Founded in Spring 2008, Chamber Philharmonic Taipei is a young and exciting chamber orchestra. Founded by conductor Wilbur Lin, the orchestra started as a chamber ensemble formed of music majors from class 2011 of National Taiwan Normal University. The orchestra focus on the performance of chamber orchestral works, mainly on Baroque and classical period performance and 20th century music. The aim is to bring great music unheard of on the island of Taiwan to the audience.
Administration
General Director: Mark Chou-Fai Chiu
Artistic Director: Wilbur Lin
Organizational Manager
Stage Coordinators:
Musicians:
Concertmasters: Chou Tzu-Jen & Chen Yu-Ning
Principal Second: Anita Liu
Principal Violist: Yu-Ting Liu
Principal Cellist: Sharen Huang
Continuo Cellist: Ming-Ko Shih
The orchestra is formed by freelance musicians.
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Bringing Cantatas to Taiwan
This is a project to perform all J.S. Bach’s cantatas at least once in Taiwan. The cantatas of J.S. Bach is the pearl of classical sacred music or even of all music. The works deserve to be heard in any place in the world. While Bach cantata cycles are being done on recordings and being performed hundreds of times a year in American or European countries, never once had they been completely performed in a Chinese society. (Except Japan, not even once in Asia.) One by one, the orchestra would like to make all cantatas being heard on the island. 7 down, 202 to go.
How Do they Do:
The performances of the cantatas will be played on modern instruments and modified modern instruments, and mostly with the contemporary a=442 pitch. However issues with voice or wind instruments occasionally lead to transposition of the music. (Fortunately, J.S. Bach himself did this often. Transposition in the Baroque era was normally not a big issue as it is now.) For example, Cantata BWV 54 is by the orchestra performed with their own edition of score and parts edited by Wilbur Lin.
Artists:
One of the aim of the orchestra is to perform these great works by local artists. So far they have collaborated with several Taiwanese soloists of the top class including soprano Chang Hsin-Mei, counter-tenor Chou Wen-Pin, tenor Huang Ya-Zhong, baritone Tsai Wei-Shu, baritone Ying-Jen Yao, oboist I-Ching Wang, and violinist Chou Tzu-Jen, along with their outstanding chamber players of the philharmonic and singers from the Bach Choir. |