Hong Kong Cellist Society 香港大提琴家協會

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Hong Kong Cellist Society 香港大提琴家協會

Words of 2021 by Clara Tsang

Cello is an instrument which when hugged feels warm, it calms your being.  In the Hong Kong Cellist Society, we wish for more people to experience our goal, which is to explore cello music.  Cello music is an art for making music through a cello.  Cello music is not only playing a musical instrument, the vibrations felt by one’s body is special since it becomes your artistic voice.  This artistic voice is connected to your subconscious which you may be unaware of until the music is played out. 

 

The journey starts here, but there will be more to discover.  You soon will realize there is a hidden treasure in you, which is waiting to be unearthed.  Most of the time, you have never realized that this treasure was a part of you and whether you are ready to understand it before it happens.  From my experience, this realisation is absolutely a shaky yet surprising moment.  When facing this moment, some people escape, they may not be ready or see the value yet.  There are some who will be on the edge to continue because they have plenty of considerations.  In this instance, the Society provides you with cello music events to get through your music journey better.  The door is also open for cello lovers who may be interested in learning.

 

Despite the Covid outbreak and lockdowns this year, you may find some articles introducing an unforgettable master’s cello music pieces and it’s stories, and other columns which bring exciting new compositions for cellists to explore.  You may also find the shares by Hong Kong cellist like Chor Kai Hei.  

 

An event “Time travel with Cellist Brian Bromberg” was held in early November to share how cello music was developed during different periods of time.  Towards the end of the month in our member event,  Mr. Billy Chan, the professional dancer, will lead us to discover the body-mind connection through the movement activities before the performance training.

 

At the end of the year, let us celebrate and look forward to the writing from Mr. Larry Ng, a professional mime,  who will share how he  interprets and uses cello music in his mime performances.   

 

Last but not least, if you love cello music, why don’t you give yourself a opportunity to touch and experience this amazing instrument by applying to our ongoing promotion courses designed for music lovers including adults and kids.   “A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.”  Hope to share this beautiful journey with you.

 

[Jul 2019] Cello Album "Just Meet You" On Sale Now

c MG 0017   c MG 9990

Sometimes we just have to be impulsive and do what we want. That is why Clara Tsang’s musical story was able to meet people like you.

"Just Meet You" album includes 8 cello pieces and each of them represents a fragment in Clara's musical story with emotions varied from joyful, tearful, agitated to irritated. The red album cover is fabric wrapped with engraved letter print for delicate relief and Z-folded inside page unfolds a thinly hazed forest with morning light shining through. This is a scene from Clara's dream and recorded her past and present in music. From the layered music to physical touch of the album, it is hoped that the audience will be able to enjoy Clara’s musical story from every detail.

“To publish an actual CD album on purely classical music in a digitalized world, I feel like a trout working hard to swim upstream. This is my dream. I hope that people who love my music will be able to listen to it in my concert and also listen to it anywhere any time, i.e. no time and space constraint. This is my present for them on our destined encountering.”

---Clara Tsang

 

Cello album "Just Meet You" is on sale now via the following channels:    

Cello Factory
Workshop 3, 11/F, Block A, Wing Kut Industrial Building, 608 Castle Peak Road, Lai chi Kok, Hong Kong

Hong Kong in store
CD Warehouse branches
CD Plus
Ka Wah Record Co. Ltd.
Rock Gallery
The Beat Records
and other distributors

Macau in store
Centro Audio Visual Tin Vek

Taiwan in store & online
ESLITE (In store & online)
Books.com.tw (Online)
Five Music (In store & Online)
Chia Chia Record Store (In store & Online)
Taipei Musiker House (Online) 

Japan online (Japanese only)
Rakuten

 

Why you should learn this piece:Sonata for Solo Cello by David Feurzeig

By Brian Patrick Bromberg

 

Music available on YouTube, Listen here!

 

Where to begin with a mammoth work such as this?  First, a brief introduction to the composer: David Feurzeig is an American composer equally versed in popular music as he is in classical music.

 

Many of his works incorporate parody, satire, and humour.  A particular favourite of mine is his solo piano piece Stride Rite, which joins themes from Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring with ragtime piano stylings reminiscent of Scott Joplin and Jelly Roll Morton.

 

 

Sonata for Solo Cello takes a more serious approach than some of Feurzeig’s other works, utilising conventions of the past in tandem with innovative techniques that show off the cello’s myriad timbral varieties.

 

The sonata opens with a beautiful majestic prelude that, if pressed, I would have to say brings to mind (perhaps vaguely) the music of Bach's first suite’s prelude. The connection to Bach goes beyond the opening notes however.  I am not exaggerating when I say that the satisfaction of playing Bach’s G major prelude is mirrored throughout Feurzeig’s sonata.

 

 

This majestic opening gives way to a second section which carries the marking ‘like distant bells.’ At first glance, this section’s adventurous usage of harmonics looks daunting, but with a bit of patient practise you will notice how the cello naturally responds to these overtones and rings in a way previously unexplored before Feurzeig.

 

 

For movement two we put the bow down and play everything with hammer-ons and pull-offs. This technique, which has been employed in guitar music for ages, is relatively new for cello and takes some time to master.  Once the technique has been honed enough, you can start to feel this music as a brisk ¾ courrente.  I suggest practising this movement super slowly and with the bow so you can focus on intonation.  When you switch to practising with pizzicato, phrasing will be much easier to sculpt.

 

 

The third movement brings us to the notturno, which acts as the fulcrum upon which the other movements balance.  This movement utilises some lovely ethereal writing that switches between artificial harmonics and fingered notes. The melodic intervals seem disjunct at first because of the wide distances between them (a diminished 9th and minor 13th) but because of the natural construction of the instrument and the way our strings are tuned, we can actually play these in one seamless legato bow.  This movement very effectively evokes the imagery of the night’s sighing insects, the dim moon, the possum’s scratch of the earth.

 

 

The second half of the sonata begins with a saraband. Although the tempo has many marked rubato inflections, it needs to still retain the characteristic of a dance. Where the courrente is a whirlwind of notes, the saraband is a lyrical song.  It is easy to imagine people dancing to the rhythm and responding to the subtly nuanced pushing and pulling of the tempo.  Another fun thing to explore in the piece is how Feurzeig has written in a displaced downbeat.

 

 

We typically expect the strong beat to occur on beat one, but Feurzieg moves this strong beat to beat two and writes the whole of the movement with this displacement.

 

 

To conclude this movement, the melody gradually disappears into the highest range of the cello’s C string touching upon all of the harmonics on the way up the neck.

 

It seems perfectly fitting to start the finale gigue with an explosion and Feurzieg does just that. This movement presents two primary sections: the first has a sort of moto perpetuo feel with a relentless driving triplet rhythm; the second is a harmonic chorale of sorts.

 

Working slowly with the metronome is the key to polishing this movement. The first section, which is a pedal point C# marcato triplet rhythm with a chromatic melody picked out around it, has occasional interruptions that showcase the cellist’s ability to play chords and blindingly fast scales.  When executed with finesse, the effect is a virtuosic tour de force.  After the initial exposition of material, Feurzeig brings back little inklings of the prelude.  These consonant reminiscent bits grow in length until it seems like they might take over only to be thwarted at the very end by the gigue’s rougher material.

 

Feurzig's composition challenges the boundaries of how the cello is played and opens up the imagination for the future of our instrument.

 

 

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