Li Chuan Yun


Li Chuan Yun, also known as Chanyun Li or Babeli, is a Chinese violin virtuoso. He began studying violin at the age of three and won his first prize in Beijing when he was five. Li performed all the violin solos for the 2002 film Together and also starred in the film. He is often cited as having been one of the youngest professional violinists in the world.

Biography

Born to a musical family in the coastal city of Qingdao in Northern China, Li's career began at the age of three, when his parents taught him to play the violin at home.
At five, Li won his first championship at the Beijing Youth and Junior Violin Competition. At eleven, he received the top award at the Fifth Wieniawski International Youth Violin Competition, becoming the youngest winner in the competition's history.
Professor Lin Yaoji from the Central Conservatory of Music, the most prestigious music education center in China, recalls the first time he listened to six-year-old Li Chuanyun: "I didn't take it seriously at first, a six-year-old playing Lalo, I just dismissed it. But once the boy started playing, I saw huge talent. I was amazed." Li studied at the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing for 10 years before beginning studies at the Juilliard School in 1996.
At Juilliard, Li studied with Dorothy DeLay, Itzhak Perlman and Hyo Kang; he later continued his study with Delay and Kurt Sassmannshaus at the University of Cincinnati Conservatory of Music.
Professor Kurt Sassmannshaus commented, "It's very rare that one person has the ability to transform a musical idea immediately into sound. Most people have to think about the technique. But Li Chuanyun just plays."

Instruments

Li has performed on a 1784 Guadagnini on extended loan from the Stradivari Society. He also performed with the following violins from the Stradivari Society in recording Stradivari Campaign.
Li Chuanyun is best remembered by Chinese audiences for his violin performance in the renowned Chinese director Chen Kaige's movie Together in 2002. The story relates the love between a father and a son who plays the violin. Li performed and recorded the soundtrack's solo violin music, which the Washington Post described as "ethereal playing…which has given the movie such a magnificent aural backdrop."
In 2004, Li appeared in a documentary series of Radio Television Hong Kong of outstanding young Chinese musicians along with Lang Lang, Yundi Li, Jian Wang, Xuan Zhang and others.

Awards