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  1. #1
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    Tan Dun's Martial Trilogy

    Thought about making this it's own thread, but then figured the way this particular thread opens fits well.

    Hero
    The Banquet
    Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon

    Composer Tan Dun combines film scores to create ‘Martial Arts Trilogy’
    By David Mermelstein, Published: July 29

    Plenty of Americans may not recognize Tan Dun’s name, but they know his music. The Chinese-born composer won an Academy Award for writing the score to Ang Lee’s “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” (2000), which has to date grossed more than any other foreign-language film in the United States. And fans of martial-arts movies may also be familiar with his contributions to Zhang Yimou’s “Hero” (2002) — another foreign hit — and Feng Xiaogang’s “The Banquet” (2006).

    Now Tan, who turns 54 on Aug. 15, has refashioned these scores into more or less traditional concertos for cello, violin and piano, respectively. Together they make up his “Martial Arts Trilogy,” which he is conducting at four venues this summer, including Aug. 5 at Wolf Trap, where he will lead the National Symphony Orchestra. Three NSO players — James Lee (cello), Heather Green (violin) and Lisa Emenheiser (piano) — are to perform the solo parts.

    In the concerts, movie clips accompany his music. “We pretty much follow the order of the films but use smaller bits,” Tan said by phone from New York earlier this month. “We let the orchestra tell the story, with the solo lines like dialogue. The movie clips enhance it, but the music takes the major role.”

    A cycle of martial-arts films has been something of an idee fixe for the composer, who says he turned down many offers to write music for movies after his Oscar win, simply because such projects were not what he calls “love tragedies with martial arts.” Although it took time to find directors who were planning the type of pictures Tan wanted to score, his patience was rewarded with music that he contends is more than the sum of its parts.

    “The three soloists tell different kinds of stories,” Tan said. “After using the cello in ‘Crouching Tiger,’ I thought maybe I should continue this love-tragedy motif with the next instrument. Eventually, I thought I might even bring the three instruments together in something like a resurrection.”

    Although combining all three solo instruments in a single score didn’t occur to Tan until his trilogy was underway, a tetralogy appears imminent thanks to a chance encounter with the director Jia Zhangke. “He’s shooting his first martial-arts film now,” the composer said. “So in the next few months I am going to finish my cycle and have four film scores as one. And after that, I will start to accept commissions for other films.”

    But for now there is just the trilogy. “We will see if Washington, D.C., audiences like and accept it,” Tan said of the combined program, in which the concertos run 30 to 35 minutes apiece, slightly shorter than if they were each performed on a bill without the others.

    A big reason the “Martial Arts Trilogy” was programmed at Wolf Trap is Tan’s presence on the podium, suggested Nigel Boon, the National Symphony’s director of artistic planning. “I love the idea of composers conducting,” he said. “We’ve had Oliver Knussen and John Adams, and we’re looking at others as well. It’s always interesting to hear a composer’s own view of his music.”

    Yet performing does not particularly appeal to Tan. “After this run, I hope to hand over my duties to different conductors,” he said. “And I’m sure they will enjoy it, because this kind of new structure for conductor — with electronics and acoustics combined in a multimedia presentation — is very 21st century. Composers have embraced the future, and now conductors must also.”

    Ben Hong, a cellist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, has twice performed the solo part of the “Crouching Tiger” concerto — at the Hollywood Bowl in 2008 and in revised form July 21 with the San Diego Symphony, the first stop of the series.

    “I think audiences will find very honest emotion from this concerto,” Hong said. “They will also find very different aesthetics and sensibilities in the way the music is made, but because it’s very direct it won’t be difficult to understand or relate to.”

    Hong describes Tan’s writing as “as absolutely brilliant and very creative,” lauding the composer’s use of unconventional instruments. The cellist singles out Tan’s use of rocks as percussion instruments. “It’s not just direct impact,” Hong said. “It could be grinding or sliding as well. He’s very interested in exploring those kinds of limits. His understanding and interest in breaking down the barriers of his traditional Chinese background with Western music to create a much broader spectrum of musical aesthetics — that’s the most obvious difference between him and other composers.”

