Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

10/10/2007

Lo Ka Ping - Lost Sounds of the Tao (2004, recorded 1970-71)

«An album of qin music collected from archives and attics alike, comprising the whole of the known recordings of Lo Ka Ping, a lost qin master privately active before his passing in 1980. A small number of other surviving recordings were unusable due to the poor sound quality. What we have here are a number of traditional works for the qin, as well as a number of original compositions by the performer himself. Also included are two performances taken from Chinese radio around the time of the second World War and delivered to American archives by a Chinese fighter pilot. The ability displayed here by Ping is something quite worth hearing. While the recording quality tends to ebb and flow, the technique remains at a high constant level. There are other recorded qin masters available, and one should certainly avail themselves of any opportunity to pick up a number of them. Ping places himself firmly in their company with these recordings.» (AMG)

Read more about Lo Ka Ping and the Qin

Arbiter Records Catalog

Link in comments (always appreciated)

20/06/2007

The Rough Guide to the Music of Himalayas (2002)

«Rough Guide to the Music of the Himalayas gathers together a varied assortment of music from the high altitudes and plunging valleys of Tibet, Nepal, and Ladakh. Centuries of geographical and political isolation have preserved some traditions virtually intact, while others have been exported to the West via the perceptions of well-meaning and/or culturally rapacious musical tourists. The 13 tracks range from folklore and devotional styles to the sort of new age pastiches one imagines might cling to the inner ear of a frost-bitten, oxygen-deprived Sherpa somewhere on Mount Everest. Wisconsin-born guitarist Steve Tibbetts supplies a pair of the latter. He sits in with a husky sweet-voiced singing nun named Choying Drolma, and if the resulting collaboration has its cloying, aging-hippie moments, it is also rather charming in an aggressively mellow way. On the more authentic side, a field recording of the cloistered inhabitants of a Buddhist nunnery perform a looping a cappella chorale, exhibiting unexpected overtones and a cyclical, repetitive momentum that Philip Glass would certainly recognize. A nearly seven-minute sample of a bass-grounded, gradually ascending chant by monks from the Drete Dhargon at Drepong Monastery could, in the right hands, be one of the most effective lease-breakers of all time. Many music lovers would not expect to have much fun listening to a compilation from this part of the world, but should they decide to give it chance, they would be agreeably surprised.» (AMG)

Link in comments

02/04/2007

Gu Yue Xin Yun (Old Music, New Sound) - Chinese Traditional Music

Some time ago, I discovered this amazing double CD of Chinese traditional music. At last, I decided to post it for the quality of the music, although I can’t give you any additional info aside from its title.
Well, maybe

some Chinese-speaking friend out there can give us a little help... It would be truly appreciated! (Click on the pics on the left to enlarge them)

«The origins of Chinese music can be traced back to distant antiquity. While European music was at its infancy 3,000 years ago, a complete musical theory and sophisticated musical instruments have already blossomed in China, owing largely to the orthodox ritual music advocated by Confucius. By the Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-220 A.D.), the imperial court has created a Music Bureau to oversee the collection and editing of ancient tunes and folk songs. Commercial contacts with Central Asia brought foreign music to China in the form of the p'i-p'a , or lute, and the hu-ch'in , a vertically-held violin. Composers were quick to adapt the new tunes and improve Chinese music. By the time of Emperor Hsuan Tsung (r. 713-755 A.D.) of the T'ang Dynasty , the court has organized the Pear Garden Academy song and dance troupe, cultivating a large number of musicians, and thus laying a firm foundation for Chinese music.» (From the net)

Landscape, Yunnan Province

Incense sticks, Yunnan Province

«There is a saying that 99 percent of all Chinese are farmers, and it's true that most Chinese music – excluding the classical, operatic and art music traditions – originates with rural, peasant traditions, and has deep regional roots. For centuries, farmers in the north have practiced wind-and-percussion ensembles. Ding County of Hebei is famous for artistry in the double reeds: the guanzi (double-reed pipe), the haidi (small oboe) and the suona (Northern oboe). In Xian, the Western Capital of China, musicians for centuries practiced the sheng (a free-reed mouth organ) and di (reeded transverse flute) for joining ensembles called Xian drum music. In the early 1960s, Liu Mingyuan and the Xinying Traditional Orchestra wrote the popular "Years of Happiness" based on rural traditional music. Eastern China is "fiddle" country, and bowed instruments such as the erhu, zhonghu, and the gaohu are popular as both solo and ensemble instruments. The Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Shandong provinces have produced a lot of fiddlers, including Wang Dianyu, Zhao Yuchai and the influential A Bing (1893–1950), a street musician famous for his many compositions, including his most famous "Listen to the Pine." In the south, folk music is often combined with dance. The huadeng is a large class of regional dance. Huadeng is known in the West as the "lantern dance" and translates literally as "flower lantern" – but has many other names: "jumping the lantern," "playing with the lantern" and lantern theater. The dance is popular in Yunnan, Guizhou, Sichuan and their surrounding areas (all in southern or southwestern China). The steps vary from place to place, but the dancers all carry lanterns or fans and they also sing.» (National Geographic)

Downtown Hong Kong

«Nell’antica Cina la musica era considerata arte destinata a perfezionare l’educazione dei giovani. La musica non solo aveva funzione didattica ma veniva investita di significati metafisici; era infatti considerata parte di un complesso sistema cosmologico e dalla sua perfetta esecuzione si faceva derivare il delicato equilibrio fra il Cielo e la Terra, e quindi, per estensione, la stabilità dell’Impero.

Nel Liji "Memoriale dei riti", il sistema musicale cinese viene spiegato in base a 5 gradi fondamentali denominati gong (palazzo), shang (deliberazione), jiao (corno), zhi (prova), yu (ali) e viene fatto corrispondere ad altri "gruppi di cinque", fattori costitutivi e caratterizzanti la vita cosmica e umana. Così, per esempio, secondo tale sistema filosofico-musicale, la nota fondamentale gong (fa) corrisponde all’elemento terra, al punto cardinale centro, al colore giallo, al sapore dolce, al viscere cuore, al numero cinque, alla funzione imperatore ecc. Analogamente la nota shang (sol) rappresenta i ministri; la nota jiao (la) rappresenta il popolo; la nota zhi (do) e yu (re) rappresentano rispettivamente i servizi pubblici e l’insieme dei prodotti; oltre, naturalmente, a ulteriori parallelismi tra ciascuna nota e un elemento, un punto cardinale ecc. La valenza magica attribuita ai suoni, le loro correlazioni cosmologiche e filosofiche possono spiegare certe peculiarità della musica cinese tradizionale; la sua lentezza e il suo mettere in evidenza la materialità di ciascun suono, come fonte di meditazione filosofica. Il do, come dominante in una composizione musicale, stava a indicare che il pezzo era stato composto per cerimonie sacrificali dedicate al Cielo, mentre la nota re veniva impiegata nelle celebrazioni che riguardavano gli antenati e la primavera. Il sol poteva riferirsi soltanto a brani che concernevano la terra, mentre il la celebrava l’equinozio d’autunno, l’imperatrice e la luna… (continua)

Check also The Internet Chinese Music Archive

Download links:

Disc 1: http://sharebee.com/189baf4b

Disc 2: http://sharebee.com/eac6304e

Hong Kong Bay