• Zlatomir Fung Hero Image
  • Zlatomir Fung Hero Image
Program Books/Zlatomir Fung, cello; Janice Carissa, piano

Zlatomir Fung, cello
Janice Carissa, piano

Sunday, November 20, 2022, 3pm
Hertz Hall

Support for Zlatomir Fung is provided by Fred Levin, The Shenson Foundation. 

Run time for this concert is approximately 90 minutes, including intermission, but not including any possible encores.

From the Executive and Artistic Director

Jeremy Geffen

This month, Cal Performances’ 2022–23 season shifts into high gear! Our carefully curated, season-long Illuminations programming (see below for details) continues with visits from new-music champions the Colin Currie Group (with Synergy Vocals) and Sō Percussion, and our classical music offerings are distinguished by appearances by acclaimed soprano Ying Fang (with pianist Ken Noda), early-music superstars (and Berkeley favorites!) Jordi Savall and his renowned Hespèrion XXI ensemble, and an astonishing young talent, cellist Zlatomir Fung (with pianist Janice Carissa). We’ll also enjoy a special Vocal Celebration, with three concerts honoring the otherworldly beauty of Georgian polyphony (Ensemble Basiani), the inspirational power of freedom songs from both South Africa and the United States (Soweto Gospel Choir), and—in a joyous launch of the upcoming holiday season—the heart-warming sounds that spring from Austria’s august six-century-old choral tradition (Vienna Boys Choir).

But this is just the start! From now until May 2023—when we close our season with the Bay Area premiere of Octavia E. Butler’s powerful folk opera Parable of the Sower and a highly anticipated recital with international dramatic soprano sensation Nina Stemme—we have a calendar packed with the very best in the live performing arts.

And what a schedule! More than 70 events, with highlights including the return of the legendary Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra under conductor Christian Thielemann (in his Bay Area debut); the beloved Mark Morris Dance Group in Morris’ new The Look of Love: An Evening of Dance to the Music of Burt Bacharach; the US premiere of revered South African artist William Kentridge’s astonishing new SIBYL; and a special concert with chamber music superstars pianist Emanuel Ax, violinist Leonidas Kavakos, and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. And these are only a few of the amazing performances that await you!

Illuminations programming this season will take advantage of Cal Performances’ unique positioning as a vital part of the world’s top-ranked public university. In the coming months, we’ll be engaging communities on and off campus to examine the evolution of tools such as musical instruments and electronics, the complex relationships between the creators and users of technology, the possibilities enabled by technology’s impact on the creative process, and questions raised by the growing role of artificial intelligence in our society.

This concept of “Human and Machine” has never been so pertinent to so many. Particularly over the course of the pandemic, the rapid expansion of technology’s role in improving communication and in helping us emotionally process unforeseen and, at times, extraordinarily
difficult events has made a permanent mark on our human history. Throughout time, our reliance on technology to communicate has—for better and worse—influenced how we understand others as well as ourselves. During this Illuminations season, we will investigate how technology has
contributed to our capacity for self-expression, as well as the potential dangers it may pose.

Some programs this season will bring joy and delight, and others will inspire reflection and stir debate. We are committed to presenting this wide range of artistic expression on our stages because of our faith in the performing arts’ power to promote empathy. And it is because of our audiences’ openness and curiosity that we have the privilege of bringing such thought-provoking, adventurous performances to our campus. The Cal Performances community wants the arts to engage in important conversations, and to bring us all together as we see and feel the world through the experiences of others.

Please make sure to check out our brochures and our website for complete information about upcoming events. We can’t wait to share all the details with you, in print and online.

Welcome back to Cal Performances!