    Tan’s embrace of video is another. Even in his pieces for the concert hall, the composer will sometimes incorporate a visual component, as he did with “The Map,” a sprawling cello concerto from 2002. “I often tell my friends I’m interested in music for film and film for music,” Tan said. “If you go to the cinema, you will enjoy my work as a movie. But if you go to a concert, you will see a movie for music. It’s kind of symmetrical.”

    Mermelstein is a freelance writer.

    Tan Dun: Martial Arts Trilogy

    8:30 p.m. Friday at Wolf Trap’s Filene Center. Tickets $20-$52. Information at wolftrap.org.
    Gene Ching
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  2. #2
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    Maybe I will split this off into it's own thread

    Seems more significant with each report. I hope it comes to my town. I think I'd enjoy this.
    Evoking Forbidden Love and Flying Ancient Armies
    By STEVE SMITH
    Published: August 14, 2011



    His high profile drew an overflow crowd to Damrosch Park on Friday night for a performance of his “Martial Arts Trilogy,” a splashy multimedia event derived from three popular film scores. Performed by the Metropolis Ensemble and presented by Lincoln Center Out of Doors, the project linked quasi-concerto suites from Mr. Tan’s music for “Hero,” “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” and “The Banquet” into an evening-length sequence, with scenes from the films projected on a screen behind the musicians.

    Mr. Tan, who conducted, clearly sees the trilogy as more than a greatest-hits medley; in effusive comments from the stage he termed it a cycle and likened it to Wagner’s “Ring.” If you knew the films, you recognized themes of honor, obligation and forbidden love running throughout the scenes, which were difficult to see at the start of the concert but became sharper as a gorgeous summer night wore on.

    Even if you couldn’t discern a plot that linked these fleeting visions of lovers and schemers, clashing armies and spectacular flying warriors, you could admire Mr. Tan’s knack for giving each film and scene its own character. His language, a mix of Hollywood grandeur and primal, percussive vitality, was consistent throughout the evening, yet each segment had its own distinct sound.

    In “Hero Concerto” the soloist Ryu Goto played two violins — one tuned down to a violalike sob — over passages that jolted like Prokofiev and thundered like Basil Poledouris’s potent 1982 score for “Conan the Barbarian.” The cellist Dane Johansen performed the extensive, ravishing solos in Mr. Tan’s warm, eloquent “Crouching Tiger Concerto.”

    In the concluding “Banquet Concerto,” originally fashioned for Lang Lang, the exciting young pianist Jiayi Sun barreled through Bartok-inflected combat scenes and tenderly caressed rhapsodic swells plainly inspired by Rachmaninoff. The Collegiate Chorale lent the music an epic quality; still, its twinkling palette aside, this was the patchiest and least satisfying of the distillations.

    The Metropolis Ensemble, a talented freelance orchestra, responded with skill and exuberance to Mr. Tan’s thrusting arms and clutching fingers. Now and then his face, captured by a camera on his music stand, filled the screen overhead: like his film music, oversize and imperious yet clearly meant to entertain.
    Gene Ching
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  3. #3
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    Alright, I'm splitting this into an independant thread

    To add to the initial post, here's our CTHD thread.
    Posted at 01:10 AM ET, 08/08/2011
    Reviews: Tan Dun’s “Martial Arts Trilogy”
    by Stephen Brookes

    Ah, tragic love. Wolf Trap was awash in it — not to mention aerial sword fights, blood-soaked revenge, thundering armies on horseback and all that other irresistible stuff — on Friday night, when the composer Tan Dun brought his hot-off-the-presses “Martial Arts Trilogy” to the Filene Center stage.

    Tan Dun, of course, is the Chinese composer who burst into the mainstream after winning an Oscar for his score to the 2000 blockbuster “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” famous for its balletic, gravity-defying martial arts. He went on to score two similar films — “The Banquet” and “Hero” — and in this new work he’s reconfigured all that music into a set of interlocking concertos, which follow the sacrifices, passions and billowing dresses of the female leads as scenes from the movies unfold overhead.

