Violin diplomacy: N. Korean musicians, New York Philharmonic get in harmony

? Swirling dancers and musicians beating traditional drums welcomed the New York Philharmonic to North Korea Monday for a historic cultural exchange between countries that have been technically at war for more than a half-century.

In a burst of musical diplomacy notably devoid of propaganda glorifying leader Kim Jong Il or attacks on U.S. policy, North Korean dancers balanced water jars on their heads or twirled pink and green fans to entertain the celebrated American orchestra – which gave them a standing ovation.

The Philharmonic is the first major American cultural group to visit the isolated communist nation and the largest-ever delegation from the U.S. to visit its longtime foe.

As part of its 48-hour trip, the 106-member orchestra was to play a concert today that will be broadcast on state-run radio and TV, where the U.S. is the target of daily condemnation. The national anthems of both countries will be played, followed by a program featuring Antonin Dvorak’s Symphony No. 9 in E Minor – popularly known as the “New World Symphony” and written while the 19th-century Czech composer lived in the United States – and George Gershwin’s “An American in Paris.”

Orchestra musicians will also give master classes to North Korean students and play chamber music with members of the North’s State Symphony Orchestra.

Philharmonic music director Lorin Maazel said despite the trip’s political overtones, it was the right decision to go.

“It would have been a great mistake not to accept their invitation,” he said after arriving at the Pyongyang airport aboard a chartered 747 jet from Beijing. A stern-faced border guard checked his passport upon exiting the plane before North Korean cultural officials greeted the orchestra with handshakes and smiles.

“I am a musician and not a politician. Music has always traditionally been an arena, an area where people make contact. It’s neutral, it’s entertainment, it’s person-to-person,” Maazel said.

He said if the music moves the audience, “we will have made whatever contribution we can make to bringing our peoples just one tiny step closer.”

But before the American orchestra was to take the stage, it was the North Koreans’ turn.

At the 500-seat Mansudae Art Theater, North Korean performers played traditional instruments such as the kayagum, a type of zither, and sang about their country’s natural beauty.

Like all parts of society under the authoritarian North Korean regime, the arts are viewed as a means to instill loyalty and bolster Kim’s personality cult.

Still, only the last number was overtly political: A woman dressed as a guerrilla and brandishing a red scarf performed a dance dramatizing Korean resistance to Japan’s colonial occupation before World War II, which according to North Korean official history was led by late founding ruler Kim Il Sung, father of current leader Kim Jong Il.

Dancers in flowing white robes swept across the stage, symbolizing the harsh winters suffered by the fighters. At the triumphal end of the performance, the backdrop picturing the Korean peninsula’s tallest peak, Mount Paektu, morphed into a stylized Pyongyang skyline where the windows of every building were filled with light.