scholarly journals Heroic pastoral and its national-style reception IN THE CANTATA “YELLOW RIVER” BY XIAN XINGHAI

Author(s):  
Lei Huang

The statement of the problem. The cantata “Yellow River” (黄河) is one of the most expressive works in Chinese musical art. The article offers interpretation of the cantata in the light of national Chinese pastoral symbolism. Created in 1939 by Xian Xinghai (冼星) and based on the text of a poem by Guang Weizhan (光未然), the cantata is still of great interest to the researchers. The poetic text of the cantata tells about hard struggle of the Chinese people against the Japanese invaders during the Second Sino-Japanese War. The Ukrainian listeners are faced with misunderstanding of the musical language and cultural norms of Chinese mentality. The artistic concept of pastoral genre as a harmonious communication between man and nature makes it possible to interpret the ethno-national language of this work in the system of European values. Rather, we can talk about a historical and cultural parallel corresponding to the “dialogue of cultures” as a leading trend in contemporary art and not about stylization. Heroism of European Baroque and Classicism was closely associated with the image of a person fighting for the social ideals (and even dying for them), while the pastoral emphasized images of nature, which served as excellent “scenery” for human actions. The relevance of the article increases interest in the problem of human communication in the globalized oecumene, in particular, in the composer’s interpretation of the cantata genre semantics in relation to a concept of “heroic man” and idea of pantheism as a philosophy of a pastoral man. The purpose of the article is to identify the established dominants of the Chinese national language in the cantata “Yellow River” by Xian Xinghai in the context of pastoral genre symbolism. Number of scientific publications investigate this piece, yet none of them addresses the issue of cantata genre semantics as a national reception of heroic pastoral. Thus, Shang Bei’s dissertation revealed the principle of constructing the Yellow River piano concerto, borrowed from the thematism of the cantata (the second section of the dissertation is devoted to the cantata itself, and the third – to the concerto). Xiangtang Hong’s (2009) dissertation explores the history of the cantata, its verbal text, Western European influences. Analysis of recent research and publications. Cantata as a genre and form of European music embodies a certain ideal of cultural identity through musical and poetic means. “The Yellow River” is no exception. The composition consists of 8 parts. There are parts where there is a tutti chorus (I, IV, VII, VIII), its female composition (IV), male duet (V), solo tenor (I), solo baritone (II), solo soprano (II), solo soprano (VI), solo pipa and the reader’s part (all parts except V), uniting all movements. The cantata uses a paired orchestral composition, but with three trumpets and solo parts for Chinese folk instruments – pipa, two sanshinas – large (bass) and small (soprano). There is a large percussion section (including seven Chinese folk instruments), harp and classical string section. The article emphasizes the role of the reader, who personifies Poet and becomes one of the most expressive timbre-dynamic lines of the music piece. The reader’s part not only reveals the patriotic idea of the work, but also contributes to the development of its form as a unifying element. This technique found in drama productions and modern cinematography made musical genre closer to the performance. Each movement is a “live scene” depicting extremely tragic times for China, when people proved the invincibility of their spirit. The poetic text makes it possible to distinguish two dramatic dimensions in the cantata: the one in which the Poet (the image of the Author) speaks of what has already happened and the second one glorifies the current events “here and now”. Each movement of the cantata portraits the changing image of the Yellow River, the waters of which can be calm, stormy, dark and transparent. The work is filled with national stylistics embedded in melodic-rhythmic and modal structures. Each movement of the cantata has several themes united by the idea of glorifying the native land and its people in different dimensions: lyrical contemplation (pastoral), stories about tragic times (narration) and singing about people (ode). Conclusions. One of the innovative principles of musical thinking is the shift from heterophony inherent in the Chinese folk song tradition to homophonicharmonic and polyphony. This proves the influence of Western European musical thinking. For example, the attraction to chromaticism, completely alien to Chinese music, at some stages of the dramatic development of the cantata becomes one of the stylistic features of its harmonious language. This is how the first part of “The Song of Boatmen on the Yellow River” begins – with a massive, brilliant chromatic descent. Thus, first of all, the hidden or the absent becomes paramount. The article notes the technique of timbre mixes of folk and symphonic instruments, which signals a professional work oncthematicism based on genrestylistic synthesis. The genre features of pastoral are revealed in the composer’s tendency towards sound-imaging symbolism associated with images of nature, which are equivalent to heroic images. In general, the interpretation of cantata as a heroic pastoral coincides with the early (baroque) stage of the genre in Europe (oratorio by G. F. Handel), which formed a complex of invariant elements in musical language, emphasizing genre semantics (the image of the “shepherd”). The work exposes the national features of the Chinese pastoral – a collective hero (people), heroic pathos, pantheism as a philosophy of love for nature, a lyrical and contemplative worldview.