    And as you’d expect, this was an epic, multimedia production, full of big-screen emotions and unabashed melodrama; Beijing Opera meets Hollywood, more or less. Tan Dun’s melodies soared and swooped through the air — like the actors, they were borne aloft on gusts of wind — and he generally steered clear of the avant-garde territory found in much of his other music. But that’s hardly a complaint. This was movie music and proud of it, as voluptuous and stylized as the cinematography of the films, designed to draw you into a weightless fantasy world where raindrops fall in slow motion and the light is always golden and death is rather pretty if you just choreograph it properly. Sure, there was more surface than depth; but it’s summer, and anyway — what a surface it was.

    The theme of tragic love tied everything together, and the opening “Hero” concerto followed the story of a woman who sacrificed love to defend her country. Violinist Heather LeDoux Green turned in a fine, full-bodied performance, capturing the sweeping emotions of the work without tugging the heartstrings too obviously. The “Crouching Tiger” concerto that followed was the most musically interesting of the three, and James Lee gave a passionate account on cello; his intimate, beautifully-calibrated solo was a highlight of the evening. The concert built to a rambunctious close with the “Banquet” concerto (about sacrificing love for power) played by the always-exciting pianist Lisa Emenheiser.

    The narrative behind all this was a bit hard to follow if you didn’t already know the films, but it made for an entertaining and enjoyable evening nonetheless. Tan Dun himself led the National Symphony Orchestra, and, while it’s interesting to hear a composer conduct his own music, it’s the rare one who can really do it well. Dun seemed ill at ease at the podium, and, honestly, generated about as much electricity as a sack of laundry; kudos to the NSO players for bringing the score to life as well as they did.

    --Stephen Brookes
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  4. #4
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    a late interview...

    ...but worthy of archiving here

    A Symphony of Martial Artistry: Tan Dun at Wolf Trap, Filene Center

    Tan Dun is not the next John Williams.

    Sure, Tan won an Oscar for the soundtrack to 2000's "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," and this opera master also scored the martial arts flicks "Hero" (2002) and "The Banquet" (2006). And, yes, the 53-year-old Hunan Province native is now conducting the multimedia concert "Martial Arts Trilogy" with the National Symphony Orchestra, featuring his soundtrack music synced to film clips. But, as Tan explains, these movies simply fit into his grander, long-simmering plan to write a specific operatic cycle.

    Were you influenced by martial arts soundtracks as a kid?
    Basically, I hate martial arts film music in general. That's why I turned martial arts film music completely upside-down. Most of my martial arts music was inspired by [19th-century] Peking opera, not 1970s martial arts films.

    How did you choose film projects after "Crouching Tiger"?
    So many people approached me to write film soundtracks, but I always asked them three questions [and "Hero" and "The Banquet" fit the criteria]: Is this a tragic love story? Is this a martial arts film? And can I write for piano or violin [since "Crouching Tiger" featured cello]? I have turned down about 30 movies since I won the Oscar.

    How did the idea for the "Trilogy" come together?
    After I composed the music for "Crouching Tiger," I decided to make a martial arts trilogy linked in the way like Wagner's Ring Cycle opera. I'm an opera writer. I thought I should make a trilogy with a [single] instrument being the focus in each movie [soundtrack].

    Was it hard to link the music from three unrelated movies by three different directors?
    I'm very proud. It's like a charmed operation. But it came together, and it made sense. The three instruments represent three girls, and they all sacrifice for love in different ways. In "The Banquet," the girl sacrifices her love for revenge and desire. In "Hero," it's for patriotic love. And in "Crouching Tiger," it's for the dream of wuxia [martial arts storytelling]. And all three [women] are played by the same actress [Zhang Ziyi]. It's an amazing coincidence.

    » Wolf Trap, Filene Center, 1551 Trap Road, Vienna; Fri., 8:30 p.m., $20-$52; 877-965-3872, Wolftrap.org.

