Liu Yuening, member of the Social and Legal Committee of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. He is currently the master tutor of the Folk Music Department of the Central Conservatory of Music and the deputy director of the World Music Center of the Central Conservatory of Music.
At the age of 12, he became famous at home and abroad for his beautiful and beautiful "Azalea".
In 1987, he graduated from the Central Conservatory of Music with excellent grades and stayed at the school to teach. During the study period, he studied under the tutelage of Mr. Zhang Wuwei, Gui Xili, and Professor Xiang Zuhua and under the tutelage of Professor Li Xiangting, specializing in the art of Chinese guqin.
In 1992, he was admitted to the college as a graduate student and devoted himself to the research of dulcimer music performing arts.
In 1994 received a Master of Arts degree. Liu Yuening has filmed the film "Spring Buds" and the TV feature films "Changing China", "Unforgettable Growth Road", etc., and has won various awards and educational gardener awards in many domestic and foreign national instrumental music competitions. A large number of playing professionals have achieved remarkable results in various competitions in various regions.
In 1993, he won the first prize of the 2nd Jiangnan Silk and Bamboo Competition at home and abroad.
In 1996, he participated in the creation of the famous "Qingmei Jingyue" Chinese Folk Music Ensemble.
In 1998, he was awarded the title of "Outstanding Young Backbone Teacher" by Beijing Higher Education Bureau.
She has held many solo solo and teacher-student concerts in Beijing Concert Hall and other places;
From April to July 2005, he held six special dulcimer concert series for teachers and students in Beijing, the first of its kind in China. He composed and arranged more than 10 dulcimer solo and ensemble works, and performed at home and abroad. He has performed in various music festivals and concerts, and has been well received; he has also arranged a large number of dulcimer accompaniment for erhu works, which further enriches the expressive power of erhu music art.
In 2005, she developed the "Divided Tone Qin Bamboo", which filled a gap in Chinese dulcimer production. He has visited more than 20 countries and regions in Asia, Europe and America for exchange performances and lectures, and has won unanimous praise from well-known news media and music critics at home and abroad.
In May 2005, as a dulcimer musician, he became the first Chinese judge of the Czech International Dulcimer Competition.
In September, he was sent by the Ministry of Education of China to the Liszt Conservatory of Music in Hungary for a one-year study visit.
In 2006, in recognition of her contributions to China-Hungary and China-Ukraine exchanges in music and culture, she was awarded the Hungarian Ministry of Education's public primary school - Sino-Hungarian Bilingual School and Ukraine's Volyn National Higher Music and Art School.