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A friendship built through music and travel between China and the Philadelphia Orchestra

By LI MINGMEI in Philadelphia | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2026-01-30 04:35
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Canadian conductor Naomi Woo performs with the Philadelphia Orchestra at the Lunar New Year Concert at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts in Philadelphia on Wednesday. Li Mingmei/China Daily

Music and travel have brought people together and strengthened connections across cultures and through friendship for more than five decades.

As the Year of the Horse approaches, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the China National Tourist Office in New York co-hosted a special concert alongside a Ni Hao! China tourism promotion, bringing a vibrant Chinese New Year festive atmosphere to the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts.

"I showed up in a little bit of red myself. It's always wonderful to see the hall decorated, and I feel like it adds to the festive kind of nature of the concert," 27-year-old audience member Eddie McKeown, a regular orchestra attendee, told China Daily.

Outside the hall, audiences also viewed the photo exhibition On the Road in China — China and the Philadelphia Orchestra, which showcases archival images from the orchestra's historic tours to China, capturing memorable performances alongside vivid scenes of Chinese cities, cultural landscapes and everyday life. The orchestra was the first American ensemble to perform in China in 1973 and has returned many times, both as a full orchestra and through smaller ensemble exchanges.

"It's brilliant to build relationships between musicians around the world," McKeown said.

Davyd Booth, a veteran violinist who has traveled to China around 15 times, was part of the first trip and the most recent trip, and is now planning for the upcoming trip in November.

"Anytime to celebrate a festive holiday is great, and no better way to do it than with beautiful music," he told China Daily.

"That is very important for us to be able to share and go to another country, for people from that country to come to us," Booth told China Daily. "The world has gotten smaller and closer, and yet the tangibles of music and making sound have gotten even larger because of being able to share so much and being influenced in our hearing new sounds from China, and China hearing new sounds from us."

Booth added that, as a musician who has traveled regularly to China, he feels "fortunate" to have witnessed the country's development and changes, observed the differences brought by China's modernization, and performed in many cities across the country. With the enduring friendship between China and the orchestra, more music exchanges have been built.

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