    Posted By Christopher Porter at 12:00 AM on August 4, 2011
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  5. #5
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    Now available as a CD

    I just might have to add this to my collection..
    TAN DUN The Martial Arts Trilogy
    September 26, 2011
    By Marc Rochester
    Tommy Anthony, Susan Botti, CoCo Lee, Wendy Pedersen, Jane Lian Ying Zhang (vocals), Itzhak Perlman, Tan Dan (violin), Yo-Yo Ma (cello), Lang Lang (piano), David Cossin, Archie Peña (percussion), Dan Warner (guitar), Julio Hernández (bass guitar), Kodo (drums), Ancient Rao Ensemble of Changsha Museum, Shanghai Percussion Ensemble, Shanghai Opera Chorus, China Philharmonic Chorus and Orchestra, Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, Shanghai National Orchestra / Tan Dun.
    Sony Classical 88697923632
    cd sleeve

    Of the many Chinese-born composers who have settled in the U.S. and celebrated their cross-cultural credentials through fusing Western and Eastern musical elements, none has done it quite so vividly as Tan Dun. He has written that he composes as “a path towards reconciliation of my own personal past and present, and a quest for human roots. It is music for and about people.” So it seems entirely appropriate that his music first hit phenomenal international popularity in 2000, not with a concert work, but with his first venture into the world of movie scores, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.

    He has since written a lot of equally evocative Western-tinged Chinese music for the concert hall and the cinema but, rather like Bruch and his G minor Violin Concerto, or Barber and his Adagio for Strings, he has never really been able to escape the huge success of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. This latest release includes four tracks from that soundtrack along with several from two subsequent movie scores.

    Each of the original movie scores was centered around a leading performer. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon has Yo-Yo Ma exuding atmosphere and nostalgia for the homeland in some particularly soulful cello writing. The first three tracks set a clear if dreamy mood for the opening of this Martial Arts Trilogy, but with the fourth things rather go astray musically with a dismal attempt at American soul music. ‘A Love Before Time’ sees Yo-Yo Ma pushed aside in favor of Hong Kong starlet CoCo Lee struggling not to sound like a rejected American Idol giving a final, tear-stained rendition. It might work in the cinema; it does not work here.

    Lang Lang takes centre stage for five numbers from the score to the 2006 movie The Banquet (released in the U.S. as Legend of the Black Scorpion). This is the least obviously Chinese of the three, at times sounding more like a Bollywood dance sequence or outtakes from Kismet, but otherwise content to unfold a series of unfocused mood pictures in which Lang Lang does little more than dribble aimlessly over the keys as if in a trance.

    On the other hand, when it comes to investing deep emotion into the most trite musical patterns, no one does it better than Lang Lang, and the force of his artistic personality manages to sidestep comparisons with Richard Clayderman – although it comes pretty close in places. In a saccharine-laden ‘Only for Love’, where Jane Lian Ying Zhang oozes out Chinese words of love to the Shanghai Opera Chorus’s lyrical oohing and aahing, he ripples delicately over some inoffensive arpeggios, but even he cannot make the ‘Sword Dance’ sound like anything other than an instrumental version of the Tammy Wynette classic, Stand by your Man.

    The most successful music in the context of this CD comes from the 2002 movie Hero. The headline soloist is Itzhak Perlman, but in
    reality he shares the honors with the potent ethnic drums of Kodo
    and the Ancient Rao Ensemble of Changsha Museum. Neither is Perlman the only violin soloist in these four tracks. Tan himself takes over the instrument in the final two numbers, his ‘Sorrow in Desert’ duet with the ethnic percussionists, in particular, is an ingenious piece of fusion music with the violin magically evoking the sounds of ancient Chinese strings.

    The performances from three orchestras – Shanghai Symphony, Shanghai National and China Philharmonic – are very good indeed,
    and the recording nicely balanced to give the whole thing a slightly romantic sheen. But this is essentially mood music which is clearly designed to accompany visual images. Heard in isolation, after the initial ear candy of exotic sounds, The Martial Arts Trilogy quickly outlives its 44-minute playing time.
    Gene Ching
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  6. #6
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    Headline act at the annual OzAsia Festival

    'eating vegetables and practising martial arts movements'
    Music career inspired by nature
    by: Tim Douglas
    From: The Australian
    September 21, 2012 12:00AM


    Composer Tan Dun in Adelaide yesterday. 'Everyone I speak to tells me you need to travel to Adelaide,' he says. Picture: Tait Schmaal Source: Supplied

    TAN Dun, a child of China's Cultural Revolution, will never forget the first time he heard Bach.

    "It was like medicine, a spiritual medicine. It fixed me," says the internationally renowned composer, who was a rice planter at a labour camp during Mao Zedong's notorious sociopolitical movement.

