The track was originated from a rural village in Northern Shaanxi. During the winter recession, when villagers, free from farm work, gathered together to sing Daoqing in celebration.
Daoqing music was originated from Daoqing Opera, which has its roots in the ancient Shao Music of Shaoshan, Hunan. In the mid-Qing dynasty, an official from Xiangtan, Hunan, was assigned to Northern Shaanxi. He arrived with an entourage that included chefs, opera troupes, and household servants, bringing Daoqing Opera to the region. Daoqing Opera, in essence, is a form of Shao Music. Confucius once famously said, "Upon hearing Shao Music, I lost my taste for meat for three months." Later, during the War of Resistance Against Japan, artists at the Lu Xun Academy of Arts in Yan’an rediscovered this musical form and, playing on the homophone, renamed it Daoqing, meaning "The spirit of the Dao."
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The track was originated from a rural village in Northern Shaanxi. During the winter recession, when villagers, free from farm work, gathered together to sing Daoqing in celebration.
Daoqing music was originated from Daoqing Opera, which has its roots in the ancient Shao Music of Shaoshan, Hunan. In the mid-Qing dynasty, an official from Xiangtan, Hunan, was assigned to Northern Shaanxi. He arrived with an entourage that included chefs, opera troupes, and household servants, bringing Daoqing Opera to the region. Daoqing Opera, in essence, is a form of Shao Music. Confucius once famously said, "Upon hearing Shao Music, I lost my taste for meat for three months." Later, during the War of Resistance Against Japan, artists at the Lu Xun Academy of Arts in Yan’an rediscovered this musical form and, playing on the homophone, renamed it Daoqing, meaning "The spirit of the Dao."
In 2011, the Seattle-Kaohsiung Sister Cities Association approached me and asked me to write a small piece about Taiwan. When the Kaohsiung City delegation came to Seattle to participate in the Seattle International Friendship City event, they could be played by Americans, which was different from the previous welcoming events where Chinese faces played their own folk music instruments. Hence this little work.
It was originally written for several instruments of a small band at the time, piano, a flute, a clarinet, two violins, a viola, and a cello seven instruments. Later, in 2011, it was changed to the Symphony Orchestra. In 2016 the local community band Bayshore Symphony collaborated with me and gave me half time, which included this piece.
SeattleConcert西雅图中西合璧音乐会
The track was originated from a rural village in Northern Shaanxi. During the winter recession, when villagers, free from farm work, gathered together to sing Daoqing in celebration.
Daoqing music was originated from Daoqing Opera, which has its roots in the ancient Shao Music of Shaoshan, Hunan. In the mid-Qing dynasty, an official from Xiangtan, Hunan, was assigned to Northern Shaanxi. He arrived with an entourage that included chefs, opera troupes, and household servants, bringing Daoqing Opera to the region. Daoqing Opera, in essence, is a form of Shao Music. Confucius once famously said, "Upon hearing Shao Music, I lost my taste for meat for three months." Later, during the War of Resistance Against Japan, artists at the Lu Xun Academy of Arts in Yan’an rediscovered this musical form and, playing on the homophone, renamed it Daoqing, meaning "The spirit of the Dao."