
Chinese pianist Lang Lang performs during 
his concert in his hometown, Shenyang, 
capital of northeast China's Liaoning 
Province, Aug. 29, 2010.
At 28, pianist Lang Lang is playing sold-out 
performances around the world and topping the classical charts. As a young 
artist he reveals his flamboyant charisma when the occasion calls for it, as 
happened this summer when he played at the open-air Audi on Stage Summer 
Concert, at Beijing's Temple of Heaven. 
Together with three American 
Broadway stars at the crossover musical concert, Lang gave a performance of 
George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue. He also played an impromptu piece with the 
China Philharmonic Orchestra. 
He has just returned from taking a 
month-long summer vacation. He has a new album and serial concerts lined up and 
he is enthusiastic about it all. 
"Everything's going too well for me at 
the moment. Now it's time to get busy," he says cheerfully at the press 
conference in Beijing for the release of the Sony two-disc CD, Live in Vienna, 
of his performance at Vienna's Musikverein Concert Hall in February and March 
this year. This release is Lang Lang's second live recording after the 
best-selling Live at Carnegie Hall in 2004, which marked his international 
breakthrough as a recording artist. 
"For me, there are few halls around 
the globe that have the same prestige as Carnegie Hall and the Musikverein. Of 
course there are other great halls, but I always feel these two have a unique 
place in people's hearts. So I felt that after Carnegie Hall, the Musikverein 
would be the place where I should do another live recording," he says. 
The CD, together with a Blue-ray DVD, contains the pianist's rendition 
of Beethoven's dramatic Piano Sonata No 23 in F Minor, the "Appassionata", with 
the more youthful and innocent Piano Sonata No 3 in C Minor as well as Albniz's 
impressionistic Sketches of Spain in Book 1 of "Iberia", in addition to the dark 
material of Prokofiev's innovative Piano Sonata No 7 in B Flat Major. He says 
all the melodies have had an emotional impact on him. 
Lang Lang started 
playing the piano at the age of 3 and first gained international attention when 
he was 17 playing a Tchaikovsky concerto with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra at 
the "Gala of the Century". 
Though he is an inspiration to young 
musicians everywhere now, Lang Lang says that he sees it as his personal mission 
to broaden the appeal of classical music to the widest possible audience. 
To further his achievements, he will expand his musical range to include 
cutting-edge technologies such as electronic music and exploring opportunities 
for 3D video and Web-based music education initiatives. 
"I enjoy the 
innovative and creative energy of classic music," he says. "Its place is not the 
library or museum. It needs to keep on progressing."
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