Overture Magazine: 2016-2017 Season May-June 2017 | Page 46

{ impromptu 44 O v ertur e | L aura F armer Fei Xie BSO Principal Bassoon He likes meat and music seasoned to taste. For BSO Principal Bassoon Fei Xie, making music and cooking have a lot in common. And he’s passionate about both. “It’s a similar approach: With music, everyone gets the same notes on a page, but you put your own interpretation into it and the piece sounds different from person to person. For cooking, you may get the same recipe and ingredients as another per- son, but your food still comes out tasting different. That’s what I like. You can infuse both music and cooking with your own personal style.” Unsurprisingly, Xie’s personal cooking style is influenced by his Chinese heritage. “When I was growing up in China, my dad always cooked a lot. He became a parent early because his parents died in the 1976 earthquake. At age 19, he had to go to work, cook, and care for his younger siblings, who were 15 and 11 at the time,” explains Xie. Despite these tough circumstances, Xie’s father, Zhengang Xie, rose to become the concertmas- ter of the Peking Opera, performing on the huqin, a fiddle-like instrument. Young Fei followed in his father’s footsteps, training as a musician at the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing—the same elite music boarding school that Lang Lang also attended. Today, the wonderfully aromatic concoctions simmering in Xie’s kitchen include an array of traditional Chinese dishes. “I’m into meat. So one of my favorite things to make is slow-cooked meat,” he says. “I caramelize sugar, then add the meat, cover it with water and cooking wines, and let it simmer for hours.” Xie’s two sons Kevin, 6, and Colin, 3, are big fans of dad’s cooking. His wife, a freelance flute player, whose name is also Fei, appreciates the food but has reservations about the accompanying mess. “I’m a messy cook! I cook like a real chef!” jokes Xie. “If I weren’t a musician, my dream would be to have my own cooking show.” bsomusic.org