玻璃体混浊用什么药| 特需病房是什么意思| 为什么会长鸡眼| 女人小便出血是什么原因| 赡养什么意思| 限高是什么意思| 神疲乏力吃什么中成药| 益生菌的食物是什么| 突然暴瘦是什么原因| 眉毛白是什么原因引起的| 吃什么能瘦| 狐臭看什么科| plv是什么意思| au585是什么金| 做nt挂什么科| 什么面条好吃| 赵本山什么时候死的| 碱性磷酸酶高吃什么药| 甘油三酯高是什么原因引起的| 六味地黄丸吃多了有什么副作用| 喝酒容易醉是什么原因| 硬座是什么意思| 什么人不穿衣服| bag是什么意思| 文书是什么意思| 尿管型偏高是什么原因| 婚检都检查什么| 后嗣是什么意思| 高血压吃什么药效果好| 乳腺增生是什么原因引起的| 属鸡的是什么星座| 男人前列腺在什么位置| 心结是什么意思| 护士资格证什么时候考| d g是什么牌子| 秦二世为什么姓胡| dj管是什么| 衣钵是什么意思| champion是什么牌子| 乔治白属于什么档次| 王母娘娘叫什么名字| 胃息肉是什么症状| 贵州有什么美食| 免签国家是什么意思| 灰指甲应该挂什么科室| 419什么意思| 天秤座后面是什么星座| 罗红霉素治什么病| 乌冬面是什么做的| 属猴配什么属相最好| 梦见手机失而复得是什么意思| 孢子是什么东西| 嗜睡挂什么科| CHANDO是什么牌子的化妆品| 光滑念珠菌是什么意思| 腿部肿胀是什么原因引起的| n是什么牌子的鞋| 女性痔疮挂什么科室| 周星驰是什么星座| 胃疼胃胀用什么药效果最好| 肉苁蓉有什么功能| 小孩子隔三差五流鼻血什么原因| 经警是做什么的| 拔牙需要注意什么| 吃什么补铁| 蓝莓有什么功效| adr是什么激素| 阴间到底是什么| 太上老君的坐骑是什么| 晴对什么| 5p是什么意思| 什么的游泳| 南音是什么意思| 3月16号是什么星座| 女人下面水多是什么原因| 拉疙瘩屎是什么原因| 九曲红梅是什么茶| 小孩长白头发是什么原因| lalabobo是什么牌子| heineken是什么啤酒| 揭榜是什么意思| 呼吸科属于什么科室| 闪光眼是什么症状| 月月红是什么花| 小儿发烧吃什么药| 背痒是什么原因| 龋齿挂什么科| 老鼠为什么怕猫| 世界第一长河是什么河| 慕强什么意思| 什么室什么空| 七月是什么季节| 被褥是什么| 玉米有什么功效| 大腿后侧肌肉叫什么| 右边肋骨疼是什么原因| 牙疼吃什么饭| 麸皮是什么| 为什么明星整牙那么快| 众什么意思| 内窥镜是做什么检查| 童子尿能治什么病| 热疙瘩用什么药膏| hcg阴性是什么意思| 三月二十是什么星座| 治疗宫颈炎用什么药好得快| 曲率是什么意思| 老百姓是什么意思| 无国界医生是什么意思| 梦见偷别人东西是什么意思| 做梦梦到老婆出轨是什么意思| 直接胆红素偏高是什么原因| 女人吃什么提高性激素| 除湿气用什么药| 今年三十岁属什么生肖| 提手旁的字与什么有关| 血糖低吃什么补得最快| 射手座喜欢什么样的女生| rf医学上是什么意思| 桃子和什么相克| 男人吃什么更持久| 做手术后吃什么对伤口恢复快| 孕妇缺铁吃什么食物好| 喝什么茶能降血压| warrior是什么牌子| 军长什么级别| 肛门下坠吃什么药| 鬼画符是什么意思| 四条杠是什么牌子衣服| 胰腺检查挂什么科| 心肌供血不足吃什么| 天津卫的卫是什么意思| 