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Margaret Leng Tan

 
Artist: Margaret Leng Tan

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Formal Connection With:

  • Active: '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Classical
  • Instrument: Piano
  • Representative Albums: "Sonic Encounters: The New Piano

Biography

Margaret Leng Tan has established herself as a major force within the American avant-garde -- a highly visible, talented, and visionary pianist whose work sidesteps perceived artificial boundaries within the usual concert experience and creates a new level of communication with listeners. Embracing aspects of theater, choreography, performance, and even "props" such as the teapot she "plays" in Alvin Lucier's Nothing Is Real, Tan has brought to the avant-garde a measure of good old-fashioned showmanship that is tempered with a disciplinary rigor inherited from her mentor, composer John Cage. This has won Tan acceptance far beyond the norm for performers of avant-garde music, as she is regularly featured at international festivals, records often for labels such as Mode and New Albion, and has appeared on American public television, Lincoln Center, and even at Carnegie Hall.

Born in Singapore, Tan was the first woman to earn a doctorate from Juilliard, but youthful restlessness and a desire to explore the crosscurrents between Asian music and that of the West led her to Cage. This sparked an active collaboration between Cage and Tan that lasted from 1981 to his death, during which time Tan gained recognition as one of the preeminent interpreters of Cage's piano music, partly through her New Albion recordings Daughters of the Lonesome Isle and The Perilous Night/Four Walls. After Cage's death in 1992, she was chosen as the featured performer in a tribute to his memory at the 45th Venice Biennale.

Tan takes a lively interest the musical potential of unconventional and unlikely instruments, and her groundbreaking CD in 1997 issued as The Art of the Toy Piano on Point Music/Universal Classics elevated the lowly toy piano to the status of a "real" instrument. Tan is certainly the world's first, and so far only, professional toy piano virtuoso. Since then, her curiosity has extended to other toy instruments as well, substantiating her credo, "Poor tools require better skills," as Marcel Duchamp once put it.

Tan favors music that confronts and defies the established boundaries of the piano and her toy instruments, and has collaborated with like-minded composers to create works for her, such as Somei Satoh, Tan Dun, Michael Nyman, Julia Wolfe, Toby Twining, and Ge Gan-Ru; she is also a favorite of composer George Crumb. Tan's authority on matters of Cage has evolved from that of an expert interpreter to responsible scholar protecting the textual integrity of his work; Tan edited the fourth volume of Cage's piano music for C. F. Peters and in 2006 gave the premiere of his newly discovered 1944 work Chess Pieces, which she also edited for publication. Tan's Mode DVD of Cage's Sonatas and Interludes includes a video in which she examines the original, 1940s-era preparation materials for the work. Photogenic and comfortable with the camera, Tan is the subject of a documentary by filmmaker Evans Chan, Sorceress of the New Piano: The Artistry of Margaret Leng Tan, which aired on the Discovery Channel in 2004 and will be available as a DVD on Mode Records in 2007. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Margaret Leng Tan
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Margaret Leng Tan
Birth name Margaret Tan Hee Leng
Born 1945
Singapore
Genres Classical
Occupations Pianist,
Toy pianist
Instruments piano
toy piano

Margaret Leng Tan (Chinese: ; Min Nan: Tân Lêng; pinyin: Chén Líng) is a classical music artist known for her work as a professional toy pianist, performing in major cities around the world on her 51 cm-high toy pianos.[1] She is also known to be a classical music performer using unconventional instruments like toy drums, soy sauce dishes, and cat-food cans.[2]

She was born in Singapore on 12 December 1945, the daughter of former Straits Times Press chairman C. C. Tan, and started taking music lessons at the age of six. In 1961 the young Tan took first place in the Singapore-Malaysia annual piano competition, and won a scholarship to study at The Juilliard School at age 16 in the following year. In 1971 she became the first woman to earn a Doctorate in Musical Arts at Juilliard, and became the diva of the prepared piano, inserting nuts and bolts into the instrument and playing it inside out to rave reviews.[3]

In 1981 Tan met John Cage, and since then they continued to work together for the last 11 years of his life. In 1984 she was awarded a US National Endowment for the Arts grant. Between 1990 and 1991 she gave retrospective concerts of Cage's music in collaboration with artist Jasper Johns.[3] Since then she has since been hailed as "the leading exponent of Cage's music today" (The New Republic) and "the most convincing interpreter of John Cage’s keyboard music" (The New York Times). She performed Cage’s music throughout North America, Europe and Asia and in the PBS "American Masters" films on John Cage and Jasper Johns. The association with Cage also led to her enchantment with the toy piano. She made her debut on the instrument in 1993 at New York’s Lincoln Center, playing Cage's 1948 Suite for Toy Piano. Since finding this first toy piano, she continued to acquire many others, including a 37-key Schoenhut toy grand piano. She continues to, in her own words, "remain wholeheartedly intrigued by the toy piano's magical overtones, hypnotic charm, and not least, its off-key poignancy."

It was in 1993 at a thrift store in the East Village in New York Tan bought her first toy piano which cost a mere US$45. The 45-cm-high, two-octave little toy thus became her instrument to deliver the 1948 Toy Piano Suite, and her first love to toy pianos.[2] She recorded her groundbreaking album, The Art of the Toy Piano, on Point/Polygram in 1997.[3] In 2002 the pianist performed in Berlin on 9 March, and in New York for a separate celebration of both John Cage and composer Morton Feldman on 13 April. In that same year Tan made history as the first Singapore-born musician to play in the Isaac Stern Auditorium of the Carnegie Hall on 14 April 2002, and performed Cage's Concerto for Prepared Piano and Chamber Orchestra with the American Composers Orchestra.[4]

Tan was also featured playing Cage's 4'33" on her toy piano in the Singapore documentary Singapore GaGa by Singaporean film-maker Tan Pin Pin. She is also never far from her toy pianos, and with a fair share of tickling stories on her travels with them. In 2001, when she was invited to perform in an abbey in Provence, France the technical staff advised her to store her toy piano away to prevent bat droppings from landing on her precious piano. In the end her piano was placed under the grand piano; this arrangement of a little piano underneath a big one reminded Tan of Matroska dolls. In another occasion, she remembered a funny sight when she carried her piano onboard the plane, and had it strapped to a seat next to her.[1]

Evans Chan's 2004 documentary, Sorceress of the New Piano: The Artistry of Margaret Leng Tan, has been invited to numerous international film festivals including Vancouver, Melbourne and AFI/Discovery Channel's SILVERDOCS, where it was nominated for Best Music Documentary. Sorceress and Chan's The Maverick Piano, which features live performances by Tan, are available as a Mode Records DVD.[5]

Tan is the featured performer for "Inside the Piano" on the Treasures of The New York Public Library Video Series.[6][7]

A Singapore citizen, Tan now resides in Brooklyn, New York,[3] and has collected 18 toy pianos.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Sandra, Leong (2006-03-19). "Her piano forte". Singapore: The Sunday Times. p. L10. 
  2. ^ a b c Tan, Shzr Ee (1998-07-29). "In the brew is music from a teapot". Straits Times. 
  3. ^ a b c d Tan, Shzr Ee (1998-07-29). "Tinkle, tinkle, (little) piano star". Straits Times. 
  4. ^ "Tan's the first at Carnegie Hall". Straits Times. 2002-03-21. 
  5. ^ http://moderecords.com/catalog/194tan.html
  6. ^ http://www.nypl.org/news/treasures/index.cfm?vidid=11
  7. ^ http://www.nypl.org/news/treasures/

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