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Night of Modern Chinese Opera and Dance Drama

 

Re-enacting an era and reviving a unique musical genre

The history of modern Chinese opera and dance drama may be less than a hundred years, but this genre that is derived from western opera and dance drama has given generations of Chinese people unique memories.

The Orchestra will bring you some of the most unforgettable moments and tunes of modern Chinese operas and dance dramas in the past 50 years. The programme includes excerpts from The White-haired Girl, Liu Hulan, Wang Gui and Li Xiangxiang, Xiao'erhei Getting Married, Liu Sanjie , The Red Guards of Hong Lake and The Wilderness.

Programme Highlights:

The dramatic element in the songs featured in the programme made them audience favourites in China at one time, and led to a new era of development in Chinese vocal music. In this concert, they are sung by famous vocalists to the accompaniment of the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra. The rich nuances may perhaps bring back memories for many in the audience.  

Know your Chinese music:


Chinese Opera and Xiqu

The Chinese counterpart to western opera first appeared in the 1920s and 1930s.  It was a performing art form that at first emerged as a hybrid of drama and opera in the western context.  In the early days of its existence, it was more like a play with sung passages, and the singing was also very much a hybrid of the western and the Chinese vocalizing techniques.  While the subject matter was home grown, with the libretto in putonghua (called “Mandarin” at that time), the form and the musical idiom were from the West.  

As for the age-old performing art form of China, commonly (and misleadingly) referred to as “Chinese opera”, xiqu, it dates back to more than two thousand years, or at least more than six hundred years if one is to take it in its fully developed form, that is, the zaju of the Yuan Dynasty (1203-1368).  Therefore, it may well be the most systematic, most comprehensive and the oldest performing art extant in the world.  Often xiqu performances include acrobatics and martial arts, two elements not so common in western opera.  In China, there are so many types of regional opera that they number over 300.  Each is built on its own dialectal vernacular, local customs and folk music, and each is unique because the dialogues and vocal delivery are also rich in regional and local flavour. 

Unlike opera, xiqu is performed according to stock characters, role types and highly stylized movements that follow preset routines.  Characters are denoted by masks (or ‘painted faces’), which can be distinguished to be “good” or “bad”. As for the music, it is based on qupai, or set pieces, rather than composed for each specific production.  One can see that “opera” and “xiqu” are two different forms of performing art.  That is why today, academics would refer to the old type of operatic form as “xiqu”, and the contemporary counterpart of western opera as “Chinese opera”. 

Let's Meet Our Guests

 


Music from the Heart -
Yu Lihong – The Bittersweet Vocalizing Experience
(in Putonghua & Cantonese)

Navigator : Chan Ming-chi
Date : 12/5/2004 (Wed)
Time : 7:30pm
Venue : Room CR2, 7/F, Backstage, Concert Hall
Hong Kong Cultural Centre
Tsim Sha Tsui
Fee : $50 (for FoHKCO : $38)
Reservations : 3185 1670

 

 

Programme

Ensemble  The Wedding Scene (From the dance opera Yu-Mei-Ren)   Wu Zuqiang, Du Mingxin 
 Arr. by Chen Ning-chi 

From the dance opera The White-haired Girl:
Soprano and Orchestra  As the North Wind Blows
Soprano and Orchestra  It is Snow Ten Miles Around
Contrapuntal Singing and Orchestra  The Red Braids in Yours Hair
Ma Ke, Qu Wei et al   Lyrics by He Jingzhi and Ding Yi                Arr. by Phoon Yew-tien* 

From the opera Liu Hulan:
Soprano and Orchestra  Heavy Snow on the Coldest Day 
Luo Zongxian, Wei Feng Lyrics by the members of the Campaign Drama Society
Soprano and Orchestra     There’re Mountains after Mountains and Rivers After Rivers Chen Zi  Lyrics by Hai Xiao 

From the opera The Brother and Sister Pioneers:
Tenor and Orchestra Cock-a-doo, Cock-a-doo, Sing Away     An Bo   Lyrics by Lu You  Arr. by Chen Ning-chi* 

From the opera Xiao’erhei Getting Married:
Soprano and Orchestra   The Crystal Clear Water and the Icy Blue Sky   Ma Ke et al   Lyrics by Hu Sha, Tian Chuan 

From the opera The Red Guards of Hong Lake:
Soprano and Orchestra   As the Waves Surge on
Hong Lake
Soprano and Orchestra   See How the Suffering People Are Liberated
Zhang Jing’an and Ouyang Qianshu   Lyrics by Zhu Benhe et al
Arr. by Phoon Yew-tien* 

