Hey, elk, look up

Hey, elk, look up

Concert Review

Symphony, guest cellist bring great outdoors to Wharton concert

January 14, 2015

For all the fiddlers, fandooglers and foom-boomers crowding the stage at Saturday’s Lansing Symphony concert, two distinct figures linger in my mind. I’ll start with the obvious one: Soloist Bion Tsang. For better or worse, in motion or stasis, through reverie and hysteria, the evening’s guest cellist made it impossible to take your eyes off of him.

Not that he was showing off. He seemed determined to take a seemingly cornball piece of music, Tchaikovsky’s “Variations on a Rococo Theme,” and wring maximum meaning and drama from every bit. He was all business, ear cocked for every cue from the orchestra and maestro Timothy Muffitt.

Every note Tsang played was strong, clear and pure, from subsonic, Russian Orthodox basso tones to supersonic signals that must have made elk look up from the snowy earth in the trackless woods of Northern Lansing.

Tsang ignored the triviality of the opening bars as he began to work out vigorous, virtuosic variations on a neat little promenade theme. This “Rococo” needed the rum — it’s not Tchaikovsky’s finest hour. Between the first few variations, an inane woodwind outburst seems to chirp, “wasn’t that nice.” However, at about the fifth or sixth variation, Tsang jumped off the Good Ship Lollipop and dove deep, stretching time with soundings that unexpectedly reached to the bottom of a silent ocean. Now and then, he would suspend a note like a silver sphere in mid-air. The mid-January tubercular ward of an audience stopped coughing, and maybe even breathing, for what seemed like a very long time. The notes seemed to have no beginning and no end, no audible attack or decay. They were just there.

Suddenly, the cellist came back up for air with a flashy finale that came off as exhilarating, not silly, like gulping oxygen after a frightening encounter with an undertow. Tchaikovsky fools you every time.

His depths are shallower than you think, but his shallows are often deeper.

By Lawrence Cosentino

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Novacek Rags

Novacek Rags

Bion Tsang is back on American Public Media's Performance Today. Heard today during the first hour of the broadcast is Bion's performance of two John Novacek rags, "Foster Fantasy" and "Intoxication Rag," both for Clarinet, Cello and Piano. The live recording with clarinetist Nathan Williams and pianist/composer John Novacek was made during a marathon concert in Bates Recital Hall in Austin, TX on Friday, September 14, 2012 celebrating Bion's first ten years at the UT Butler School of Music.

APM's Performance Today is America's most popular classical music radio program and a winner of the 2014 Gabriel Award for artistic achievement. The show is broadcast on 293 public radio stations across the country, and reaches approximately 1.4 million listeners each week. To find out where and when Performance Today is broadcast in your area, visit performancetoday.publicradio.org.

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Verklärte Nacht

Verklärte Nacht

Bion Tsang is back on American Public Media's Performance Today. Heard today during the first hour of the broadcast is Bion's performance of Arnold Schoenberg's Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night), Op. 4, for string sextet with violinists Erin Keefe and Steven Rose, violists Phillip Ying and Virginia Barron and cellist David Ying. The recording was made from a concert in Packard Hall in Colorado Springs on June 9, 2013.

Performance Today is broadcast on 260 public radio stations across the country and is heard by about 1.3 million people each week. To find out where and when Performance Today is broadcast in your area, visit performancetoday.org.

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Schubert Adagio and Rondo Concertante

Schubert Adagio and Rondo Concertante

Bion Tsang is back on American Public Media's Performance Today. Heard today during the second hour of the broadcast is Bion's performance of Franz Schubert's "Adagio and Rondo Concertante," D. 487, for Piano, Violin, Viola and Cello with pianist Inon Barnotan, violinist Alexander Velinzon and violist Michael Klotz. The recording was made from a concert in Nordstrom Recital Hall at Benaroya Hall in Seattle on July 23, 2014.

Performance Today is broadcast on 260 public radio stations across the country and is heard by about 1.3 million people each week. To find out where and when Performance Today is broadcast in your area, visit performancetoday.org.

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Rossini Duetto

Rossini Duetto

Bion Tsang is on American Public Media's Performance Today for the second time this week. Heard this weekend during the first hour of the broadcast is Bion's performance of Gioacchino Rossini's "Duetto in D Major" for Cello and Double Bass with double bassist DaXun Zhang. The recording was made during a marathon concert in Bates Recital Hall in Austin, TX on Friday, September 14, 2012 celebrating Bion's first ten years at the UT Butler School of Music.

Performance Today is broadcast on 260 public radio stations across the country and is heard by about 1.3 million people each week. To find out where and when Performance Today is broadcast in your area, visit performancetoday.org.

More info...