隽字五行属什么| knife是什么意思| 北洋军阀是什么意思| 小腿痛是什么原因| 怀孕一个月有点见红是什么情况| 蜱虫用什么药可以消灭| 生态棉是什么面料| 肾结石喝酒有什么影响| 嗯呢是什么意思| 变蛋是什么蛋| 经常便秘吃什么药好| 额头上长痘是因为什么| 中性粒细胞百分比偏低是什么意思| 欧芹是什么| 高锰酸钾是什么| 早上五六点是什么时辰| 给产妇送什么礼物好| 全飞秒手术是什么| 不宁腿是什么症状| 上眼皮痒是什么原因| 人造海蜇丝是什么做的| 尿血是什么病的征兆| 小孩不说话什么原因| 寻的部首是什么| 徐才厚什么级别| 跪舔是什么意思| 感冒冒虚汗是什么原因| 大三阳是什么病| 额窦炎吃什么药效果好| 躺着头晕是什么原因| 揽子是什么意思| 额头长痘痘什么原因| claire是什么意思| 山大王是什么意思| 梦见坐飞机是什么预兆| 石足念什么| 巩加虫念什么| 多巴胺是什么意思| 重心是什么| 什么是什么的摇篮| 专科警校出来干什么| 五七是什么意思有什么讲究| 甲子日五行属什么| 痛经喝什么药| 子宫内膜回声不均匀是什么意思| 十二指肠炎吃什么药| 补肾壮阳吃什么好| 为什么医生说直肠炎不用吃药| 办健康证挂什么科| 经常挖鼻孔有什么危害| 怀孕什么时候开始孕吐| 小龙虾不能和什么一起吃| 一个米一个参念什么| 朋友妻不可欺是什么意思| 女人梦见狗是什么预兆| 农家一碗香是什么菜| 隐翅虫咬了用什么药膏| 女性解脲支原体阳性吃什么药| 间接胆红素高是什么原因| 行气是什么意思| 容易犯困是什么原因| 开塞露擦脸有什么效果| 突然头晕想吐是什么原因| 怀孕做nt检查什么| 八一建军节是什么节日| 滚去掉三点水念什么| 秋葵什么时候播种| 蜂蜜可以做什么美食| 令坦是对方什么人的尊称| 一片冰心在玉壶的冰心是什么意思| 脾胃虚寒有什么症状| 祛是什么意思| 什么叫管状腺瘤| 畈是什么意思| 人类什么时候灭绝| 美国为什么支持以色列| 北京属于什么气候| 麒麟长什么样| 男人血精是什么原因造成的| 艳羡是什么意思| 神是什么意思| 3月是什么季节| 什么也别说| 黄水疮是什么原因引起的| 胃里有胀气吃什么药| 四五月份是什么星座| 龙生九子都叫什么名字| 毛滴虫病是什么病| 工会副主席是什么级别| 漂流需要带什么| cooh是什么基| 灯五行属什么| 吃什么对喉咙好| 我国最早的中医学专著是什么| 代金券是什么意思| 别有洞天是什么生肖| 阴蒂瘙痒是什么原因| gn是什么意思| 盲点是什么意思| 想请假找什么理由好| 蛔虫是什么| 臼是什么意思| 去医院检查是否怀孕挂什么科| 什么样的枫叶| 蚂蚁怕什么| 聪明绝顶是什么意思| 王是什么生肖| 什么死法不痛苦| 拉肚子挂什么科| 莲藕是荷花的什么部位| 户口本可以干什么坏事| 什么人不适合做厨师| 血糖仪什么牌子的好用又准确| 夕阳无限好是什么意思| 引火下行是什么意思| gh是什么意思| 频繁打哈欠是什么原因| 什么叫囊肿| 一什么所什么| 饱经风霜是什么生肖| 肝内囊性灶什么意思| 宝宝睡觉出汗是什么原因| 气血不足是什么症状| 7月5日是什么星座| 克拉是什么单位| 五谷指的是什么| 眼皮一直跳是什么原因| 菠萝不能和什么一起吃| 喝酒手麻是什么原因| 12月14是什么星座| 怀孕吃鹅蛋有什么好处| 尿浑浊是什么病的前兆| 百度
Home>>

