New York recital debut will be at Weill Recital Hall in Carnegie Hall on December 5, 2003. For more information, please go to www.carnegiehall.org. |
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¡§Bass Players with great technique and supreme artistry are non-existent. Well, there are a few exceptions: the legendary Gary Karr, of course, Eugene Levinson of the New York Philharmonic, and now Yung-chiao Wei, a young, multi-talented female bassist from Taiwan¡¨ reads a recent New York Concert Review of Yung-chiao Wei¡¦s Carnegie Hall solo recital debut. Yung-chiao Wei was also praised by The Miami Herald as "a two sided-talent - a competition winning pianist turned double bass virtuoso". Through her musical insight, ¡§breathtaking virtuosity¡¨ and personality, Wei combines compelling, artistic performances on the double bass with a magical presence in stage. ¡@ |
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Currently a double bass professor at the Louisiana State University in Baton
Rouge, Wei is a recipient of numerous honors and awards, honors including
the 2003 Taiwan Young Concert Artist Competition, both the 2nd
Prize and Audience prize in the 2001 Izuminomori International Double
Bass/Cello Competition in Japan, the New World Symphony Concerto
Competition, the Texas International Festival Concerto Competition, two
consecutive years the Interlochen Arts Academy Concerto Competition, the
Academy¡¦s Young Artist and Fine Arts Award, and first prize in the Taiwan
National Music Competition.
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Ms.
Wei¡¦s recent Carnegie Hall debut garnered tremendous praise from New York
Concert Review Inc. critic Anthony Aibel, who cited ¡§Wei is a
phenomenon¡¨. Her performance of Schubert¡¦s Arpeggione Sonata in A minor
elicited another mention of praise; Aible affirmed that ¡§nuance on the
double bass is hard to accomplish, but Wei plays with subtlety of dynamics,
color and expression one seldom, if ever, hears on the bass¡¨. ¡@ |
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Wei
has appeared at major concert halls around the world including Carnegie
Hall, Davis Hall, Jordan Hall, Isabella Stewart Garden Museum, Ozawa Hall,
Lincoln Center Alice Tully Hall, National Concert Hall (Taiwan), Izuminomori
Hall (Japan). Recent and upcoming performances include her New York recital
debut at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall in December 2003, concerto
appearances with the National Symphony Orchestra in Taiwan, the New World
Symphony (FL) and solo recitals in Taiwan. She has been invited to give
performances and master classes at the Eastman School of Music, Interlochen
Arts Academy, Taipei University of the Arts, Tonghai University, University
of North Florida, among many. She served as a faculty member of the Bowdoin
Music Festival in Maine,
and was a
juror for the International Bassist Society Competition in 2003 ¡@ |
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As a
chamber musician, Wei has collaborated with celebrated artists such as Leon
Fleisher, James Buswell, John Gibbson and Joseph Robinson. Her orchestra
experience includes serving as principal bassist in the New World Symphony
Orchestra (FL) under Michael Tilson Thomas; the Boston Symphony Orchestra under
Music Director, Seiji Ozawa; the New York String Orchestra at Carnegie Hall;
Metamorphosen Chamber Orchestra in Boston. She has participated in
several festivals including the Tanglewood Music Center, Aspen Music Festival,
Spoleto (Italy) and the Pacific Music Festival (Japan). Wei has been featured
on the radio and television throughout USA (CBS, WGBH, PBS), Japan¡¦s NHK and in
Taiwan.
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A native of Taiwan, Wei began playing the piano at age six and the bass at age twelve. She received her Master of Music degree with honors from the New England Conservatory in Boston and her Bachelor of Music degree with a Performance Certificate from the Eastman School of Music ¡V the first bassist to be awarded such a certificate in twenty years. Her teachers include James Vandemark, Lawrence Wolfe, Stuart Sankey, Jeff Turner, Derek Weller and Claudia Chen. |
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Review: Yung-chiao Wei, double bass Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall December 5, 2003 ¡@ |
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Bass players with great technique and supreme artistry are non-existent. Well,
there are a few exceptions: the legendary Gary Karr, of course, Eugene Levinson
of the New York Philharmonic, and now Yung-chiao Wei, a young, multitalented
female bassist from Taiwan. Wei is a phenomenon. She began playing the piano at
age six and the double bass at twelve, and has excelled at both, having won the
2003 Taiwan Young Concert Artist Competition, the second prize (no first prize
was awarded) and Audience Prize in the 2001 Izuminomori International Double
Bass/Cello Competition in Japan, The New World Symphony Concerto Competition.