    "You must understand that before the Cultural Revolution, every family was broken; everyone was injured inside and outside. I was a late teenager and was so hungry (for music from the outside world).

    "When I heard Bach's music, I was changed forever."

    For the 55-year-old, then, having been awarded last week the City of Hamburg's 2012 Bach Prize -- presented every four years to "an exceptional composer of our time" -- must be at the very forefront of his consciousness.

    "It is a very important honour for me, yes, but I am really just focused right now on coming back to Australia," he says.

    "That, for me, is the real dream come true. Everyone I speak to tells me you need to travel to Adelaide. So I am."

    Tan will conduct the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra in his Martial Arts Trilogy, a multifaceted concert featuring music and multimedia displays, tomorrow and Sunday.

    A headline act at the annual OzAsia Festival, Tan will feature his famous scores from the Chinese martial arts-inspired films Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Hero and The Banquet.

    While Tan admits he is no martial artist, he says the philosophies of the physical arts are imperative in his composition.

    Before composing the score for cellist Yo-Yo Ma in Crouching Tiger, Ang Lee's 2000 film, Tan spent six months in a temple "eating vegetables and practising martial arts movements".

    "I learned the gestures and then transposed them into sounds," says the Oscar and Grammy award winner.

    "It's not about physical action but the ego and mind competing. It's about balance.

    "The most important lesson in martial arts is: play loudest sound in silence, or victory without fighting. And I use that philosophy in my music."

    Tan has led some of the world's most notable orchestras, including the Royal Concertgebouw, London Symphony and the New York Philharmonic, and is a recognised global innovator.

    His Internet Symphony, commissioned by YouTube, has accumulated 15 million hits.

    But Tan says he will never forget his roots; everything in his output can be traced back to his humble beginnings in a small shamanistic village in Hunan province during the Mao years.

    "As a child I would watch the village shaman making music with water on a stone," he says. "Those sounds -- the music of nature -- are still with me."
    Gene Ching
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  7. #7
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    More on Oz

    Anyone here near Adelaide?
    Strains of martial arts movies hit the spot
    by: Graham Strahle
    From: The Australian
    September 24, 2012 12:00AM


    Film music composer Tan Dun. Picture: Schmaal Tait Source: Supplied

    MUSIC
    Tan Dun: Martial Arts Trilogy
    Adelaide Symphony Orchestra. Conductor: Tan Dun. Adelaide Festival Theatre, September 22.

    ONE of the world's most accomplished film composers, Tan Dun is known particularly for the music he wrote for three wuxia or martial arts films that have proved highly successful in the West: Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000), Hero (2002) and The Banquet (2006).

    The first, with cello solos by Yo-Yo Ma, won him an Oscar, and all three scores also exist in concerto versions for performance in the concert hall.

    To have this martial arts trilogy performed for the first time in Australia, and with the composer conducting, was a real treat. Excerpts from the films were projected behind the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, along with live video feeds of the players and the small, wiry figure of Tan Dun at the podium.

    To call them concertos is a bit of a stretch, because they do not stand entirely on their own as concert works, at times falling into a subservient role of accompanying the visual image and occasionally combining with sound effects, dialogue and even wordless singing in the film excerpts.
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    Nevertheless, these are wonderful scores that belong at the pinnacle of film music as an art, and the fact they integrate so intimately and seamlessly with the visual dimension makes them only the more admirable. Emotively powerful, they are melodically lush but elegantly restrained, and extremely clear in their gestural content.

    Hero is a thunderous, exciting score that sets eloquent solos from violin and guqin (Chinese zither) against a backdrop of dark-hued strings, muscular rhythms and explosive percussion. Sword thrusts in the fighting scenes and a hailstorm of arrows fired from an army on horseback were precisely matched in musical terms by bursts of blazing brass and razor-edged slashes of bow. Violinist Natsuko Yoshimoto was ravishing in her solos, perfectly judging the music's changing moods.

    A darker, gruffer but equally invigorating work, the Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon concerto for cello maintains a more consistent, equal partnership with the visual image. Playing with great fervour, cellist Li-Wei was joined by one of the orchestra's percussionists who lightly tapped a hand-held drum as he sauntered up to the stage front for an intriguing improvisation halfway through.