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

Jeremy GeffenThis month, Cal Performances’ 2022–23 season shifts into high gear! Our carefully curated, season-long Illuminations programming (see below for details) continues with visits from new-music champions the Colin Currie Group (with Synergy Vocals) and Sō Percussion, and our classical music offerings are distinguished by appearances by acclaimed soprano Ying Fang (with pianist Ken Noda), early-music superstars (and Berkeley favorites!) Jordi Savall and his renowned Hespèrion XXI ensemble, and an astonishing young talent, cellist Zlatomir Fung (with pianist Janice Carissa). We’ll also enjoy a special Vocal Celebration, with three concerts honoring the otherworldly beauty of Georgian polyphony (Ensemble Basiani), the inspirational power of freedom songs from both South Africa and the United States (Soweto Gospel Choir), and—in a joyous launch of the upcoming holiday season—the heart-warming sounds that spring from Austria’s august six-century-old choral tradition (Vienna Boys Choir).

But this is just the start! From now until May 2023—when we close our season with the Bay Area premiere of Octavia E. Butler’s powerful folk opera Parable of the Sower and a highly anticipated recital with international dramatic soprano sensation Nina Stemme—we have a calendar packed with the very best in the live performing arts.

And what a schedule! More than 70 events, with highlights including the return of the legendary Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra under conductor Christian Thielemann (in his Bay Area debut); the beloved Mark Morris Dance Group in Morris’ new The Look of Love: An Evening of Dance to the Music of Burt Bacharach; the US premiere of revered South African artist William Kentridge’s astonishing new SIBYL; and a special concert with chamber music superstars pianist Emanuel Ax, violinist Leonidas Kavakos, and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. And these are only a few of the amazing performances that await you!

Illuminations programming this season will take advantage of Cal Performances’ unique positioning as a vital part of the world’s top-ranked public university. In the coming months, we’ll be engaging communities on and off campus to examine the evolution of tools such as musical instruments and electronics, the complex relationships between the creators and users of technology, the possibilities enabled by technology’s impact on the creative process, and questions raised by the growing role of artificial intelligence in our society.

This concept of “Human and Machine” has never been so pertinent to so many. Particularly over the course of the pandemic, the rapid expansion of technology’s role in improving communication and in helping us emotionally process unforeseen and, at times, extraordinarily
difficult events has made a permanent mark on our human history. Throughout time, our reliance on technology to communicate has—for better and worse—influenced how we understand others as well as ourselves. During this Illuminations season, we will investigate how technology has
contributed to our capacity for self-expression, as well as the potential dangers it may pose.

Some programs this season will bring joy and delight, and others will inspire reflection and stir debate. We are committed to presenting this wide range of artistic expression on our stages because of our faith in the performing arts’ power to promote empathy. And it is because of our audiences’ openness and curiosity that we have the privilege of bringing such thought-provoking, adventurous performances to our campus. The Cal Performances community wants the arts to engage in important conversations, and to bring us all together as we see and feel the world through the experiences of others.

Please make sure to check out our brochures and our website for complete information about upcoming events. We can’t wait to share all the details with you, in print and online.

Welcome back to Cal Performances!

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

Charles Ives
Four Songs from 114 Songs, arr. for cello and piano

Over the course of his life, Charles Ives—successful insurance man by day and prolific maverick composer by night—composed more than 150 songs in an extraordinary variety of styles about anything that caught his fancy. Between 1919 and 1922, he decided to gather them together—polishing songs written in his youth and adding more—into 114 Songs, a virtual autobiography of his life in notes and verse (since he also wrote many of the lyrics). He then published the volume at his own expense, along with a literary “Postlude” detailing his iconoclastic philosophy about music in general and songwriting in particular.

Ives’ songs, like his equally eclectic instrumental music, contain everything from sentimental parlor melodies in styles popular at the turn of the 20th century—such as “In the Alley” and “The Collection”—to path-breaking experiments in harmony and polytonality. Sometimes both the popular and the radical are combined in the same piece, such as the two-section “Memories” and “The Collection,” with its highly chromatic piano prelude and interlude flirting with atonality while the vocal lines are decorously conventional. And sometimes they are pure art songs in the European style, like “Two Little Flowers.”

More about “Two Little Flowers”: During World War I, the childless Ives couple took in a little girl named Edith from an impoverished New York City family and eventually decided to adopt her. The pretty, golden-haired child brightened their lives and is the subject of this 1921 song setting a text by Ives and his wife, Harmony. Fragile and lovely in a style reminiscent of French impressionism, the song depicts Edith and her close friend Susanna playing in the Ives garden.

