ID :
230756
Fri, 03/02/2012 - 06:16
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/230756
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Praise For Malaysian Teenage Music Prodigy
From Hafizah Kamaruddin
NEW YORK, March 2 (Bernama) -- Malaysian music prodigy Tengku Ahmad Irfan
Tengku Ahmad Shahrizal is not only a talented genius but a rare talent who, at
the age of 13, has shown "sophistication and depth" in his work, according to
his piano professor Dr Yoheved Kaplinsky.
Kaplinsky, a renowned classical pianist, lecturer and professor of music at
the Juilliard School here, said the young man excelled in piano and composition.
The artistic director of the institution's pre-college division, which
caters to young talented musicians aged between seven and 17, was impressed with
Tengku Ahmad Irfan's performance the moment he came for audition at the school
in February last year.
Kaplinsky said that though Tengku Ahmad Irfan had only been under her
tutelage since last September, he had made tremendous progress.
"His compositions are so mature and sophisticated that even his teachers are
amazed that he can do it," she told Bernama and RTM after a visit by the
Malaysian prime minister's wife, Rosmah Mansor, and several members
of the Association of Wives of Ministers and Deputy Ministers (Bakti) to the
prestigious performing arts school here Thursday.
Heaping praise on the young Malaysian, Kaplinsky predicted that the teenager
would make it in the music world since "he has all the ingredients of a
wonderful musician" and that "his future is pretty much assured".
Rosmah arrived here on Wednesday for a four-day working visit in conjunction
with United Nations' 56th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women
(CSW). She is scheduled to deliver a luncheon talk at the CSW on Friday.
Describing Tengku Ahmad Irfan as hardworking and conscientious in his work,
Kaplinsky said: "Whatever we give him, he does to perfection. Definitely a rare
talent."
Noting that Irfan was able to play anything he wanted as he worked on
perfecting his skills, she said the school would provide him performance
opportunities along the way.
"Irfan will grow into a very sincere and very caring musician, and has both
the talent and the personality to become a real artist," Kaplinsky said, noting
that the Malaysian's humbleness and refined personality would work in his favour
in his career as a musician.
Meanwhile, Tengku Ahmad Irfan, who is from Permata Seni Muzik, said he felt
honoured to have been selected to further his studies in music at the school
considering the stiff competition to get admission. He has won a scholarship
from the school.
Founded in 1905 as the Institute of Musical Art by Dr Frank Damrosch, the
school enrolls less than seven per cent from the thousands of applicants each
year. Last year, 5,000 people applied for the coveted spots.
Tengku Ahmad Irfan, the eldest child of an ENT specialist, said he only came
to know of the school during a performance here in 2010 when he was drawn to an
advertisement at a bookshop.
He was fortunate that his father, Tengku Dr Ahmad Shahrizal Tengku
Omar, a senior lecturer at the Faculty of Medicine at Universiti Malaya,
received a fellowship to further his studies in New York. The family then moved
to the Big Apple last year.
Tengku Ahmad Irfan, who is pursuing a double major in piano and composition
as well as an elective in conducting at the Juilliard School, is also studying
at a normal school, called the Professional Children's School, here.
His talent in music came to the fore at the age of seven, and in two years
he acquired the certificate of excellence from Trinity Guildhall for Grade 5
Solo Piano and subsequently for Grade 8.
-- BERNAMA