    The Banquet concerto for piano is an ebullient work of a more Westernised stylistic orientation that achieves a closer, quite intricate interaction between soloist and orchestra. Ending with a gushingly uplifting melody, soloist Jiayi Sun reached into the music and gave it exactly what it needed.

    The OzAsia Festival continues until September 30.

    MUSIC
    Tan Dun: Martial Arts Trilogy
    Adelaide Symphony Orchestra. Conductor: Tan Dun. Adelaide Festival Theatre, September 22.
    Gene Ching
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  8. #8
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    Coming to S.F.

    April 25, 2015. I must make a note in my calendar...
    TAN DUN’S MARTIAL ARTS TRILOGY—FILM WITH THE SAN FRANCISCO SYMPHONY



    FILM SERIES

    Subscribe for savings and perks! This concert is in packages:
    Film
    Conductor/Performers
    Damian Iorio
    conductor

    San Francisco Symphony

    Program
    Various Selections from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, The Banquet, and Hero

    Buy Tickets
    Sat, Apr 25, 2015 at 8:00pm
    Davies Symphony Hall

    If you would like assistance purchasing tickets for patrons with disabilities, please call the box office at (415) 864-6000
    Gems of Chinese Cinema at S.F. Symphony
    BY JANOS GEREBEN,
    September 2, 2014


    Jet Lee in Hero

    One of the most amazing scenes in all cinema is a sword fight in the rain against the strains of a guzheng — Chinese plucked zither — seen through a curtain of individual raindrops each in a bizarre closeup. That's just one of the hundreds of scenes in Christopher Doyle's stunning cinematography that help make Zhang Yimou's 2001 Hero a masterpiece.

    Hero is about the first Chinese emperor (Qin Shi Huang, 259-210 BC) and the warrior (Jet Lee) who may or may not assassinate him. It is one of the great films of recent times — complex, gripping, with a fabulous cast, and an unforgettable soundtrack. As Yo-Yo Ma's cello solo resounds over the resplendent court, all elements come together in one overwhelming whole.

    This entire epic wu xia (martial arts) story is a kind of visual music. Set on a huge scale, with incredible vistas, immense, operatic crowd scenes, and brilliant colors, Hero is grand musical theater of history and passion. It also has a depth of emotional, philosophical, and political substance, the conclusion representing a dramatic change in Zhang's stand on the vital issue of the individual versus the state.

    The all-star cast (Jet Li, Tony Leung, Maggie Cheung, Zhang Ziyi, Donnie Yen and Chen Dao Ming as the Emperor) is seen against the background of grand palaces in Hangzhou, the natural reserve of Jiuzhaigou (with the Nuorilang water falls), Xian, Luoyang, and others, with visuals reminiscent of pointillism, abstract expressionism, and photomicrography.


    Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung in Hero

    Personally, I am not a great fan of Tan Dun's other works, such as Water Passion After St. Matthew, nor even of his and Zhang's collaboration on The First Emperor, an opera on the same subject as Hero, produced at the Metropolitan Opera. The best of Tan Dun is in his film scores: Hero, Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon; and Feng Xiaogang’s The Banquet.

    Damian Iorio, artistic director of the Philharmonic Orchestra of Murmansk, will conduct the San Francisco Symphony on April 25, accompanying excerpts screened from those three films with the music of Tan Dun.

    The SFS Film Series will also feature:

    Sept. 27, The Wizard of Oz (Harold Arlen and Herbert Stothart)
    Oct. 31, Organ accompaniment by Todd Wilson to silent classic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
    Dec. 12 and 13, Home Alone (John Williams)
    Jan. 9 and 10, The Godfather (Nino Rota)
    March 28, "Great Moments of Dance in Film" — scenes from 2001: A Space Odyssey, Brigadoon, Madame Bovary, An American in Paris, others
    Gene Ching
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  9. #9
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    I never did make that calendar note

    Fortunately, I subscribe to the S.F. Chron and the pink section reminded me that this is this Saturday. I was scheduled to do something else, but I might change plans...
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  10. #10
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    Our latest ezine offering

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