Antonín Dvořák
Rondo for Cello and Piano in G minor, Op. 94

Before traveling to America in 1892 for an extended stay, Antonín Dvořák toured Bohemia and Moravia for five months, giving concerts of his chamber works with his two favorite trio partners, violinist Ferdinand Lachner and cellist Hanus Wihan. In planning his trip, Dvořák found that, since the tour began in January, he needed to quickly write something for his cellist. (Wihan was later to be the dedicatee of the composer’s renowned Cello Concerto.) Thus, he spent Christmas Day of 1891 creating the melodious Rondo for Cello and Piano in G minor. Two years later, while working in New York City, he arranged the work for cello with chamber orchestra. Paying tribute to a Wihan specialty, the piece features extensive passages for the cello in its highest soprano register.

Set in a relaxed Allegretto grazioso tempo, this work follows the classical rondo form of ABACABA, with A being a jaunty, dancing refrain theme led by the cello. The B section is smoother and more lyrical, with the cello playing a nostalgic theme over the piano’s arpeggios. Dvořák significantly increases the tempo for the virtuoso C section, which is lengthier and more dramatic than what has come before. On their returns, the A and B sections are elaborated, taking on a richer and more serious coloration. By the closing coda, the Rondo has become a much weightier piece than its opening had suggested.

Ludwig van Beethoven
Sonata for Cello and Piano in A major, Op. 69

The turn of the 18th into the 19th century brought advances in construction not only for the violin and piano but for the cello as well. Throughout the Baroque and early Classical periods, it had primarily played the essential but unglamorous role of continuo in ensembles: providing the ground bass for harmonic movement. But the development of the end pin securing the cello to the ground gave it greater resonance. And virtuoso cellists swiftly developed refined techniques that enabled the instrument at last to claim the solo role that Bach had first envisioned.

Haydn exploited the cello’s newfound prominence with two famous cello concertos. But it was Beethoven, with his five cello sonatas, who did the most to move this rich-toned singer to center stage. And in his Triple Concerto, he actually made the cello the leader among his soloists.

His Third Cello Sonata was written between 1807 and 1808 at about the time he was composing his Fifth and Sixth symphonies. It is dedicated to Baron Ignaz von Gleichenstein, who at this time was one of the composer’s closest friends, handled many of his business affairs, and was moreover an outstanding amateur cellist. The manuscript score shows Beethoven labored hard to achieve a balanced partnership between the dark-toned cello and the brilliant, percussive piano.

In overall tone, this lovely work harkens back to slightly earlier Beethoven pieces, notably the Violin Concerto, with its emphasis on singing lyricism and a mood of serene optimism. Therefore, Beethoven’s superscription on the manuscript score seems puzzling: “Inter Lachrimas et Luctum” (“Amid Tears and Sorrow”). Whatever sorrow he may have been feeling at that time is thoroughly sublimated in this music.

Two major lyric themes and a number of attractive subsidiary melodies propel the sonata-form first movement. The noble first theme, so well suited to the cello, is the real leader, dominating both the development section and the fine closing coda. Following a brief, stormy excursion into the minor mode, the cello introduces the more ecstatic second theme, soaring upward on a long scale into its expressive alto register.

The second-movement scherzo is a Beethovenian rhythmic game in which cello and piano are usually out of step with each other. The piano opens with a lurching syncopated theme. But when the cello tries to imitate its limping gait, the piano straightens up for a regular ONE-two-three rhythm, launching a continual tug of war. This A-minor scherzo alternates with a mellow trio in A major featuring warm chords for the cello; the piano continues limping off-the-beat in the background.

A gorgeous cantabile (singing) rhapsody—an embryonic slow movement—opens the finale. But after only 18 measures, it breaks off for the Allegro vivace finale proper, which combines two themes with dashing energy. In this sonata-form movement, we hear much more of the spirited first theme, which Beethoven makes the subject of his development section. But the second theme deserves our attention, as well: it begins with a little pleading phrase in the cello’s high register so eloquent it almost speaks words. Throughout, Beethoven provides plenty of sparkling fast passagework to show off both soloists’ virtuosity.

