Tchaikovsky Rococo Variations

Concert Preview

Cellist Bion Tsang makes solo debut with conductor Roberto Abbado and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra

Cellist Bion Tsang returns to Minnesota next month for four performances of the Tchaikovsky’s Variations on a Rococo Theme with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. The concerts on May 5 – 8, 2011, at venues around the greater Minneapolis / St. Paul metropolitan area will mark his solo debut with conductor Roberto Abbado and the SPCO.

“The audience for SPCO is one of the finest and most receptive audiences in the country,” says Mr. Tsang, who has performed with the orchestra for six other weeks in its 2010-11 season, substituting for Principal Cellist Ronald Thomas. “I am honored to return to the stage to perform with Roberto and the orchestra. They have my deepest respect for the brilliant depth and breadth of music that they produce all year-round—SPCO is truly an enviable gem in the performing arts.”

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Bach Suites for Solo Cello

Concert Preview

Cellist Bion Tsang prepares next generation of cello virtuosos for one-of-a-kind recital at UT Austin’s Bates Recital Hall

Six years ago, Bion Tsang performed all six Bach Suites for Unaccompanied Cello in one sitting at The University of Texas at Austin Butler School of Music. Performing any or all of Johann Sebastian Bach’s revered works for cello is a virtuosic accomplishment, an achievement that combines mastery, artistry, discipline and fortitude.

Next month, Tsang is passing Bach’s torch to six of his current and former students, who will perform the Bach Suites in a single evening on Tuesdat, April 19, 2011, at 7:30 PM in Bates Recital Hall. Cellists Nathan Harrenstein, Jun Jin, Samuel Converse Johnson, Francesco Mastromatteo, Jun Seo, and Jeffrey Wang will perform these monumental masterpieces for solo cello including:

1. Suite in G major, BWV 1007 2. Suite in D minor, BWV 1008 3. Suite in C major, BWV 1009 4. Suite in E-flat major, BWV 1010 5. Suite in C minor, BWV 1011 6. Suite in D major, BWV 1012

Tsang believes that performing Bach’s masterworks becomes a driving force for future success for these young musicians.

“I want my students to evoke a response from the audience that will fill them with inspiration they need to succeed for years to come,” says Mr. Tsang. “The growth these students have acquired by learning these Bach pieces is outstanding, and to perform them is to be affirmed as a musician and an artist.”

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Instrumental Minds … plus Hearts

Concert Review

The Boston Musical Intelligencer Boston, MA February 13, 2011

Three syllables’ worth of surnames added up to a startling amount of musicality at New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall Saturday evening, February 12th. The Foundation for Chinese Performing Arts presented Nai-Yuan Hu, violin, Bion Tsang, cello, and Ning An, piano in a riveting recital entitled “Instrumental Minds.”

Kodály’s Duo for Violin and Cello, Op. 7 is one of a regrettably limited number of pieces crafted for this instrumental combination. Somber and angular, this work, penned at the start of World War I, seems to reflect the dark mood of the time. Kodály, along with compatriot and contemporary Béla Bartók, was an inveterate ethnomusicologist who ferreted out and catalogued multitudinous Hungarian folk songs. This is readily apparent in his Duo, which, with its generous use of pizzicato technique and modal key structure, evokes a decidedly Eastern European flavor. This impassioned, declamatory, melodically acerbic and technically demanding music was handled with sophistication and reverence by the instrumentalists. Violinist Nai-Yuan Hu, the elder statesman of the group, performed with a high degree of stern-faced competence; Bion Tsang spun a warm, full tone on the violin’s larger cousin. Both players clearly communicated the yearning and pathos of the piece, painting a desolate music landscape with a passionate performance.

Anton Arensky is the only composer I know to have a glacier named after him, the Arensky Glacier in Antarctica, a rather odd tribute bestowed by the USSR Academy of Sciences in 1987. Musically, Arensky’s output during his brief life was anything but glacial. Case in point: his Trio No. 1 in D minor, Op. 32, a lush, energetic, rhapsodically Romantic work that envelops the listener in a warm blanket of sound. Hu, Tsang, and An combined to weave a flowing, shimmering soundscape with melody lines that rippled through the instruments. The second movement “Scherzo” flowed by in a froth of notes; the nostalgic “Elegia” appropriately paid tribute to cellist Karl Davidov, in whose memory the work was composed. Not surprisingly, the cello figured prominently, and Bion Tsang played with intensity and bravura. All told, hard to imagine a more stirring, glittering performance of this late Romantic gem, a highly appropriate choice for the eve of the eve of Valentine’s Day. Though only their second collaboration, the musicians played as if the Hu-Tsang-An Trio was a long-established entity.

This concert turned out to be much more than the “Intrumental Minds” title suggested. These performers wore their hearts on their sleeves.

By Michael Rocha

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KMFA's 44th Birthday

Bion Tsang CDs featured in KMFA's spring pledge drive

KMFA Classically Austin 89.5 Austin, TX January 21, 2011

Two of Bion Tsang's latest compact discs are offered again as "Thank You Gifts" during the KMFA Birthday Membership Drive on January 26-28, 2011. A contribution at the Bronze Circle/Business Circle level of $500 or more entitles you to a Classically Austin 4-Pack CD Set including the CD "Bion Tsang and Anton Nel Live in Concert: Brahms Cello Sonatas and Four Hungarian Dances" as well as the 2010 Grammy-nominated CD "A Company of Voices: Conspirare in Concert," in which Mr. Tsang is featured guest artist in three tracks. Make your pledge today to support KMFA!

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Austin Monthly

Bion Tsang profiled in Austin Monthly magazine.

Austin Monthly Austin, TX January 2011

Master Class

UT MUSIC STUDENTS TAKE LESSONS FROM CELEBRATED CELLIST

At an age when most kids learn to ride bikes, Bion Tsang picked up a cello. He was only 7 years old, but it didn't take long for him and his teachers to discover his incredible talent with the instrument. Tsang entered Juilliard at the ripe age of 8 and remained there for nine years. After attending Harvard University, where he studied musicology and composition, Tsang realized he was meant to perform music rather than write it. "When I perform, I want to capture the essence of music and evoke a response from the audience," he says. "Classical music isn't always pretty; sometimes it's angry, nasty and dramatic."

In 2002, Tsang made the move from New York City to Austin to become the professor of cello at the Butler School of Music at UT. He now teaches his students to "make a musical instrument illustrate what is in your mind, heart and soul." That's something that the professor can speak of with firsthand knowledge, as it earned him a 2010 Grammy nomination for Best Classical Crossover album for his work with Austin's choral group Conspirare. "The award ended up going to Yo-Yo Ma, but just being nominated for something so prestigious was a great honor in itself," he says.

When he's not instructing younger generations in classical music or playing frequent on-campus concerts, Tsang travels the world to perform everywhere from Chicago to Hong Kong and beyond. "I want my students to see the fruits of our labors through performance," he explains, though he's quick to add that teaching comes first. "The biggest reward is to see my students grow in their love for the music and to watch their development."

By Heather Calvillo

Available in hard print in Vol. 18, No. 1 (January 2011, Talk: Creative, pp. 40-41)