Wen Kezheng

Wen Kezheng (Chinese温 可 铮, Tongyong Pinyin Wen Ke - Zheng, W.-G. Wen Ke - Zheng, ) ( born 1929 in Beijing, † 2007) was a Chinese singer of the vocal range bass. He was director of the institution for singing beings on the Shanghai Conservatory. On Nanjing Conservatory he completed his musical studies in 1950. He was chairman of the Fourth Music Association of China. In 1957 he won the sixth World Youth Music Festival the silver medal.

Biography

Wen Kezheng child was a Beijing family of intellectuals; His father encouraged his musical talent. At the age of ten he won a Children's Music Prize with an old Italian song. He was in the 1940s, the aptitude test on the Nanjing National Conservatory with grade one.

From 1946 to 1956 he studied Russian singing with Professor V. Shushlin. After graduation, he worked first in the Band of the Nanjing Jing Ling University, where he met his wife Qiu - Wang. He was also director of the Institute singing at the conservatory in Shanghai, the fourth committee chairman of the Music Association of China and the Political Consular emcee of Shanghai. Professor Wen held in 1951, the first singing solo concert in Beijing, Tianjing and Nanjing successful, with pianist Li Jialu

Who took 1956 as a representative of Shanghai at the first national music festival part. In the same year he won the gold medal at the first national singing competition of the Chinese Ministry of Culture. In 1957 he won the silver medal in Moscow a classical singing competition, followed by a vocal album was published by him in the Soviet Union.

Soon after, he was with his wife solo concerts and singing lessons in the world. In the USA, he joined in 1986 as the first Chinese singer to. On another solo concert at the Palace of the Japanese prince, he sang " Beethoven's Ninth " Symphony, accompanied by Osaka Symphony Orchestra.

From the political consular conference in Hong Kong, he received an invitation to a solo vocal concert in 1989. The following year he joined with singing in Macau on several occasions.

  • Singer of classical music
  • Chinese
  • Born in 1929
  • Died in 2007
  • Man
816934
de