Friday, June 7, 2024

Yuja Wang

I have a pantheon of personal heroes: artists of great achievement. They inspire me by reifying our dreams. Simply knowing such people exist gives me hope for humanity.

I've told you in the past about several of these: glass-blower Lino Tagliapietra, writer David Foster Wallace, and guitarists Duane Allman, Dickey Betts and Roy Buchanon. Let me add another genius to the list.

Yuja Wang. Yes, she has an unusual name but it's easily pronounced: You-jah Wong (not Wang). Whether you know it or not Yuja is the best pianist in the world right now. She's 37 years old and has been astounding audiences since she was a teenager. She's played with every prominent orchestra in the country, toured internationally, and sold-out Carnegie Hall. Yuja is an indisputable superstar.

During the pandemic when Yuja couldn't play concerts she collaborated with a respected composer on a new piece of music. The composer says he wrote the piece specifically for her, believing Yuja is the only pianist capable of performing it. During their collaboration Yuja took passages AND MADE THEM HARDER TO PLAY. She amped up technical difficulty of the work to make it shine brighter. The composer was justly amazed at this.

When people can't comprehend something complex they often focus on trivial aspects, like commentary that dogged David Foster Wallace about the bandana he wore on his head at public readings. Instead of considering the literary merit of David's work or its estimable themes some clueless critics pondered ridiculous theories on why David wore a bandana (e.g., eccentricity, vanity). The truth is more mundane: David was shy and especially nervous speaking in public; as a result he sweated profusely and used a cloth bandana to absorb and conceal sweat. That's all, nothing more.

A similar thing happens to Yuja. As a young woman she performed wearing attractive clothes, usually a stylish dress and high heels. Classical music critics disparaged her appearance as too sexy for concerts. One even sexistly wrote that "if her dress was any shorter" the concert-hall "would have to restrict admission to those over 17 years old." Yuja explains, quite simply, that she likes to wear nice clothes and doesn't understand why anyone focuses on that instead of her musical performance.

If you haven't heard of Yuja yet, check her out. There are many videos of her performances on streaming channels, YouTube and CDs. Or you can come over to my place and listen to her on vinyl records.  :)


8 comments:

  1. She's a badass! If she is comfortable in skyhigh heels and amazing dresses, more power to her. I used to wear heels to my arts classes (up to 3 hours standing). My professor made snide remarks but I refused to change. Her musical skill is as savvy as her fashion sense.

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  2. Thank you for showing me and telling me about this talented pianist- I love that she wanted to make the music even more difficult!
    It's silly that people focused so much on her clothing. I think they did that a bit with Nicola Benedetti, a fantastic internationally-acclaimed violinist (who I performed with when she was around 12!) Interestingly on the subject of wardrobe choices, she had a malfunction with her dress in the middle of a performance with the orchestra. Why shouldn't she choose a dress she likes. If she can play in it, then why not!

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    1. Musicians should have the right to select their clothes just like everyone else.

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  3. P.S. thank you for thinking of me as you wrote this! ;-)

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  4. Saw this article and thought of you...
    https://www.classicfm.com/discover-music/instruments/piano/best-pianists-all-time/

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    1. Fascinating! I also admire Glenn Gould while recognizing his eccentricity.

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