阴道菌群失调用什么药

By Li Mingyue, Shi Muyang, Yu Ying (People's Daily Online) 13:37, October 11, 2022

Midsummer, Glasgow. The Nelson Mandela International Day was celebrated here every year. At the memorial banquet held at the City Chamber this year, a world-music trio played miscellaneous tunes from different regions of the world. More unusual was that the widely-known Chinese folk tune, Moli Hua (Jasmin Flower) was also heard. And this was played by the leading flautist—the Glasgow-born Scottish composer and musician Edward McGuire. 

McGuire represents a rare example of a contemporary British composer who has composed for the classical orchestral world and the folk music world—Scottish, Celtic, and Chinese—with equal passion and prolificacy. Over the past decades, McGuire has collaborated with numerous top-class orchestras and has been featured at many international music festivals. He received the British Composers Award and the Creative Scotland Award. As a valuable contrast to his classical music practice, McGuire’s flute playing made him the leading musician in two folk music bands: the Scottish Whistlebinkins and the Scotland-based Chinese Harmony Ensemble. His Chinese connection continues with a considerable number of classical compositions inspired by traditional Chinese music and culture.

Edward McGuire

Meeting China through music: Germination of a friendship

People’s Daily Online: You took The Whistlebinkies to Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou for an exchange tour with the Beijing Goodwill Folk Group in 1991. This was something quite exceptional. The Scotsman describes it as “our nation’s first musical representatives in the PRC”. Could you share with us some most memorable elements of your early encounter with China and its culture?

McGuire: I would say that my origin of performing and being interested in the traditional music of China goes back to my student’s day when I bought a flute for the first time, a bamboo flute, actually the xiao flute in 1968. My introduction to China was in November 1990, when I went to Hong Kong with the Scottish Ballet for my Peter Pan. Also, in Beijing, I met the Chinese People’s Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries, and they invited The Whistlebinkies to do an exchange visit with Mr. Zhou Yaokun’s traditional music group, the Goodwill, the following year. Mr. Zhou, the virtuosic erhu player, introduced me to some melodies that our folk music group should play when we did the music tour. Also, in Shanghai, I met Mr. Gu Guanren who was the director of the Shanghai National Music Orchestra. So that was a good introduction. We played some music together and then the tour was a very exciting one.

After coming back from China I started to study the Chinese language. One of my Chinese friends, a dancer and a choreographer, had the idea of bringing Scottish and resident Chinese musicians together in the formation of a group that would later become the Harmony Ensemble. I was playing the Western orchestral flute in The Whistlebinkies and I was playing the bamboo flute in the Harmony Ensemble. And in 2004 we got an award to produce a one-act ballet based on the old Chinese legend of the Ox Boy and the Weaver Girl. We had a real combination of traditional instruments including the Scottish bagpipes, concertina, the Celtic harp, and the Chinese yangqin, erhu, and guzheng, and I was playing the dizi. We created a combination of music styles from both countries, by, for example, using the idea of pentatonic melodies to bring the two sides together.

People’s Daily Online: You set an excellent example for us in terms of making music a powerful means for deepening the connection between nations and cultures. Your orchestral work Chinese Dances, for example, was used as encores by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra on their China tours, and your ensemble piece Chinese Folksong Suite was played at the ceremony of the Confucius Institute at the University of Glasgow. What do you think is truly special about your practice in this regard?

