The New York-based musicians blending traditional Chinese instruments with jazz
If jazz is about free-flowing expression, do the instruments have to be Western?
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.
With Zong on piano and Shen Jiaju on the pipa, a plucked lute, 1966 opens minimally but advances with a sense of dread.