Diversity in China

Encores and Standing Ovations

Numerous articles featuring Tyler Thompson can be found on the internet following his recent performance at the gala fundraising dinner of the Purple Silk Music Education Foundation. Local and mainstream media are highlighting the great talent of a young African American teen and Oakland native who displays great skill in the art of Chinese Opera.

Tyler began singing for the Purple Bamboo Orchestra while attending Lincoln Elementary School. According to his teacher, Sherlyn Chew, he began learning children’s songs as his range, proficiency and fluency progressed. According to SF Gate, his first solo was at the San Francisco Davies Symphony Hall and Herbst Theater at the age of 6. He has also performed on television shows such as “Good Morning America” and at the U.S. State Department, where he sang for then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Chinese Vice Premier Wu Yi. One performance was at HP Pavilion in Silicon Valley in front of 13,000 people. A video of that performance has been played in China and seen by countless millions.

According to the Los Angeles Times, his mother, Vanessa Ladson, said she chose Lincoln because of its high academic standards, as well as its proximity to her job at a utility company. She also stated for the Chronicle that Tyler gets his musical gifts from his grandmother, Addie Thompson, who sings, and his father, who is a percussionist. When asked how she felt about Tyler singing Chinese opera she stated that “Music is universal.” “It has no borders, no barriers.”

The Chronicle also highlighted that one of the featured speakers was Aisha McDaniel, a member of the first Purple Bamboo Orchestra in the mid-1990s, when she was about 11 years old. Now she is 24 and she spoke fluent Mandarin as part of her presentation.

Nigerian-born Pop Star in China

Emmanuel Uwechue is often referred to as the “unlikely” pop star that is taking the spotlight in China. His Chinese name is Hao Ge (pronounced How Guh) which also means “Good Song” in Chinese. Although Chinese is not his native tongue, Mr. Uwechue is fluent and sings in Mandarin.

While Mr. Uwechue is one of many foreigners to have made a name for himself in China, he is definitely the first African to have reached widespread success in China. Many of the songs by 33 year old Uwechue are soul-infused versions of classic Chinese love songs, with faster rhythms.

Mr. Uwechue’s contribution to the Chinese music scene is viewed as a symbol of the growing relationship between Africa and China. A New York Times article about Hao Ge highlights that among nations with close Sino-African* ties, Nigeria in particular has benefited from Chinese capital. China has invested more than $7 billion in energy, communications and infrastructure in the country, which exports some $4.7 billion in crude oil to China each year, according to a recent statement by Li Yizhung, China’s minister of industry and information technology.

Mr. Uwechue’s transition into music is my personal favorite. According to jamati.com, Uwechue began his music career as a country music singer when he wasn’t working as an astrophysicist (he has a mathematics degree from University of Monrovia).  It will be interesting to see a collaboration between him and some R&B folk.  Him singing in Mandarin and them in English.  Now that would be fascinating.

As referenced in afronline.com “It just goes to show there are no boundaries if you are determined to do something.”

*Sino-African relations refers to the historical, political, economic, military, social and cultural connections between China and the African continent.

PAASSC will continue to highlight ways in which China is diversifying to help dispel the myths and barriers that some may perceive in our children’s ability to build relationships and opportunities within the Chinese culture.

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