Intermission 

From the opera Liu Sanjie:
Soprano and Orchestra   Hear How This Side Sings and That Side Joins In
Contrapuntal singing and Orchestra  What Bears Fruit Up High?
Liu Chuan, Liu Sanjie   Lyrics by the Creative Team     
Arr. by Phoon Yew-tien* 

From the opera The Red Corals:
Soprano and Orchestra   Sadly the Sea Wind Blows
Soprano and Orchestra   In Praise of the Corals
Wang Xiren, Hu Shiping    Lyrics by Zhong Yibing, Shan Wen 
Arr. by Phoon Yew-tien*

From the dance opera The Twinkling Red Star:
Tenor and Orchestra The Red Star Shines On My Path As I Go to War
Soprano and Orchestra  The Azalea
Fu Gengchen    Lyrics by Wang Rujun    Arr. by Chen Ning-chi* 

From the opera Jiang Jei:
Soprano and Orchestra   In Praise of the Red Plum Blossoms    Yang Ming, Jiang Chunyang and Jin Sha    Lyrics by Yan Shu    Arr. by Chai Benyao 

From the opera The Wilderness:
Tenor and Orchestra Women, O Women
Soprano and Orchestra   O Tiger My Love
Duet and Orchestra  Man Lives Only Once
Wan Fang Lyrics by Jin Xiang  Arr. by Qu Chunquan* 

Ensemble   The Victory Yangge Dance (From the dance opera White-haired Girl   Ma Ke, Qu Wei et al   Arr. by Yu Chiu-for 

* Arrangement commissioned by HKCO/Premiere

 


 

Date: 14-15.5.04
Time: 8:00 pm
Venue:
Hong Kong Cultural Centre
Concert Hall
$150,$130,$100,$90


Zhang Guoyong
/ Conductor

  • Zhang Guoyong is the Professor of Shanghai Music Conservatory, the President and Artistic Director of Shanghai Opera House and Resident Conductor of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra currently.
  • In 1993, he was transferred by the government to study in the Moscow State Conservatory named after Tchaikovsky, where he studied under the world famous conductor
    G. Rozhdestvensky. In 1997, he obtained his PhD.Degree with distinction.
  • He has cooperated with many orchestras and well-known musicians both at home and abroad. At the end of 1998, he was invited to collaborate with the Russian Kremlin Ballet to conduct Nutcracker and Swan Lake, which turned to be a great success.

Barbara Fei / Host

  • A local famous soprano vocalist well-known for her contributions to music, Fei was invited on many occasions to perform in New Zealand, the United States, Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou in China, and many other South East Asian countries. She is dedicated to the promotion of choral arts in Hong Kong and has presented and hosted many international choral seminars and conferences in recent years.

  • She is currently a member of the Hong Kong Arts Development Council; Music Director and Conductor of the Allegro Singers; Chairman of the Hong Kong Association of Choral Societies; and Senior Music Advisor of HKCO. Fei was also awarded the Bronze Bauhinia star by the Chief Executive The Honourable Tung Chee Hwa of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China in 2001.

Chi Liming / Tenor 

  • Chi Liming entered the Vocal Department of the Shanghai Conservatory of Music with outstanding results in 1986, and joined the Shanghai Opera House as a Principal in 1991.  Since then, he has performed major roles in many famous operas.

  • Chi starred in the European premiere of the opera The Savage Land when it toured Europe in July 1997.  It was the first contemporary opera from China to be taken to Europe.  He was described as “an Italian operatic tenor true to form” by the media there.  He held his solo recital in 1998.

  • In recent years, Chi has been an active figure on the opera stage in China and other parts of the world.  Opera Arts described him as “a tenor that has made Italian directors sit up and listen”.

Yu Lihong / Soprano 

  • A National Class One Performer and a soloist with the Shanghai Song and Dance Troupe.  She graduated from the Vocal Department of the Shanghai Conservatory of Music with a B. A. degree (Honours) in 1996 way ahead of the stipulated term of studies.  She is currently studying for her Master’s Degree in the China Conservatory of Music. 

  • Yu is a winner of the Government Award at National Level in the Chinese Vocalists Competition.  Her voice has been heard in many parts of the world, with the media dubbing her as “the lark from China”.

  • Yu’s voice is endowed with a sweet, round clarity, brilliance, a broad range, and expressiveness.