Crossing Edges

2013

Crossing Edges

 

for erhu (Chinese fiddle) and orchestra - 2013

 

To LU Yiwen

 

If iI had to describe my music, i would define it much more by its coordinates than by an esthetic position ; in a three-dimensional space, somewhere at the crossroads of a fragmented map, placed between the past and the future, and located on the axis that connects our most tangible materiality to this human need of spirituality. Crossing Edges defines those edges that intersect and overlap in the representations of geometric figures in two dimensions. Therefore, in my music, this concept is echoing an imaginary journey in the form of an oscillation between a dreamed China and a Western imagination. Starting with this intense desire to share an incredible happiness on having heard the erhu (a Chinese fiddle, pronounced more or less like : "Eu-fu") of LU Yiwen at a symphonic concert proposed as a musical break during the masterclasses - in composition and analysis of modern music - I gave in 2013 at the Shanghai Conservatory. These magic sounds seemed to reach another important momentum that arisen, few months before, from discussions with a long-time friend and painter LIU Shu-Tsin, about the perspiration of the Chinese thought in her graphical representation. Finally, it was one of her recent paintings - The happy medium- which gave me the idea of the formal process of Crossing Edges. Colorful pictorial work, this triptych is situated between abstraction and figuration. It contributes to this oriental spirit which plays on oppositions without antagonism but with complementarities - the famous Yin and Yang. So, this painting derives the figure from calligraphy. From the thickness of the strokes of an ideogram emerge villages, mountainous landscapes springing from the mist. All this little world calling for the elevation of the soul.

 

The happy medium moreover makes reference to an ideogram that sums up the space defined in the previous lines [see the sign]. An « inside » that turns on itself and that can only exist because there is an energetic « outside », both connecting the heaven to the earth through a vertical line in the middle of the sign. Musically speaking, this will result in two expressive states which will alternate throughout the work : one, melodic, horizontal and cyclic, soft and languid, using resonances of some Chinese traditional music ; the other, vivacious an energetic, highlighting the qualities of the erhu through some harmonic progressions (vertical) derived from analysis of the timbre of the instrument itself – a habit in my composition process which derives often its harmonies from the « spectral analysis » made with computer.

 

Besides, the Chinese musical thought upset me in many respects and helped me to situate myself in a better way. In fact, in West, we talk a lot about Cross-over about the meeting of different cultures. For many years, despite my interest in world music and its involvement in my work, I had some difficulties with these categorical definitions because i did not perceive my music under the angle of the mixture, but rather under the concept of Altra Cosa, these other « altered » cause. Chinese artists finally offered me their solution, those who refuse this notion of mixture, replacing it with the idea of « resonance », in the figurative sense, but also in its acoustic sense : when two different sounds resonate together in a reverberate place, ignoring the dominant-subordonate relationship. Then remains the perfect fusion…Thus, i would like to share with you these « resonances » of the Chinese music in fusion with my western sounds... In the hope of a new life of freedom.

 

The work was commissioned by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra of Liege which premiered it with lots of success at the "Oriental Festival" in Belgium, on February 23rd. 2014 - birthday's date of the composer ! - by Lu Yiwen and the Orchestra conducted by Christian Arming.

Furthermore, that work was choosen for the opening concert of the World Music Days Festival 2015 (Ljublijana). Zhang Yong Yin was largely acclaimed, aside the Slovenian Radio and Television Orchestra conducted by Simon Krecic.

 

A "derivation" of this concerto, Echoes of Crossing Edges, for erhu and 10 musicians, was composed at the intention of my friends of the Shanghai Sinfonietta, who premiered it in China in April 2014.

 

Claude LEDOUX

 

 

Informations about Echoes of Crossing Edges at :

http://www.compositeurs.be/en/catalog/echoes_of_crossing_edges

 

Shu-Tsin LIU, "le Juste Milieu" (101x198)

 

Informations about Liu Shu-Tsin's works  HERE

 

Compositeur(s)
Durée
0:17:0
Effectif
for erhu (Chinese fiddle) and orchestra
Effectif complet

erhu solo
2-2-2-2 /2-2-2-0/ perc (2)-timb-celesta/ Strings