Judith Weir
Unlocked for Solo Cello

Like Ralph Vaughan Williams and Béla Bartók, Judith Weir’s creative voice has been heavily influenced by her study of folk music—in her case, not just folk music from her native England but from many places and times. And also like those two earlier composers, she does not simply quote folksongs or copy their shapes in her melodies. Instead, she uses folk materials, in the words of David C.H. Wright, “as a creative spur, resonating with complementary elements of her own musical personality.”

Weir is in the forefront of a remarkable group of women composers in the UK, and her operas have won particular favor. She has also composed music for the spoken theater, creating scores for the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal National Theatre (its production of Sophocles’ Oedipus cycle). Her focus on the voice and on dramatic storytelling carries over into her chamber music as well.

For this program, Zlatomir Fung has chosen Weir’s Unlocked for unaccompanied cello (1999), which draws its inspiration from folksongs of the American South. Here are her comments about the piece:

Unlocked arises out of my interest in the magnificent collection of American folksongs in the Library of Congress in Washington, collected by John and Alan Lomax in the 1930s. A significant proportion of the songs were collected from prisoners—mostly Black prisoners in Southern jails. The piece is made up of freely composed cello “fantasias” inspired by five of these songs:

No. 1 (“Make Me a Garment”) is based on a song sung by a prisoner in Florida, who was found by the Lomaxes in the tuberculosis ward and could only whisper his song.

No. 2 (“No Justice”) is a set of variations, using extended playing techniques, growing out of a simple prison song from Georgia (original title “Oh we don’t get no justice in Atlanta”).

No. 3 (‘The Wind Blow East’) comes from fragments of a chorus heard in the Bahamas; it represents the prisoner’s dream of a better life.

No. 4 (‘The Keys to the Prison’) is based on an original song sung by a 15-year-old Cajun girl in French. In the song, a boy in prison sings to his mother, “Hey mom, I’ve got the keys to the prison and I’m going to escape.” She says “How come, when the warders have the keys hanging round their necks?” The music composed around it is very fast and agile, and for me represents the prisoner’s fantasy that the prison doors are suddenly wide open, and the guards are all gone.

No. 5 (‘Trouble, Trouble’) is a transcription/arrangement of a blues sung by a prisoner in Alabama.

George Walker (1922–2018)
Sonata for Cello and Piano

One of America’s foremost 20th-century composers, George Theophilus Walker was a pioneer for most of his distinguished career. In 1945, he was the first African-American graduate of Philadelphia’s esteemed Curtis Institute, and shortly thereafter, he became the first Black instrumentalist to give a recital in New York’s Town Hall and to perform as a soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra (playing Rachmaninoff’s Third Piano Concerto under Eugene Ormandy). In 1956, he was the first African-American to earn a doctorate from the Eastman School of Music. And in 1996, he crowned these accomplishments by becoming the first Black recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music, America’s highest musical accolade, for his Lilacs for soloist and orchestra, commissioned by the Boston Symphony.

These achievements were astonishing for a man, born of Jamaican-American parents, who grew up in a generation when opportunities for African-American classical musicians were virtually nil. After finishing high school at the precocious age of 14, Walker graduated with honors from Curtis at an equally remarkable 18. Awarded a Fulbright scholarship, he made the pilgrimage to Fontainebleau in France, to study with the legendary pedagogue Nadia Boulanger.

Despite devoting most of the early years of his career to performing, Dr. Walker ultimately became a prolific composer in all musical genres, receiving commissions from such renowned ensembles as the Cleveland Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Atlanta Symphony, and the Boys Choir of Harlem. Composed in 1957, his Sonata for Cello and Piano reveals his complete understanding of the qualities of both instruments, the cello as well as his own instrument, the piano. Writes cellist Seth Parker Woods in Strings magazine, “This sonata is truly one of the lesser-known masterpieces of the repertoire…. It is a treasure and needs to be repositioned in the American classical music canon.”