McGuire: I learned a lot through talking, hearing discussions, listening and performing with local Chinese musicians. I did an arrangement of Three Chinese Dances, based on the traditional dance music of Yunnan, Xinjiang and Tibet. These very varied melodies are ones that Ms. Wu Yanmei introduced me to and she could sing some of those songs and also dance to them. And, interestingly, it was a classical music group that asked me to write that. So that was a very nice collaboration of dance, folk music and classical players. An American classical group, the Zodiac Trio, played the piece for their concert tour in China in 2013, including one at the Yantai Grand Theater. It had a successful reception. So it is an interesting phenomenon of Chinese music coming around the world to my country and then being taken back by an American group from Scotland over to China again. It just shows how music can be very part of the interchange of ideas and friendship between countries.

I also work with an organization called the Scotland China Association and they selected me to be vice president of that about 20 years ago. And I still do those functions for them. So we keep up an interest in what is happening in China and the role it has been playing globally. So we have a deeper understanding of the fact that there is a good role for culture to play in achieving peace and boosting communications between nations. That is a very important thing.

Edward McGuire

East and West: Dare to break boundaries

People’s Daily Online: Since the 20th century, Chinese musicians started to have the opportunities to have their voices to be heard worldwide. Composers Tan Dun and John Cage (with whom you have both befriended), for example, are well-known pupil-mentor duos that have had a huge influence on the West’s understanding of Chinese culture. What are some of your impressions of contemporary Chinese composers and musicians?

McGuire: I remember in 1988, there was a special festival called New Chinese Music in Glasgow, and that was organized by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. They invited several Chinese composers to have their pieces performed. Mike Newman was the producer. He went to China and met the composers. Mike brought them here, and one of them stayed here to work with the BBC Orchestra in Glasgow. And that man was Tan Dun, and he became the associate composer and conductor with the orchestra for three years. And I met him at that time. I had some pieces played by the orchestra in those years and we became friends. The very interesting thing is that he was translating some texts from John Cage, the Eastern-influenced American composer. He had also written, in Chinese, articles about John Cage. And those articles are important ones for the Chinese to bridge the philosophical gap between China and the West.

In 1990 The Whistlebinkies played John Cage’s 4’33’’ at the Musica Nova festival in the Concert Hall of the University of Glasgow. In the same concert, we premiered his Scottish Circus, which we had commissioned from him in 1985 after working on an improvisation with him one year before. At the Edinburgh International Festival that year, The Whistlebinkies gave an improvised performance, under Cage’s direction, at the reception for the opening of an exhibition of Cage’s visual artworks at the Fruitmarket Gallery. John Cage died shortly after composing Scottish Circus. I wrote his obituary, and then I was invited to the funeral memorial celebration in New York. And I went there and got in touch with Tan Dun, and he said, come and stay at my flat in Eastern Broadway. It was October 1993, I think. We talked a lot that evening, and we went out and looked at the big Halloween parade. I think Tan Dun has done a lot in terms of exploring the meeting point of the music cultures of the East and the West. He, for example, did field recordings of the very old traditional women singing of central China and incorporated them into his own works.

People’s Daily Online: You are familiar with Scottish, Celtic and Chinese traditional music, and your composition and music performance freely switch between different cultural traditions. Any thoughts to share with us regarding your experience of exploring the traditional culture of multiple origins?

McGuire: Cultures of the other provide us with very different ideas. In Chinese music, a single note can also mean a single gesture of a phrase of music. In Chinese painting and calligraphy, so much meaning was put into a minimal activity. And therefore we come to the inspiration that people who are interested in the philosophy of the East and China in particular, like John Cage, brought into their music some philosophical and meditative meaning. In terms of cross-over music practice, I think anyone interested in music should explore the contrasts and the meeting points of Western and Eastern cultures. One example of a similar meditation and stillness is created by the classical music of the Highland Bagpipes in Scotland, in which the evolution of the theme becomes a universe in itself. And the constancy of the drone of the bagpipes, if it is well in tune and well played, can have a transcendental or meditative or magical effect on the listener. We could also compare, for example, women’s folk singing of China with the traditional female singing of the British Isles, especially those that use the pentatonic scales.

