Shanghai Concert Hall Hosts Forum for Its 90th Anniversary, Inviting Global Theatres, Musicians, and Scholars To Explore Future Paths

Shanghai Concert Hall

Shanghai Concert Hall Hosts Forum for Its 90th Anniversary, Inviting Global Theatres, Musicians, and Scholars To Explore Future Paths in The Post-COVID Era

 

PR86477

 

SHANGHAI,Nov. 6,2020/PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/--

 

To celebrate its 90th anniversary, Shanghai Concert Hall hosts an international

forum themed "New paths, new beginnings" on Oct. 29th in Shanghai, while

live-streaming it online.

 

As a part of the celebratory events to mark the Shanghai Music Hall's 90th

anniversary, the forum is composed of various sessions including keynote

speeches, panel discussions, partnership agreement signing-ceremony on the

cloud, and online programme showcasing. In 2020, Shanghai Concert Hall embraces

its 90th anniversary by exploring the future of historically important art venues, and

reflecting upon the "restart" of the performing arts industry in the post-COVID era.

 

Representatives of the Royal Albert Hall (UK), Suntory Hall (Japan), Esplanade

- Theatres on the Bay (Singapore), Shanghai Grand Theatre, Shanghai Concert

Hall, Shaanxi Opera House/Xi'an Concert Hall, the Elbphilharmonie (Hamburg),

the Philharmonie de Paris / Cité de la musique (France), La Seine Musicale

(France), along with leading artists and scholars in the world such as Xu Shuya,

Daniel Hope, Luo Xiaoci gather online to discuss the ways forward for theatres

and the performing arts industry beyond 2020.

 

Confronting the challenges of the industry

Insights shared by renowned theatre leaders

 

The sudden strike of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 has posed great threats to

people's lives, and brought unprecedented challenges to the global theatre and

performing arts industry. This has in turn urged theatre professionals to

remain resilient and explore new paths forward.

 

In the morning session of Shanghai Concert Hall's 90th Anniversary Forum, FANG

Jing, General Manager of Shanghai Concert Hall, Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi, President of

the Suntory Hall (Japan), Craig Hassall, CEO of the Royal Albert Hall (UK),

along with Yvonne Tham, CEO of Esplande -Theatres on the Bay (Singapore) have

delivered keynote speeches to address the challenges faced by the performing

arts industry and share insights on the future development of music halls,

based on their experience of fighting the pandemic at their respective organizations.

 

Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi, cellist and President of the Suntory Concert Hall in Japan,

says in his keynote speech: "Through this pandemic, Suntory Hall has realized

that online performances brought us closer to the world via the internet

despite the virus has forced us to get social distance from each other. We have

discovered a new possibility to reach prospective audiences even outside of the

hall - that should be considered as a giant step in our history."

 

Due to pandemic, the Royal Albert Hall is closed for the first time since the

second World War. In his keynote speech, Craig Hassall, the Hall's CEO, says

that after the closure, the Royal Albert Hall has launched new programs such as

Royal Albert Home as part of its digitalization efforts. At the same time, in

order to adapt to the new normal of the performing arts industry, the Hall has

taken strict measures to make itself a certified COVID-ready venue. Mr. Hassall

says that "faced with the challenges in 2020, we all need to think of new ways

to stage concerts and events, and look beyond our own countries to explore more

possibilities of digital participation".

 

Yvonne Tham, CEO of Esplanade - Theatres of the Bay (Singapore), attends the

forum online from the Esplanade's Concert Hall, and shares in the keynote

speech her belief in international collaboration: "in a time like a global

pandemic, we have not only looked inward but it has reinforced the importance

of maintaining networks, maintaining collaboration on the international front."

She also shares Esplanade's new attempts to digitize performances during the

pandemic, as well as the launch of the "Esplanade Academy", which delivers

training programs in technical production and helps expand opportunities for

people to experience live music in new ways.