In sonata form, the Allegro passionato first movement is the work’s most traditional. The cello’s urgent principal theme surges out of the piano’s rolling ostinato and then grows into a lively dialogue between the two instruments. Played in warm double stops, the cello’s second theme is slower, more pensive, and tinged with regret. The development section intensifies both moods as the piano becomes more aggressive in driving the music forward.

Marked “sostenuto,” the very slow second movement is an intensely expressive aria for the cello, tactfully supported by the piano. Woods comments that it “is intertwined with echoes of blues sonorities and a feeling of unrequited love. A soaring melodic line, which feels almost timid at the beginning, overtakes the piano part at its apex.” Throughout, Walker uses reflective pauses to draw us in deeper.

With its rapidly shifting moods and rhythmic intricacy, the finale is a challenge for both players. Woods again: “Fiery and playful, the cello takes on the role of both lead voice and blues-inspired walking bass that gets traded back and forth with the piano. Angular in shape, its unrelenting drive and fast meter changes keep the duo on their toes.” Near the end, Walker doubles the music’s speed. “I have found myself both smiling from sheer joy and holding on for dear life, especially as the piece nears the coda.”

—Janet E. Bedell © 2022

Janet E. Bedell is a program annotator and feature writer who writes for Carnegie Hall, the Met­ro­politan Opera, Los Angeles Opera, Cara­moor Festival of the Arts, and other musical organizations.

Zlatomir Fung, cello
Janice Carissa, piano

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The “Musical Mandate” of Groundbreaking Cellist Zlatomir Fung

Zlatomir Fung

At 23 years old, cellist Zlatomir Fung has won international recognition for his profound musicianship. Over the past few years, he has made history as the youngest (age 20) musician, and first American in four decades, to win First Prize at the International Tchaikovsky Competition (Cello Division); he has received the Borletti-Buitoni Trust Fellowship and an Avery Fisher Career Grant; and he has toured in the United States, Europe, and Asia with renowned orchestras and as a recitalist. This Sunday (November 20), Fung offers the Bay Area an exciting opportunity to experience his virtuosity firsthand as he makes his Cal Performances debut.

Equally noteworthy to his 2019 victory at the Tchaikovksy competition are the nearly two decades of extreme dedication and attentiveness to his craft that preceded and enabled this particular accomplishment. Fung began playing the cello at age three and, showing early promise as a thoughtful and natural musician, participated in his first competition at only 11 years old.

“From the beginning, the most important aspect of the competition was my relationship with my progress and motivation,” said Fung. “As a very goal-oriented individual, competitions gave me a strong sense of purpose and focus for my improvement as a musician.”

As reported by Musical America, Fung’s attachment to the cello flourished substantially around this time. When he moved with his family to Boston at age 12, he was newly inspired by the local musical scene and began for the first time to seriously consider a career as a musician. With the change of scenery came fresh opportunities for deepened engagement, including enrollment in a New England Conservatory prep school program. As he fantasized about a future performing on grand concert stages, his fascination with great artists such as Edgar Moreau motivated him to build and refine his craft.

Fung continued competing into high school, earning prestigious awards that included top prizes at the 2016 George Enescu International Cello Competition, 2015 Johansen International Competition for Young String Players, 2014 Stulberg International String Competition, and 2014 Irving Klein International Competition. He was also recognized as a 2016 US Presidential Scholar for the Arts and earned the 2016 Landgrave von Hesse Prize at the Kronberg Academy Cello Masterclasses.

In 2017, he went on to study cello performance at the Juilliard School under the mentorship of Richard Aaron and Timothy Eddy. It was at the end of his second year at Juilliard that Fung competed in the 2019 International Tchaikovsky Competition, one of the most important international classical music competitions, which is held every four years to reward and reveal new talent among musicians ages 16 to 32 (cello division).

Though he was already something of a musical sensation at the time, Fung’s record-breaking win was a game-changer for his career, “open[ing] several doors… regarding personal connections, publicity, and international exposure,” he shared.

