Spring River Moon Light is one of the
most famous Chinese traditional music works. It had been popular among ordinary
people before the year 1875, and has become one of the masterpieces in treasury
of Chinese classical music. It was originally named as Pipa tune Flutes and Drums
at Dusk, and was adapted by Liu Yaozhang, a member of Shanghai's Datong Music Conservatory
and renamed as Spring River Moon Light by Zheng Jinwen in 1930. Since 1949, it has
undergone many revisions, until now it is a highly polished piece.
The introduction has a background of musical harmony, and then a Pipa is plunked
faster and faster, giving out drumbeat-like notes. At the same time, deft fingering
on a vertical bamboo flute produces the melody. The contrast between the two instruments
-- one producing pellet-like short notes by twanging, and the other producing long-drawn-out
notes -- conjures up a picture of a river in spring time. The technique, often used
in folk music, of phrases repeated over and over, and seemingly chasing one another,
gives a vivid impression of ripples on water. The understated melody, the fluid
rhythmical meter, the ingenious subtlety, with random orchestration, combine to
paint a tranquil scene of a river on a moonlite night in spring, and is pean of
praise to the countryside south of Yangtze River. The whole work is divided into
ten sections, each having a different title.
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