David Harrington of Kronos Quartet talks about the inspiration and
development of A Chinese Home, a new piece conceived with pipa virtuoso Wu
Man and director Chen Shi Zheng A Chinese Home is structured in four parts,
with transitional elements between the sections and a recorded soundscape
that will be played in the hall during intermission as a prelude. Starting
within the home, visually represented by footage from the historic Yin Yu
Tang, the first section of the work evokes the China of the distant past
through ceremonial and spiritual music. A variety of folk songs, including
music from ethnic minority cultures in China, suggest rural villages. Kronos
and Wu Man perform on a variety of instruments, including percussion and
traditional Chinese wind instruments. The second part explores the
urbanization of China, starting in the 1920s and up to the Communist
revolution, through the music and spirit of Shanghai. Folk music transforms
into jazz and pop music. Music is appropriated as a tool for propaganda in
Mao's China (1949-1976), and folk tunes are rearranged and converted into
revolutionary songs. The sounds of personal life are expanded into the public
realm. Finally the sonic landscape is reconstructed through the electronic
manipulation of music that leads to a portrait of the contemporary China that
has emerged since the 1980s. Folk music is remixed; familiar music is
transformed through sampling. A new China that is connected to the old is
represented by an electric pipa, designed and built by San Francisco-based
MacArthur fellow Walter Kitundu. The public returns to the personal, though
transformed by modern life.
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