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Bion Tsang at Blue Rock

Bion Tsang just completed his "encores" recording sessions at Blue Rock Artist Ranch and Studio. He recorded 19 short show pieces for cello and piano with pianist Cecilia Kao. Andy Murphy of Panda Productions engineered the audio while Sam Roden and Nick Hartanto of Rodanti Bros. Films shot video. With all the audio recorded in the first two days, the third day was spent primarily capturing video for a short film linked to the track "Figaro." Bion's two boys, Bailey and Henry, were the principal actors. Look for the recording "Bion Tsang at Blue Rock" to be released by the end of 2012.

Seattle Chamber Music Festival

Concert Review

Classical KING FM Seattle, WA July 12, 2012

... Then came one of the evening’s big surprises: Bion Tsang’s reading of Falla’s “Suite Populaire Espagnole” (reworked for cello by Maurice Marechal). Tsang has always been a reliably excellent utility player with the festival, but this performance was something special: tremendous subtlety, beautiful shading, loads of interpretative finesse. With the pianist Inon Barnatan, Tsang produced a variety of tone colors, ranging from the smoky and subtle to the feisty and assertive. It was a compelling performance that drew sustained cheers from the audience.

By Melinda Bargreen

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Bion Tsang on SymphonyCast

This week, Bion Tsang appears on SymphonyCast, American Public Media's two-hour weekly radio program hosted by Alison Young featuring a full-length concert by a national or international symphony orchestra. Bion is the highlighted soloist in Tchaikovsky's "Variations on a Rococo Theme" with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and conductor and Artistic Partner of the SPCO Roberto Abbado. Listen online to hour 1 of the broadcast or live from your local public radio station. More info...

Bion Tsang on America's Music Festivals

For the second time this year, Bion Tsang appears on America's Music Festivals, the nationally syndicated radio series that brings live concert performances and audio features to the airwaves from music festivals throughout North America. Back on January 1, 2012, Bion was heard in Boccherini's Cello Sonata in A major performed at Music in the Vineyards (Napa, CA) with pianist Jeffrey Sykes. Tonight, Bion can be heard in Saint-Saens' Piano Trio No. 2 in E minor performed at the Cape Cod Chamber Music Festival (Cape Cod, MA) with violinist Stephanie Chase and pianist Spencer Myer. For station listings of America's Music Festivals, visit americasmusicfestivals.org. More info...

En garde!: Bion Tsang

Art Review:The cellist swashed and buckled his way through Dvorák like a great actor playing Cyrano

Austin Chronicle Austin, TX April 6, 2012

The cello has been typecast as the sad sack of the symphony. When composers need a mourner, that's typically who they call, leaving many people with the impression that moaning wistfully is all the cello can do. Antonín Dvorák was one composer who saw the instrument as capable of so much more and created a virtuoso showcase for it that makes you rethink all you know about the cello, and in tackling his Cello Concerto in B Minor with the Austin Symphony Orchestra, Bion Tsang swashed and buckled his way through the work like a great actor playing Cyrano de Bergerac. Maybe it was the way in which Tsang wielded his bow that first put me in mind of Edmond Rostand's peerless swordsman – thrusting swiftly and with unerring precision into the heart of each note – but the comparison felt apt through the concerto's finale. In it, the cello has all of Cyrano's brio and valor and pluck, dashing headlong into melodic themes and executing them with a breathless panache. In a work with seeming martial aspirations – the opening sounds like it's dropping you in the middle of a battle – the cello is its soldier-hero, taking on all comers. But like Rostand's, this is also a highly romantic figure with a strong melancholy streak. Repeatedly, the cello succumbs to rueful reverie – slow, exquisitely lovely passages in which it oozes regret. Because Tsang attacked the "action sequences" with such verve and relish, it brought even richer contrast to these moments of sorrowful reflection, which ached with the loss of a dozen loves. On the podium, conductor Peter Bay devoted much of his efforts to reining in the orchestra, keeping them soft enough for Tsang's every rich note to be clearly heard. And they were heard, and deeply appreciated, too, so much so that the audience leapt to its feet in an instant for the guest soloist. It led to a quick encore of Dvorák "Humoresque No. 7" – you may know it as the tune to "Passengers will please refrain from flushing toilets on the train" – during which Tsang proved himself as adroit at comedy as romance and action. His jaunty, sly performance left the crowd grinning and no doubt hoping that his first appearance with the ASO will be followed by another sooner rather than later.

By Robert Faires

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