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Yo-yo Ma, Silk Road make stop in Seoul

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  • Yo-yo Ma, Silk Road make stop in Seoul

    Yo-yo Ma, Silk Road make stop in Seoul
    By Warren Lee

    THE KOREA HERALD
    June 17, 2004, Thursday

    A program featuring Armenian folk songs, Romany melodies and a Korean
    12-stringed zither or "gayageum" thrown in for good measure may appear
    chaotic, but there is a common thread that unites these sounds. All
    were heard along the Silk Road, the ancient trade route that connected
    the people and traditions of Asia and Europe.

    For the past six years acclaimed cellist Yo-yo Ma has led the Silk
    Road Project on a nomadic concert series devoted to music from lands
    along the historic route. Ma has helped unearth and introduce a
    diverse range of isolated musical traditions that remain as exotic
    to contemporary ears as they were to European travelers like Marco
    Polo several hundred years ago.

    The Silk Road Project will make its first appearance in Korea at the
    Seoul Arts Center on June 24, with Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble
    performing music stretching from Azerbaijan to Korea with stops
    in between.

    Ma originally created the Silk Road Project, which has gone on to
    successfully capitalize on the exoticism shrouding the Silk Road's
    historical legacy, as an earnest study of how musical ideas travel
    through various geographic and cultural terrains. It has become
    more than a mere travelogue in sound and aims to underscore more
    similarities than differences among traditions, while integrating
    Western classical works with ties to those traditions.

    The concert will begin with a pair of Korean artists. Kim Ji-hyun's
    performance of "gayageum byeongchang," traditional Korean singing
    with accompaniment on the gayageum, will contrast with a newly
    commissioned work by composer Jacqueline Kim. "Tryst," written for
    the gayageum, oboe and cello, is a love song sung between the famed
    scholar and poet Jung Chul and the beautiful courtesan Chin Ok. The
    vocal cries are brought to life by the gayageum, with the cello and
    oboe mirroring the traditional ensemble functions carried out by the
    "piri," a Korean wind instrument.

    The second half of the program features the music of Azerbaijan,
    Armenia and Roma arranged for string quartet, performed by Ma, violist
    Nicholas Cords and violinists Jonathan Gandelsman and Colin Jacobsen.

    In "Mugham-Sajay for String Quartet," composer Franghiz Ali-Zadeh
    mimics the sounds of traditional Azerbaijani and Middle Eastern
    instruments, transforming a Western string quartet into a small
    Azerbaijani folk band. Her piece evokes the spirit of her native
    mugham, a collection of suites that form the backbone of Azerbaijani
    classical music. Ali-Zadeh, who received a doctorate in musicology
    from Baku Conservatory, exemplifies the Western-trained composer who
    straddles two musical worlds. Chinese virtuoso Wu Tong will perform a
    traditional work on the sheng, a Chinese mouth organ made of bamboo or
    bronze pipes. In "The Prospect of Colored Desert" written for Chinese
    lute, violin, cello and sheng, Chinese composer Jia Daquan, a painter
    who turned to music when his vision became impaired, imagines a black
    ink brush painting a desert.

    The Silk Road Project represents another step in Ma's musical journey
    that extends well beyond performance of the classic cello repertory.
    Fascinated by how ideas evolve when they travel over geographic and
    cultural distances, Ma founded the organization to study the flow of
    ideas along the Silk Road. The Silk Road Project is now an umbrella
    organization and common resource to a variety of artistic, cultural
    and educational projects.

    Yo-yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble will perform June 24 at 7:30 at
    the Seoul Arts Center Concert Hall, located near Nambu Bus Terminal
    Station, Subway Line No. 3, Exit 5. Tickets start at 30,000 won. For
    more information, contact (02) 720-6633 or visit www.sac.or.kr.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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