Following this win, requests for recital engagements from performing arts presenters rapidly increased, and Fung was faced with the challenge of balancing schoolwork with both music competitions and performances. Though a transition from competitions to recitals often happens more gradually and later in a performer’s career, for Fung, the overlapping engagements have proven a natural complement to one another.

“In many competitions I competed in, recital rounds were an essential part of the experience. They also happened to be my favorite part: I had more control over the repertoire and the possibility of crafting a varied experience for the audience and the jury,” Fung said. “My mentality during competitions and my mentality in other performances and recitals are mostly the same [in that] I strive to create the most immersive and transporting musical experience possible for the audience.”

This “immersive experience,” which serves as a hallmark of Fung’s performances, is well-documented, and speaks to his technical mastery as well as his acute interpretations and artful programming. The young artist has been described as having a “rare… Midas touch: he quickly envelops every score he plays in an almost palpable golden aura” (Bachtrack). Fung has also been lauded for his “impeccable intonation and thoughtful phrasing” (Baltimore Sun), which create a richness of performance likened to “his own musical mosaic” (Benicia Herald).

Ahead of his Cal Performances debut, Cal Performances Executive and Artistic Director Jeremy Geffen shared his own excitement about the opportunity to host Fung. “Introducing the next generation of artists Cal Performances’ audiences didn’t yet know they couldn’t live without has been a hallmark of our series for decades,” said Geffen. “Though we’re always excited to support artists on their ascent, I am particularly thrilled to present Zlatomir Fung, an artist in whom virtuosity, intelligence, preternatural emotional maturity, interpretive insight, and the ‘x factor’ all find their nexus!”

Fung is admittedly “particularly passionate about programming” and, though a true lover of classical repertoire, creates layers of meaning by pairing canonic pieces with newer works. For his Cal Performances recital, Fung has crafted an eclectic and engaging program that matches cello showpieces by Beethoven and Dvořák with an arrangement of Ives songs and two contemporary works: Judith Weir’s Unlocked, which was inspired by American folk songs, many of which were contributed by Black prisoners in Southern jails, and a cello sonata with distinct blues sonorities by George Walker, the first Black composer to win a Pulitzer Prize for Music.

Of his meticulously crafted programs, Fung said, “I enjoy bringing lesser-known works together with staples from the repertoire. The ability to shape the arc of an entire concert experience—a whole afternoon or evening with an audience—lends recitals a more authorial feel and gives [me] space to create an entire world for the audience to fall into.”

Though Fung greatly appreciates the “tremendous honor” of his past competition awards, he is ultimately focused on the “larger musical mandate,” and the opportunities afforded—particularly through recitals—to shape our relationship to important works.

“The awards are only the beginning,” Fung said. “The actual work and meaning lie in the art itself. As a young musician starting out, I want to bring an energetic, exuberant, and original voice to my work. One day, I hope to have done enough meaningful musical work to make my awards only a footnote in my biography.”

Zlatomir FungAt 23 years old, cellist Zlatomir Fung has won international recognition for his profound musicianship. Over the past few years, he has made history as the youngest (age 20) musician, and first American in four decades, to win First Prize at the International Tchaikovsky Competition (Cello Division); he has received the Borletti-Buitoni Trust Fellowship and an Avery Fisher Career Grant; and he has toured in the United States, Europe, and Asia with renowned orchestras and as a recitalist. This Sunday (November 20), Fung offers the Bay Area an exciting opportunity to experience his virtuosity firsthand as he makes his Cal Performances debut.

Equally noteworthy to his 2019 victory at the Tchaikovksy competition are the nearly two decades of extreme dedication and attentiveness to his craft that preceded and enabled this particular accomplishment. Fung began playing the cello at age three and, showing early promise as a thoughtful and natural musician, participated in his first competition at only 11 years old.

“From the beginning, the most important aspect of the competition was my relationship with my progress and motivation,” said Fung. “As a very goal-oriented individual, competitions gave me a strong sense of purpose and focus for my improvement as a musician.”

