Wong Jum-sum loved music of all kinds, and had a particularly deep-seated passion for Western classical music.

In the 1950s, both Wong and classical music were finding their feet in Hong Kong society. The best they could do was to openly embrace the unknown.

To embrace the unknown, one needs support from all directions.

Thanks to Radio Hong Kong, Wong was able to listen to enticing music all day everyday, in that process learning to appreciate simultaneously the distinctive worlds of Shankar and Schubert.

Thanks to Leung Yat-chiu, he knew classical music held no special mystical aura. Whatever sounded good was good music.

Thanks to Wong Jum-sum himself, he learnt to read and absorb the principles and practices of making music, no matter whether they came from Bach or Beethoven.

Thanks to Hong Kong of the 1950s, he encountered a succession of visiting maestros, extending immensely his ideas about music and life.

Mozart: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik,
K.525 (1st movement) (1959)


Wong Jum-sum played the harmonica, and very well too. His harmonica team won many inter-school competitions, Wong recalled, and they were able to play immaculately all the four movements of Eine Kleine Nachtmusik. He and his friends enjoyed music and played to their hearts. They were lucky to live in a time when Mozart was not yet the untouchable music deity he later became.

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Composer:
Wolfgand Amadeus Mozart

Performers: Bruno Walter
conducting the Columbia
Symphony Orchestrar

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