– Ryan Yeh
Friend. Not tool. Not vehicle. Friend.
He carries with him a phrase from his headmaster: discipline is consistency in effort and in performance. Even on difficult days, he returns to the instrument with that thought steady in his mind.
The Weight of the Stage
Lorna does not romanticise competition.
“It is an emotional rollercoaster.”
– Lorna Zhang
You hear extraordinary players warming up and doubt flickers. Confidence must be summoned deliberately. Results can feel seismic. Mental resilience becomes as essential as technique.
Ryan agrees that preparation is not only physical.
“Preparing for a competition is largely mental preparation… the mental preparation is as important as preparing your performance.”
– Ryan Yeh
He is clear-eyed about perspective, too.
“Some of the musicians who were not selected for the final might play as well or even better than me – it’s all about your performance on the day.”
– Ryan Yeh
Hayden understands resilience firsthand. The first time he entered this competition, he did not advance beyond the preliminary round. It sharpened rather than discouraged him.
Growth, not glory.
The Orchestra Awaits
Lorna speaks of Christchurch Town Hall with excitement – and honesty. Thrilled. Slightly nervous. Ready to explore the concerto with the CSO and James Judd.
Hayden calls performing the full concerto with orchestra “a huge honour.” To stand as soloist is to assume responsibility – for phrasing, for direction, for courage.
Ryan was “absolutely overwhelmed” when selected as a finalist.
“To be able to play Rococo with Christchurch Symphony Orchestra is the reason I entered the competition.”
– Ryan Yeh
The Rococo Variations – elegance, poise, lyricism edged with fire. For a young cellist, it is both showcase and confession.
Advice from the Edge of the Spotlight
Lorna urges young musicians to enter – there is nothing to lose. Be the best version of yourself. Listen deeply to others. Learn from everyone.
Hayden echoes her: give it a go. Don’t fixate on awards. The process builds more than prizes ever could.
Ryan frames it differently.
“Take the competition opportunity as a treasure hunt.”
– Ryan Yeh
Enjoy your moment on stage. Make friends off it. Sixty-plus young musicians in one place is not merely rivalry – it is community.
There it is again – that lightness. That refusal to let pressure extinguish joy.
On Saturday evening, the hall will fall silent.
Three young musicians will step forward carrying discipline, doubt, courage, colour, friendship, ambition – and sound.
And so, as the lights rise in the Douglas Lilburn Auditorium this Saturday evening, we wish these remarkable finalists steadiness of hand, clarity of spirit, and the courage to inhabit every note. May the music carry them – and us – somewhere unforgettable.
Roger Wyllie, View Mag