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Mozart Violin Sonata in C major, K. 296 1. Allegro vivace Ma Si-Hon (馬思宏), violin; Tung Kwong-Kwong (董光光), piano 錄音日期: 約1963年 (Recorded circa 1963) Digitized by Patrick Wong from LP: Insignia Records INS-501 --- 馬思宏先生生於中國廣東,七歲開始學琴,他的啟蒙老師是他的三哥,中國著名小提琴家,作曲家,音樂教育家馬思聰先生。馬思宏先生1948年赴美,1950年畢業於新英格蘭音樂學院。1951年成為第一位獲得海費茲獎(Heifetz Award)的小提琴家。1954年他與著名鋼琴家董光光女士結為伉儷。 董光光女士生於1923年。上海人,早年跟隨母親-中國早期的鋼琴家王瑞嫻學琴,後師從意大利鋼琴家指揮家梅·帕器學習鋼琴。1945年與上海工部局樂隊合作,演奏勃拉姆斯的第一鋼琴協奏曲,同台的還有後來成為丈夫的馬思宏演奏了勃拉姆斯的小提琴協奏曲。到美國後跟隨世界著名鋼琴家施納貝爾學琴,也是施納貝爾的最後一個學生。 ---- Well-known Chinese-American pianist, Tung Kwong-Kwong, (Mrs. Kwong Kwong Ma) died Monday, August 5, 2013 in a suburb of Philadelphia. Born in Shanghai, China, Tung Kwong Kwong was first taught piano by her mother, Zoen Yien Wong, one of the first Chinese women to study music abroad, and one of the first Chinese graduate of Boston’s New England Conservatory. Tung Kwong Kwong subsequently studied with Maestro Paci, conductor of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, before coming to the United States in 1946, to continue her musical studies. Cited by Arthur Fiedler of the Boston Pops as his favorite soloist, she was a frequent performer with the Boston Pops. Tung Kwong Kwong was also one of the last students of the famous pianist, Artur Schnabel, with whom she studied until his death in 1951. She also studied with Karl Ulrich Schnabel, both in New York, and in Tremezzo on Lago Como, in Italy. In the 1950s, she worked with Leonard Shure, in Cleveland. In the late 1950s, Tung Kwong Kwong was invited to Germany by her brother Maestro Ling Tung, conductor of the Seventh Army Symphony Orchestra, and in numerous appearances with the orchestra, Tung Kwong Kwong performed all five piano concerti of Beethoven and the two by Brahms. Later, Tung Kwong Kwong joined her husband, the late violinist, Ma Si-Hon, to whom she was married for over fifty years, and they recorded and toured together throughout Western Europe, North America, and the Far East, appearing at the Salzburg and Dartington Festivals, among many others. Tung Kwong Kwong and Ma Si-Hon were also resident artists at the Marlboro Music Festival in the early 1960s, and continued to tour together in the 1960s and 1970s in America, under Columbia Artists Management. In the 1980s, the duo made several tours of the Far East, performing and teaching both in Taiwan and Mainland China, as well as Hong Kong and Bangkok. In the early 1970s, Tung Kwong Kwong and Ma Si-Hon founded the Si-Yo Music Society, which presented annual series of chamber music concerts in New York City between 1971 and 2004 in support of the Chinese cummunity. At its inception, performances were held at the Chinese School in Chinatown, later becoming established at Pace University’s Schimmel Auditorium, and subsequently, Merkin Hall near Lincoln Center. Among the artists who appeared regularly with them in these concerts were many alumni from Marlboro, as well as other notable artists, including Stanley Drucker, principal clarinetist of the New York Philharmonic, Metropolitan Opera soprano, Benita Valente, and Jerry Grossman, principal cellist of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra. In addition to her many duo and ensemble performances, Tung Kwong-Kwong appeared regularly in New York, performing at Town Hall, Merkin Hall, and later in a solo recital in Carnegie Hall. Through her long career, starting as a teenager in Shanghai, Tung Kwong Kwong remained a remarkable and influential teacher and coach teaching piano to many gifted young players. She taught privately and was an adjunct professor of piano at Kent State University School of Music in Ohio and also taught at Pace University in New York City. (https://www.wetzelandson.com/browsere...)