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The New York-based musicians blending traditional Chinese instruments with jazz

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Shen Jiaju, left, pianist Li Zong, centre, and Yang Feifei pictured before their performance at Carnegie Hall in New York. Photo: AFP

If jazz is about free-flowing expression, do the instruments have to be Western?

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In a cross-cultural experiment, a group of young Chinese artists musicians based in New York is testing the possibilities of fusion by bringing jazz and other Western forms to performances on traditional instruments.

With a concert at Carnegie Hall last week timed for the Chinese Lunar New Year, the artists delved into quintessentially Chinese subject matter, but through a markedly modern lens.

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On Vermilion Bird, a composition named for the creature of Chinese mythology that represents fire, composer Li Zong offered jazzy progressions.

Yang Feifei added a more Chinese touch on the huqin, the two-stringed bowed fiddle, while also complementing the jazz feel by playing pizzicato.

The music turned bleaker on 1966, also composed by Zong, a reference to the start of the Cultural Revolution.

Now is the time for Chinese instruments to get out of their comfort zone
Yang Feifei, musician

With Zong on piano and Shen Jiaju on the pipa, a plucked lute, 1966 opens minimally but advances with a sense of dread.

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