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Gao Ping (; born
Chengdu Chengdu; Sichuanese dialects, Sichuanese pronunciation: , Standard Chinese pronunciation: ; Chinese postal romanization, previously Romanization of Chinese, romanized as Chengtu. is the capital city of the Chinese province of Sichuan. With a ...
, 1970) is a Chinese composer and professor of composition at Chinese University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen School of Music. He has also taught composition at the Conservatory of Music at Capital Normal University in Beijing, the University of Canterbury, New Zealand School of Music (Wellington), and University of Waikato in
Hamilton, New Zealand Hamilton (, ) is an inland city in the North Island of New Zealand. Located on the banks of the Waikato River, it is the seat and most populous city of the Waikato, Waikato region. With a territorial population of , it is the country's List of c ...
. Gao gained his D.Mus in composition from the University of Cincinnati University. He is professor in composition at the Conservatory of Music at
Capital Normal University Capital Normal University (CNU; 首都师范大学) is a municipal public university in Beijing, People's Republic of China, China. It is affiliated with the City of Beijing and co-funded by the Beijing Municipal People's Government and the M ...
in Beijing. He also holds a guest professorship at the China Conservatory. From 2005 he taught composition at the School of Music at Canterbury University in Christchurch, New Zealand. He is also a research associate in the Department of Music at Waikato University. His 1988 China Record Company album ''Jazz in China'' was one of the first domestic jazz-classical albums released in China. Born in Sichuan province, he grew up as a young pianist at the Sichuan Conservatory in Chengdu, Gao Ping was affected by China’s concurrent transformation from a collective to a market economy. This transitional phase between old and new and the productive cultural clash between East and West left traces, that would later be evident in his music. The Beijing-based musicologist and professor Li Xi’an has referred to Gao Ping as a leading member of the “sixth generation” of Chinese composers. Gao Ping’s works have won wide acclaim throughout the world. His last chamber music release on Naxos was described by a German critic as “music which wants to be heard with ears of a child, full of wonder and amazement…deep and vulnerable.” In his recent works, Gao returns more fully to China as a creative theme. Works such as Piano Quintet “Mei Lan Zhu Ju” (2009) and The Four Not-Alike for multi-function pianist and Chinese instruments (2012) reflect the appeal of his fusing of Western and Eastern idioms, as well as the expanding interest in his compositions dealing with China and its multiple pasts.


Honours and awards

In 2010 Gao was awarded the
Composers Association of New Zealand The Composers Association of New Zealand (CANZ), established in 1974, after an initial meeting of composers was organised by David Farquhar. Farquhar was the association's first president. It is a body that lobbies for the interests of New Zealand ...
Trust Fund award.


Selected works

* ''Distant Voices'' (1999) - for piano * ''Shuo Shu Ren'' or ''The Storyteller'' (2001) - for sextet * ''Sonata No 2 for cello and piano'' (2001) * ''Two Soviet Love Songs for Vocalising Pianist'' (2003) * "The Mountain" for orchestra (2005) * ''Piano Concerto No.1'' (2007) * ''Wild Cherry Tree''—symphonic songs for soloists and orchestra(2012-2017) * ‘’Four Not-alike‘’ for multi-function pianist and Chamber Orchestra (2012) * ''Sonata for Piano'' (2015) * ''Piano Concerto No.2 "Evocation of Spirits'' (2016) * ''prayer Songs'' for string quartet (2019) * ''Searching for the Mountain'' for piano trio (2021)


References

1970 births Living people {{improve categories, date=February 2022