Buch, Englisch, Band 19, 256 Seiten, Paperback, Format (B × H): 170 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 590 g
Reihe: Intercultural Music Studies
Ancient Traditions, Contemporary Trends
Buch, Englisch, Band 19, 256 Seiten, Paperback, Format (B × H): 170 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 590 g
Reihe: Intercultural Music Studies
ISBN: 978-3-86135-652-3
Verlag: VWB-Verlag für Wissenschaft und Bildung
This book looks at some of these traditions: at the changing tastes and attitudes towards the guqin zither and at a musical transfer at the end of the 18th century, at the minority music of the Naxi and Uyghur people, at developments in the 20th century such as Li Jinhui’s children operas in the 1920s or at the interdependence between music and power under and after Mao Zedong. Stepping into the 21st century, a new folk song movement and the careers and success of glittering girl bands are examined, as are the ways Chinese in Taiwan look at their old motherland. Two music-related themes are Chinese shadow play and the folk dance genre yangge, and last not least we also can read an advice for westeners how to open their ears for Chinese music.
The book comes with an 80-minute audio CD whose 17 tracks give sound to the papers in this publication.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Contents:
Contents
+++ Preface (Bernhard Hanneken & Tiago de Oliveira Pinto)
+++ Helen Rees: Traditional Performing Arts in China Today: Cultural Policy and Practice
+++ Barbara Mitt ler: Of Pride and Prejudice. Rethinking Music and Power in China
+++ Alexander Rehding: From ??? to Moo-Lee-Chwa. History of a Musical Transfer ca. 1796
+++ Omid Bürgin: Representations of Guqin in China Today: From Recurrent Nostalgia, Cultural Etiquette to Revival Movements
+++ Frederick Lau: Celestial Music, Glamorous Angels: Girls Glitzing up Traditional Chinese Music
+++ Frank KouwenhovenCan Chinese Music Swing?
+++ NING Er: Soft Knife. China’s Folk Singer/Songwriters in the Last Decade
+++ TANG Lijiang: Chinese Shadow Play. Improvisation and Collaboration
+++ Johannes Sturm: The Rise and Fall of a Musical Genre: Li Jinhui’s Children Operas in the Context of Time
+++ Yongfei DU: Yangge: A Genre of Chinese Folk Dance
+++ Chuen-Fung WONG: Intercultural Encounters, Global Circulations, and the “Original Ecology” Style of Uyghur Music in the Late Twentieth Century and Beyond
+++ CHUNG Shefong: Who Is Singing Over Here? China as Ancestors’ Home and as a Foreign Land
+++ The Authors
+++ Content of CD
+++ Index