I think, the quest to join, to allow the essence of traditional music to come through, not to copy traditional music, but to allow the inspiration, the rhythms and the instant communication between composer, musician and audience is a very important one. Through performing traditional music on the flute in The Whistlebinkies, I have learned how to instantly communicate with an audience and cause emotional conversations. I think contemporary music went through a period of very difficult communication which excluded a lot of people. So I would like to bring back the emotional connection in music, and I think we can be taught how to do that by observing how traditional music does that.

Edward McGuire

People’s Daily Online: In the era of globalization, artists enjoy great freedom in making their choice—they need to define themselves culturally between the East and the West, the traditional and the contemporary. What is your philosophy on this? Can you give some advice to young Chinese composers and musicians?

McGuire: For me, there is an interesting question about how traditional culture interacts with classical music and culture. I have a feeling that the impresarios of the world of entertainment and music and festivals sometimes cannot categorize me, because sometimes they think I’m a folk musician, sometimes they think I’m a modern classical musician. Other people think I’m too romantic or too traditional in my orchestral music. So I have a broad style that might not be easily categorized, but I think I can explain it to people and I set an example to other composers. I don’t teach them, but I think I try to set an example.

I think young composers should remain true to their human essence and try to communicate with people. Try to communicate with a wide audience. Try playing your music to your parents and grandparents and ask them what they think. That is one of the best thermometers for testing your musical temperature. And also, don’t forget the young children. Music for children is an amazing thing to try and do.

There is a very interesting question about, in modernism, how to deal with ancient cultures and how they influence what is looked upon as modern culture. Time is moving on every day, so anything that is called modern is old next week. So you cannot rely on modernism being around too long. And there are ancient cultures and traditions that really are part of the human being’s outlook, part of our bodies, of our souls and minds. So people still look for beauty; they look for rhythm; they look for pulses like the heartbeat and emotional statements. And that does not change. It is called being human. 

(Web editor: Hongyu, Wu Chengliang)

Photos

Related Stories

海娜是什么 好运是什么生肖 眼白发青是什么原因 老年人生日送什么礼物 氟斑牙是什么原因造成的
吃什么卵泡长得快又圆 燕窝是什么做成的 什么情况下需要切除子宫 次数是什么 舌尖有点麻是什么原因
颈椎病头疼吃什么药 od是什么意思 看淋巴挂什么科室 放我鸽子是什么意思 iwc手表是什么牌子
不明原因腹痛挂什么科 干燥综合征吃什么药 长个子需要补充什么 51年属什么生肖 精液少是什么原因
比基尼是什么hcv8jop0ns4r.cn 什么食物含铁hcv8jop9ns0r.cn 冬虫夏草补什么xianpinbao.com reald厅什么意思hcv9jop8ns2r.cn 金牛座和什么座最配hcv9jop0ns1r.cn
多动症看什么科室hcv9jop5ns6r.cn 什么症状提示月经马上要来了jinxinzhichuang.com 4月10号什么星座hcv7jop5ns2r.cn 高铁特等座有什么待遇hcv7jop6ns8r.cn 漠河什么时候可以看到极光wuhaiwuya.com
人生的尽头是什么hcv9jop7ns2r.cn 紫菜是什么颜色hcv8jop1ns5r.cn 甲功异常有什么症状hcv8jop9ns8r.cn 多囊不能吃什么食物hcv8jop9ns5r.cn 后背疼挂什么科hcv8jop5ns0r.cn
扁平足为什么不能当兵hcv9jop3ns2r.cn 梦到很多蛇是什么意思hcv9jop6ns6r.cn 可谓是什么意思zhongyiyatai.com 为什么不呢hcv9jop2ns2r.cn 64是什么hcv8jop0ns1r.cn
百度