2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 245-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang LI ◽  
◽  
Zhixiang XIE ◽  
Fen QIN ◽  
Yaochen QIN ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 100-113
Author(s):  
Y.V., Netsvitay T. V. Tararoev

Background. Goals In recent years, there is a growing interest in musical thinking, which is a key element of musicology and music philosophy, since music is a conscious, mental activity of a person and understanding the mechanisms of this activity, we can signifi cantly expand and deepen our understanding of music. The purpose of this study is to defi ne and supplement and clarify the concept of M. G. Aranovsky musical thinking our author’s approach, concretizing and clarifying the methodological and heuristic function of symmetry in musical thinking and its anthropological content. The work uses methods of comparison, analysis and synthesis. Musical thinking manifests itself in three forms of basic musical activity - composing, performing, listening, to which we also add theoretical (research) and pedagogical They are based on the processes of musical thinking and the fulfi llment of certain goals: the creation of an artifact, interpretation, reproduction, perception, analysis and theoretical understanding. The three spheres of realization of musical thinking are emotional-sensual, rational-logical and textual, semantic. These forms are closely intertwined and function on the basis of musical language, which is the foundation of any musical creative activity. The direct interaction of music and rationality is displayed in terms of “musical logic” and “architectonic musical ear”. Logic is the science of the most common laws of thought. These laws of thinking are expressed in the most abstract forms, patterns, rules that can be interpreted as conformity of something to specifi c norms, patterns. With regard to music, logic implies following certain standards and rules. Since the rational principle in music is closely associated with the irrational unconscious, the common logical norms that have been formed in a certain historical epoch within the framework of the dominant system of musical language are refracted through the individual stylistic features of the composer. A specifi c type of thinking - musical - generates the corresponding type of logic. Therefore, it is possible to express musical thinking by the sum of concepts - musical logic, musical speech and semantics of musical speech. M. G. Aranovsky identifi es four layers of musical logic: combinatorial, linguistic, contextual and artistic, i.e. those aspects (levels, edges) of the creative activity of a musician, in which there is logic. The lowest and at the same time fundamental level of musical logic is combinatorial, it is the sphere of primary elementary logical combinations of the simplest elements. However, the logic of this level extends to all scales of structures, from small motive links to sections of a one-part form. M. G. Aranovsky proposes to distinguish three types of logical combinations: 1. Identical - based on a constant repetition of structural units, where the formed elements are identical with each other (for example, AAAAAA). In terms of symmetry, this is a transformation of a simple movement along the time axis. It can again be noted as the simplest type of isomorphism, where only one characteristic changes - temporary. If we exclude it from consideration, then we can say that this is a “degenerate case” of isomorphism, which is an automorphism. 2. Equivalent - based on the modifi ed version of the repetition, in which there are both similarities and differences, i.e. incomplete identity is formed (for example, A1A2A3A4). From the point of view of symmetry, this combination of sequences represents the “unity” of the operation of symmetry, movement and violation of symmetry as such, i.e. in this sequence, some properties are repeated, while others change. This temporal process can be represented as isomorphism in the proper sense of the word, when some elements remain identical, while others change, and in general the objects are different, but similar. 3. Alternative - a combination of sequences of different units with complete exclusion of formal or obvious similarity (for example, ABC). Through symmetric transformations, this kind of logical combinations of primary elements can be described as an even greater symmetry violation, which preserves only the general “sequence of elements”, i.e. a small number of common properties, while these elements themselves are significantly different from each other. In this case, one can speak of a deep “transformation” of isomorphism, which can be called “metamorphism” (gr. Metamorphoómai - transformation of form). The basis of this transformation is a violation of the original symmetry in such a way that much more properties change than in the case of isomorphism. It can be schematically represented as A1 → B, A2 → C, etc. Thus, metamorphism can be considered both as a similarity, which has undergone a rather strong transformation, and as a symmetry violation, leading to a signifi cant complication of the structure. Thus, the result of this study is the position that, from the point of view of M. G. Aranowsky, the temporal process is the basis of musical thinking. The built-up chain “temporal process → musical logic → musical thinking” is the anthropological specifi city of human thought (in the musical sphere) associated with temporal processes in which a person is “immersed” and from which he cannot “exit” under any circumstances. Findings. we conclude that this chain can be called the “temporal-anthropological triad”. It represents the sequence “automorphism → isomorphism → metamorphism”. Each of its stages is different from the previous increase in the level of complexity. Of particular interest is the transition from isomorphism to metamorphism, since it is associated with the process of symmetry breaking. The mechanisms and principles of this disorder need further investigation.


2011 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Run-chun LI ◽  
Xiu-zhi ZHANG ◽  
Li-hua WANG ◽  
Xin-yan LV ◽  
Yuan GAO

2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 503-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li-Qiong YANG ◽  
Guang-Xuan HAN ◽  
Jun-Bao YU ◽  
Li-Xin WU ◽  
Min ZHU ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document