As reported by Musical America, Fung’s attachment to the cello flourished substantially around this time. When he moved with his family to Boston at age 12, he was newly inspired by the local musical scene and began for the first time to seriously consider a career as a musician. With the change of scenery came fresh opportunities for deepened engagement, including enrollment in a New England Conservatory prep school program. As he fantasized about a future performing on grand concert stages, his fascination with great artists such as Edgar Moreau motivated him to build and refine his craft.

Fung continued competing into high school, earning prestigious awards that included top prizes at the 2016 George Enescu International Cello Competition, 2015 Johansen International Competition for Young String Players, 2014 Stulberg International String Competition, and 2014 Irving Klein International Competition. He was also recognized as a 2016 US Presidential Scholar for the Arts and earned the 2016 Landgrave von Hesse Prize at the Kronberg Academy Cello Masterclasses.

In 2017, he went on to study cello performance at the Juilliard School under the mentorship of Richard Aaron and Timothy Eddy. It was at the end of his second year at Juilliard that Fung competed in the 2019 International Tchaikovsky Competition, one of the most important international classical music competitions, which is held every four years to reward and reveal new talent among musicians ages 16 to 32 (cello division).

Though he was already something of a musical sensation at the time, Fung’s record-breaking win was a game-changer for his career, “open[ing] several doors… regarding personal connections, publicity, and international exposure,” he shared.

Following this win, requests for recital engagements from performing arts presenters rapidly increased, and Fung was faced with the challenge of balancing schoolwork with both music competitions and performances. Though a transition from competitions to recitals often happens more gradually and later in a performer’s career, for Fung, the overlapping engagements have proven a natural complement to one another.

“In many competitions I competed in, recital rounds were an essential part of the experience. They also happened to be my favorite part: I had more control over the repertoire and the possibility of crafting a varied experience for the audience and the jury,” Fung said. “My mentality during competitions and my mentality in other performances and recitals are mostly the same [in that] I strive to create the most immersive and transporting musical experience possible for the audience.”

This “immersive experience,” which serves as a hallmark of Fung’s performances, is well-documented, and speaks to his technical mastery as well as his acute interpretations and artful programming. The young artist has been described as having a “rare… Midas touch: he quickly envelops every score he plays in an almost palpable golden aura” (Bachtrack). Fung has also been lauded for his “impeccable intonation and thoughtful phrasing” (Baltimore Sun), which create a richness of performance likened to “his own musical mosaic” (Benicia Herald).

Ahead of his Cal Performances debut, Cal Performances Executive and Artistic Director Jeremy Geffen shared his own excitement about the opportunity to host Fung. “Introducing the next generation of artists Cal Performances’ audiences didn’t yet know they couldn’t live without has been a hallmark of our series for decades,” said Geffen. “Though we’re always excited to support artists on their ascent, I am particularly thrilled to present Zlatomir Fung, an artist in whom virtuosity, intelligence, preternatural emotional maturity, interpretive insight, and the ‘x factor’ all find their nexus!”

Fung is admittedly “particularly passionate about programming” and, though a true lover of classical repertoire, creates layers of meaning by pairing canonic pieces with newer works. For his Cal Performances recital, Fung has crafted an eclectic and engaging program that matches cello showpieces by Beethoven and Dvořák with an arrangement of Ives songs and two contemporary works: Judith Weir’s Unlocked, which was inspired by American folk songs, many of which were contributed by Black prisoners in Southern jails, and a cello sonata with distinct blues sonorities by George Walker, the first Black composer to win a Pulitzer Prize for Music.

Of his meticulously crafted programs, Fung said, “I enjoy bringing lesser-known works together with staples from the repertoire. The ability to shape the arc of an entire concert experience—a whole afternoon or evening with an audience—lends recitals a more authorial feel and gives [me] space to create an entire world for the audience to fall into.”

Though Fung greatly appreciates the “tremendous honor” of his past competition awards, he is ultimately focused on the “larger musical mandate,” and the opportunities afforded—particularly through recitals—to shape our relationship to important works.

“The awards are only the beginning,” Fung said. “The actual work and meaning lie in the art itself. As a young musician starting out, I want to bring an energetic, exuberant, and original voice to my work. One day, I hope to have done enough meaningful musical work to make my awards only a footnote in my biography.”

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