Compiled from the Performing Arts programmes* and Visual Arts exhibition records from HKADC’s Arts Yearbooks and Annual Arts Survey projects dating from 2010.

ReImagine Sonic Frontiers

Music

Event Detail Image
Art Genres / Sub-categories

Western Instrumental Music

Location

Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, Concert Hall

Start Date

2017/10/28

End Date

2017/10/28

Art Genres / Sub-categories

Western Instrumental Music

Location

Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, Concert Hall

Start Date

2017/10/28

End Date

2017/10/28

ReImagine Sonic Frontiers

Description

Description

To open its landmark 10th season, the Hong Kong New Music Ensemble presents five striking works from Asia and the USA that reimagine traditional musical materials and forms, exploring new sonic frontiers.
At the concert’s centrepiece is South Korean composer Unsuk Chin’s 15-player ensemble work, Gougalon (Scenes from a Street Theater). The composer writes that the work is about an “imaginary folk music” with Hong Kong being a point of inspiration:
“In 2008 and 2009 I visited Hong Kong and Guangzhou, among other places. The atmosphere of the old and poor residential neighbourhoods with their narrow, winding alleys, ambulatory food vendors, and market places…brought to mind long forgotten childhood experiences. It reminded me very much of Seoul of the 1960s, of the period after the Korean War and before the radical modernization….I was particularly reminded of a troupe of entertainers I saw a number of times as a child in a suburb of Seoul.”
Two works in this programme combine Chinese, Japanese and Western instruments. In Toshio Hosokawa’s Landscape V, the Japanese composer experiments with finely thin calligraphic textures verging on the edge of silence for Japanese shō and string quartet. As a tasteful pairing, local composer Charles Kwong’s quintet Sonata/ dissipated in silence evocatively explores the transitions between sound and music, and ambience and silence.
Two commissions are also presented in this concert. American composer Eric Wubbels’ sextet life-still, co-commissioned by the HKNME and MATA Festival (USA), is a “distantly starlit lullaby” (New York Music Daily) where each player’s heartbeat at times determines for the flow of the music. Chinese composer Yao Chen’s The Supplicant for solo oboe and 10 players explores musical expression at the frontier between the old and the new, the East and the West, and between irrational mysticism and rational logic.

Organiser / Presenter Hong Kong New Music Ensemble
Performing / Production Unit Hong Kong New Music Ensemble
Composer:Charles Kwong; Eric Wubbels; Yao Chen; Toshio Hosokawa; Unsuk Chin

Info

Admission

$150

Indoor / Outdoor

Indoor

Local / Non-local Production

Local

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