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

Music about China X Chinese Music Without Bounds

Music

Event Detail Image
Art Genres / Sub-categories

Chinese Instrumental Music

Location

Hong Kong City Hall, Concert Hall

Start Date

2016/02/27

End Date

2016/02/27

Art Genres / Sub-categories

Chinese Instrumental Music

Location

Hong Kong City Hall, Concert Hall

Start Date

2016/02/27

End Date

2016/02/27

Music about China X Chinese Music Without Bounds

The 44th Hong Kong Arts Festival

Description

Description

Traversing East, West, the Past and the Present
The development of Chinese symphonic music hinges upon the building of the repertoire, with a constant input of new, original compositions which open up channels between Chinese music culture and the rest of the world. Leading composers have contributed to the symphonisation of Chinese instrumental music over the decades with their consummate understanding of Chinese culture and mastery of compositional idioms by breaking down cultural, temporal or spatial boundaries.

To tie in with the theme of Chinese Music without Bounds of the symposium, this concert features some milestone works in Chinese orchestral music distinguished by orchestration. They include Doming Lam’s Autumn Execution (1993) which was one of the ‘Twentieth Century Chinese Music Classics’; Peng Xiuwen’s As the Moon Rises, which is a lyrical, impressionistic depiction of a moonlit scene through his ingenious orchestration; Zhao Jiping’s Raise the Red Lantern, a work that has been recognized the world over through the soundtrack scores on television and in the cinema; Zhu Jian’er’s inventive work, A Sorrowful Tune, which engages polyphony that consists of multiple, independent melodic voices; Guo Wenjing’s Chou-Kong-Shan (‘Sorrowful, Desolate Mountain’), a milestone in the history of development of the Chinese bamboo flute; Dirk Bosse’s Hallow-e’en Dances, a piece that may be described as ‘Chinese music written with a macro angle’ by a Western composer; and Liu Xing’s Symphony No. 2 for Chinese Orchestra, a monumental work fusing Chinese music with jazz, written in the 1980’s. The programme by itself is a conglomeration of rich and modern Chinese orchestral sounds, so come and join us as we soar in this magic realm where no boundaries exist!

Organiser / Presenter Hong Kong Arts Festival Society
Co-organiser / Co-presenter Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra
Performing / Production Unit Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra
Dizi:Tang Junqiao
Conductor:Yan Huichang
Composer:Doming Lam; Zhu Jian’er; Liu Xing; Zhao Jiping; Dirk Brossé; Guo Wenjing
Music Arrangement:Peng Xiuwen

Info

Lowest Price

$100

Highest Price

$380

Indoor / Outdoor

Indoor

Local / Non-local Production

Local

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