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From: tomc~nl.sequel.net
Date: Mon, 28 Oct 1996 23:34:07 +0800
Subject: Asia Pacific Harmonica Festival

I've just returned to Manila from Taipei in Taiwan, where I attended the
Asia Pacific Harmonica Festival. This is the first such Festival. At last
year's World Harmonica Championships in Yokohama, a group of the top Asian
players got together and decided Asia deserved its own Festival, which would
run in alternate years to the World Championships, which I'm guessing will
now stay in Europe/North America.

This year's festival was organized by the Harmonica Art Promotion
Association [HAPA] of Taiwan, which has run three previous national
Festivals, beginning in 1993, and therefore has some experience at running
such events.

This year's Festival was remarkably successful. Over 800 attended, mostly
from Taiwan, but with a 48-member contigent from Japan, as well as
contingents from Hong Kong, the People's Republic of China, Korea, Malaysia,
Singapore and the Philippines. SPAH's Bob Williams would have been envious:
most of the competitors were young -- elementary, high school and college
students. And their level of musicianship and technique was quite high.
The youngest competitor didn't even come up to my belt -- must have been no
more than 7 or 8 years old. He was included in the final evening's line-up
of performers, playing Flight of the Bumblebee and something by Bach. One
of the finest performers of the entire competition was a 12-13 [?] year old
Japanese boy who played tremolo flawlessly.

The program ran non-stop from 8:30 a.m. til after 9 p.m. Competitions were
held in Youth Tremolo [17 contestants], Adult Tremolo [32], Chromatic [25],
Duo [20], Trio [24], 4-9 person Ensemble [23], 10-45 person Ensembles [14]
and Diatonic [5]. Concurrently there were workshops on Tremolo [2],
Chromatic [2], Diatonic [1]. The judges were drawn mostly from the top
ranks of Asian players, along with a few top musicians/composers from
Taiwan. Among them were [several of whom have attended a SPAH convention
within the last few years]: Shigeaki Iwasaki and Yushin Yoshida from Japan,
Ho Jia-Yi of People's Republic of China, Ho Bai-Chang of Hong Kong, Chang
Yia-Gaw from Malaysia, Sun Jen-Kuan of Singapore, Lee Hea-Bong of Korea [and
yours truly, included, I suppose, as the only Caucasian in attendance and a
veteran of an earlier HAPA Festival]. A harmonica store did brisk business
throughout -- though I was disappointed at the small number of CDs for sale
[including four of Bonfiglio's were there, released in Japan].

The next Asia Pacific Festivals will be held in Malaysia [1998] and Korea
[2000]. The World Championships will be held in Germany [1997] and France
[1999]. MARK YOUR CALENDARS.

The organization of this Festival was outstanding. HAPA deserves a very big
round of applause for setting a very high standard.

Thomas "Tomcat" Colvin
Manila, Philippines

[Incidentally, I have a new e-mail address. Been away from the list for
about 2 months, got a stack of back digests to catch up on.]