I. Peking Opera II. Shadows III. Pink Actress IV. Black Dance VIII. Red Sona
Eight Colors for String Quartet was the first piece I wrote after coming to New York in 1986. It shares the dark, ritualized singing, very dramatic form, and attention to tone color and dynamic with my pieces written in China, but still is very different from them. This string quartet marks the period of my first contact with the concentrated, lyrical language of Western atonality. From it, I learned how to handle repetition, but otherwise responded in my own way, out of my own culture. I drew on Chinese colors, on the techniques of Peking Opera - familiar to me since childhood. The work consists of eight very short sections, almost like a set of brush paintings, through which materials are shared and developed. The subjects are described by the eight interrelated titles, and form a drama, a kind of ritual performance structure. Not only timbre, but the actual string techniques are developed from Peking Opera; the vocalization of Opera actresses, and Buddhist chanting can be heard.I began to find a way to mingle old materials from my culture with the new, to contribute something to the Western idea of atonality, and to refresh it. I found a danger in later atonal writing to be that it is too easy to leave yourself out of the music. I wanted to find ways to remain open to my culture, and open to myself. Notes by Tan Dun
Classical Music | Music for Quartet
Tan Dun
Selections from “Eight Colors” for String Quartet
PlayRecorded on 05/28/2014, uploaded on 10/15/2014
Musician's or Publisher's Notes
I. Peking Opera
II. Shadows
III. Pink Actress
IV. Black Dance
VIII. Red Sona
Eight Colors for String Quartet was the first piece I wrote after coming to New York in 1986. It shares the dark, ritualized singing, very dramatic form, and attention to tone color and dynamic with my pieces written in China, but still is very different from them. This string quartet marks the period of my first contact with the concentrated, lyrical language of Western atonality. From it, I learned how to handle repetition, but otherwise responded in my own way, out of my own culture. I drew on Chinese colors, on the techniques of Peking Opera - familiar to me since childhood. The work consists of eight very short sections, almost like a set of brush paintings, through which materials are shared and developed. The subjects are described by the eight interrelated titles, and form a drama, a kind of ritual performance structure. Not only timbre, but the actual string techniques are developed from Peking Opera; the vocalization of Opera actresses, and Buddhist chanting can be heard. I began to find a way to mingle old materials from my culture with the new, to contribute something to the Western idea of atonality, and to refresh it. I found a danger in later atonal writing to be that it is too easy to leave yourself out of the music. I wanted to find ways to remain open to my culture, and open to myself. Notes by Tan Dun
More music by Tan Dun
Eight Memories in Watercolor (excerpts)
Performances by same musician(s)
Tango "Por Una Cabeza"
String Quartet in G minor, Op. 27
String Quartet No. 12 in F Major, Op. 96, B. 179, "American"
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