Young-chiao Wei has appeared at major concert halls around the world including
Carnegie Hall, Davis Hall, Jordan Hall, the Isabella Stewart Garden Museum,
Ozawa Hall, Lincoln Center¡¦s Alice Tully Hall, The National Concert Hall of
Taiwan and Izuminomori Hall in Japan. Her teachers include James Vandemark,
Lawrence Wolfe, Stuart Sankey, Jeff Turner, Derek Weller and Claudia Chen. ¡@ |
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She chose difficult repertoire for her December recital. She opened with Bruch¡¦s Kol Nidrei, Op. 47, originally for cello, and she played with an extraordinarily expressive, solid tone with impeccable intonation. In Schubert¡¦s Arpeggione Sonata in A minor, Wei, along with her excellent pianist, Vivian Chang-Freiheit, produced very delicate, fine phrasing, always singing lines knowing full aware that Schubert is the master lieder composer. The second movement flowed with a genuine serenity, and the Allegretto was the epitome of effervescent charm. Nuance on the double bass is hard to accomplish, but Wei plays with subtlety of dynamics, color and expression one seldom, if ever, hears on the bass. ¡@ |
| ¡@ | After intermission, Wei chose a marvelous unaccompanied contemporary work by David Ellis (b. 1933). The work is fairly brief, but Ellis develops his ideas with solid craftsmanship in a short period of time. She played the work with utter assurance and conviction, and the audience was enamored. The following short works were Chinese National folk melodies by Yan-jun Hua and Pao-yuan Chuang with titles: Reflection of the Moon on Lake Erquan and Song of Grassland. Wei shifted positions with ease and eloquence, singing passionately with her instrument every step of the way. These works had a common modality and mood, however, and performing them back to back on the program wasn¡¦t the best idea. Bottesini¡¦s Nel cor piu non mi sento, Op. 23, which followed, made up for that slight flaw, as she played the work effortlessly in the Italian bel canto style; in other words, she played as if she was on an operatic stage, singing a free, heart-felt Bellini aria. Paganini¡¦s Variations on One String (on a theme from Moses in Egypt) was breathtaking in its virtuosity, yet Wei, with all her impressive technical abilities, still found time to make the music breathe. The fiendishly difficult harmonics in the upper range were pure and in tune; stellar one-string, stunt-like playing on such a notably cumbersome instrument is nothing short of miraculous. Catch Wei in concert soon, before Barnum and Bailey sign her to a contract. |
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-Anthony Aibel New York Concert Review Inc. Spring 2004 |
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Students interested in study at Louisiana State University School Of Music are invited to participate in auditions at locations listed below. Louisiana State University School of Music, Baton Rouge, LA, USA Taipei, Taichung, Tainan, Kaohsiung, Pintong, Taiwan Auditions are for admission and scholarship purposes. A live audition is encouraged for scholarship consideration. Tape audition is also acceptable. To schedule an audition please call (225)578-2678 or e-mail ywei1@lsu.edu Applications are available on-line at www.music.lsu.edu LSU's scholarship program is one of the most comprehensive and competitive of any school in this geographic region. For international students, TOEFL scores of at least 550 for undergraduate and graduate admission. ¡@ |
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Audition requirements
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Requirements
for Bass Studio (Undergraduate degree)
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Guest Artist
James
Vandemark, professor of double bass at
Eastman School of
Music, will visit LSU on March 16 - 18,
2002, for bass master classes, recital, and lecture on
career planning.
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| Yung-chiao Wei is
going to hold bass
auditions and master
classes in Taiwan
(Taipei, Taichung, Tainan, Kaohsiung, Pintong). For information, please
contact Professor Wei at ywei1@lsu.edu
or (225)578-2678.
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Upcoming Solo
recital series
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Double Bass publishers and sources Bass links in International Society of Bassist ¡@ international society of bassist International Society of Bassist ¡@ international double bass competitions The First Joseph Prunner International Double Bass Competition The Second Sperger International Double Bass Competition ¡@ job opportunity The American Federation of Musicians of the United States and Canada ¡@ Louisiana State University home page ¡@ Louisiana State University School of Music home page ¡@ music competitions ¡@ |
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Contact Yung-Chiao at : ywei1@lsu.edu
,Office: 225/578-2678 Fax: 225/578-2562
Louisiana State University, College of Music and Dramatic Arts
102 New Music Building, Baton Rouge, LA 70803-2502
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Site design by: Richard Wei, outlander_wei@yahoo.com
Copyright © 2003, Yung-chiao Wei.