 

In the keynote speech, Fang Jing says that during the pandemic Shanghai Concert

Hall has always remained true to its mission by searching for new ways to usher

in new opportunities: "We have been making lots of new attempts, not only in

creating innovative works that deliver the value of art, but also in better

shouldering our social responsibility and sharing art in unprecedented ways."

 

Through SNS and live-streaming platforms, Shanghai Concert Hall has been

engaging with its audiences via online live performances and events as a

"Concert Hall on the Cloud". Those ground-breaking efforts aim to facilitate

innovative collaborations, and deliver art's value in the new times. Shanghai

Concert Hall has been working on shifting its role from being a regular concert

venue to becoming a smart theatre and a more versatile space for art.

 

In-depth panel discussions

To explore new possibilities for arts venues and the classical art

 

The Forum also features two panel sessions in the afternoon. The first

discussion is on "The New Normal of Performing Arts created by Art+Technology".

Zhang Xiaoding, General Manager of Shanghai Grand Theatre and Cao Yan, General

Manager of Shaanxi Opera House/ Xian Concert Hall discuss with Barbara

Lebitsch, Director of Artistic Planning at the Elbphilharmonie and Emmanuel

Hondré, Director of the Concerts Department of the Philharmonie de Paris / Cité

de la musique, new directions and possibilities of the fusion of theatre

development and technology.

 

The second session titled "New Possibilities for Classical Music" sees Xu

Shuya, renowned composer and professor at Shanghai Conservatory of Music,

Laurence Equilbey, conductor and Musical Director of Insula Orchestra resident

at La Seine Musicale, violinist Daniel Hope, and guzheng (Chinese zither)

artist Luo Xiaoci, Vice President of Shanghai Musicians Association and

Director of Shanghai Chinese Orchestra discuss topics such as talent

development, status quo and prospects of China's classical music industry, as

well as classical music's creative functions.

 

New Strategic Partnerships with World-leading Arts Venues

Shanghai Concert Hall's new attempt to work more closely with its international peers

 

During the Forum, Shanghai Concert Hall has also signed strategic partnership

agreements online with the Royal Albert Hall and the Royal Welsh College of

Music & Drama. The Royal Albert Hall is one of the world's most famous concert

halls, as well as the busiest one with diverse programmes. The Dora Stoutzker

Hall at the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama is Wales' first Purpose Built

Chamber Concert Hall; well known for its acoustics, the Hall is a regular venue

of the BBC Cardiff Singer of the World Competition and its masterclasses. In

the future, the three parties will work together on the basis of mutual respect

and reciprocity, share experience and broaden cooperation by leveraging each

other's strengths in the fields of business operations, arts education,

online/offline program exchange and nurturing young artists. At the same time,

the three parties have also been in touch with other renowned performing arts

organizations around the world including the Lincoln Center in the United

States, Sydney Opera House in Australia and La Seine Musicale in France to

discuss further details of forging new ties in years beyond the pandemic.

 

After the online signing, Shanghai Concert Hall has showcased its first

commissioned work The Tune of Water, as a highlight of the Hall's

crossover-brand-cooperation project "Music∞"(Music Infinity). The piece

premiered at Shanghai Concert Hall in 2018, and was invited to perform at the

"Chinese Spring Festival" at Beijing Tianqiao Performing Arts Center in 2019 -

in the same year, it was listed among the national five "Outstanding Programmes

Focusing on China" by the country's Ministry of Culture and Tourism, and was

showcased at the Festival OFF d'Avignon in France in July. Since its premiere,

it has been well received by both domestic and international media and

audiences. With its showcasing as the final agenda item of the Forum, The Tune

of Water channels ethnical rituals into the contemporary times via theatre,

sharing with the audiences the charm of arts.

 

On-Demand Webinar: https://b23.tv/Os2CYI and https://b23.tv/7LAcmM 

 

SOURCE:  Shanghai Concert Hall

 

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