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Founded by Yehudi Menuhin & Richard
Pontzious
Inaugural concerts conducted in August 1990 by
Yehudi Menuhin
The 103 members of the Asian Youth Orchestra (AYO) are among the finest
young musicians in China, Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Chosen through highly
competitive auditions held throughout the region, they are together for six weeks each
summer, initially for a three week Rehearsal Camp, then to perform on tour for three weeks
with international solo artists and conductors.
In 17 years, they have performed with cellists Yo-Yo Ma, Mischa Maisky,
violinists Gidon Kremer, Gil Shaham, Leila Josefowicz, Young Uck Kim, Akiko Suwanai and
Cho-Liang Lin, soprano Elly Ameling, pianists Alicia de Larrocha, Cecile Licad, Leon
Fleisher and Jon Nakamatsu, the Beaux Arts Trio and trumpeter Hakan Hardenberger. Among
those who have conducted AYO are Sergiu Comissiona, Alexander Schneider, Eri Klas, Tan Dun,
Okko Kamu
and the orchestra's co-founders, Yehudi Menuhin and Richard Pontzious.
Since its debut concerts in 1990, the Asian Youth Orchestra has performed in New York's
Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center, at the White House, at the United Nations, and at the
Hollywood Bowl. On two European tours the Orchestra has appeared in Amsterdam's historic
Concertgebouw and opened the fall concert season in Berlin's Konzerthaus.
In 1996, AYO was the first international orchestra in more than 50 years to perform in
Hanoi, Vietnam. The orchestra returned four years later for two concerts in Hanoi and Ho
Chi Minh City before continuing on to Australia for debut concerts in the famed Sydney
Opera House for the 2000 Olympic Arts Festival.
In 1997, AYO was in Hong Kong and Beijing with cellist Yo-Yo Ma for the world premiere
performances of Tan Dun's Symphony 1997. That tour, the longest ever
undertaken in China by an international orchestra, also marked AYO's unparalleled third
appearance in Beijing's 10,000-seat Great Hall of the People.
Since 1990, the Asian Youth Orchestra has played 261 concerts in
167 cities to more than one million people. Millions more around the world have seen and heard the orchestra on CNN,
CNBC Asia, NHK Television, Radio and Television Hong Kong, and Star TV.
Some 1,000 to 1,500 musicians in 12 Asian countries and territories audition each year
for AYO. The youngest is 15, the oldest 25. When selected, they study with an exceptional
artist-faculty from the Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, National, San Francisco and Pittsburgh
symphony orchestras, Boston Musica Viva, the Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras and
Monnaie Opera.
A tuition-free summer program, the Asian Youth Orchestra is designed to ignite a pride
for what can be achieved by Asian musicians in Asia, while
affecting a positive influence on the brain and talent drain that continues to frustrate
all Asian nations. It is the orchestra's intention to expose Asia's brightest young
musicians to rich and varied artistic experiences that include rare opportunities for
exchange, study and performance.
A formation committee of Hong Kong business men and women created the organizational
structure for the Asian Youth Orchestra in 1987 and established it as a non-profit
charitable trust qualified under Section 88 of the Hong Kong Inland Revenue Ordinance as a
tax-exempt institution.
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