The yaji convenes in Bo's living room while Bo photographs from a helicopter. Clockwise from top left: John, Peter, Rebecca, Matthew, Mingmei and Stephen.
On
10 December 2005 the following members of then New York Qin Society (NTQS)
attended a Society meeting at the home of Bo Lawergren: Stephen Dydo, Matthew
Flannery, Rebecca Flannery, Bo Lawergren, Peter Reis, John Thompson, Yip Ming-Mei.
Members gave the following comments on their activities.
Bo
Lawergren
In
October and November Bo traveled to Amsterdam, then to Hong Kong, Shanghai and
Wuyi Shan, a mountain range on the border between Fujian and Jiangxi
provinces.
In
Amsterdam from October 5-9 several members of NYQS gave papers at the 10th
International CHIME Meeting, "Exploring China's Musical Past".
Bo
Lawergren, "The Qin: From Central Asia to Central China."
Rembrandt
Wolpert, "Metronomes,
Matrices, and other Musical Monsters"
Elizabeth
Markham, "Tang melody in
Heian editions: data for the historical musicologist, options for the
experimental performer?"
Yi Mingmei, "Women Qin Players in the Musical Heritage of China from the Han to the Present"
Rembrandt
chaired a panel, "Yuefu Labs", during which Elizabeth gave a
presentation and Stephen Dydo performed four new pieces for qin and pipa.
Stephen
and Mingmei also took part in a qin concert on the final day.
See the October 8 meeting notes for more on this.
Bo
added that at CHIME he was asked to write two articles for translation into
Chinese. One, on musical discoveries in the tomb of the Marquis Yi of Zheng,
is for a large two-volume book to be published in China in connection with an
anniversary of the tomb's discovery. Other important scholars worldwide will
also be contributing articles. The other article, for the Journal of Wuhan
Archeological Museum, will concern the origins of the qin.
In
Hong Kong Bo visited Yang Yuansheng, a Ph.D. candidate in the Hong Kong
University Department of Music (topic: Manuscripts in Japan on Chinese Music),
and went with him to see Ruan Shichun, an accomplished maker of Tang dynasty
string instruments. Ruan has made a copy of the pipa in the Shosoin
Treasure House, Nara, for Rembrandt Wolpert. Bo believes this instrument has
been played by Wu Man.
In
Hong Kong Bo also visited Dr. Tong Kin-Woon. Bo also visited the qin collector Benny Shum.
From
October
23–28, 2005, in
Wuyishan, Fujian Province, Bo attended a conference of APSE (Asia Pacific
Society of Ethnomusicology).
His topic was "Transmission and Change of the Chinese Qin,
Between the Zhou and Tang Dynasties."
From
Nov 3-6, 2005, at the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, Bo attended, together
with members Elizabeth Markham and Rembrandt
Wolpert, the "2005 Symposium on Ancient East-Asian Tablature
Notations." They gave the following presentations:
Rembrandt
Wolpert, "Re-Interpreting
Sino-Japanese Instrumental Notations"
Elizabeth
Markham, "Parameters
of Melody and Time Captured for Early Instrumental Gagaku"
Bo
Lawergren, “Instruments on Japanese Raigo paintings and their Chinese
and Central Asian sources”
With
regard to his own paper, Bo showed members a book called Descent of Amitabha
and the Heavenly Multitude. Descent (raigo in Japanese, laiying
in Chinese) paintings often show these Buddhist celestials descending with
and/or playing musical instruments; Bo's paper described this and analyzed
what we can learn from them about music of the day.
Peter
Reis
Peter,
in Paris last month, went to the Museum of Music Instruments at the Cite de la
Musique in the northeast corner of the city. He looked unsuccessfully for qins,
but found an interesting set of what the msueum claim to be Tang dynasty
horses with figures of women musicians on top. The women seem to be playing
the instruments, some of which were missing. They were in excellent shape, but
it was not clear how carefully there provenance had been documented; they were
acquired only recently. Peter showed pictures he had been able to take.
John
Thompson
John
spoke about his recent trip to Beijing and Hong Kong, a short trip left over
from the trip he had to cut short in June. In Beijing he gave a performance
for the Chinese Cultural Society at Beijing Normal University (now actually a
regular university, but it keeps the old name for posterity's sake). The
audience was a mixture of students, faculty and qin players from outside. At
the end Han Jie, who teaches qin at the university, presented John with a poem
he had written commemorating the event.
John
the played Hanjie Cao (Melody of Han Credentials), discussed in some
detail in the minutes for the November meeting. He played the modal prelude, Yingzhong
Yi, several times, and also highlighted some of the more descriptive
passages.
Yip
Mingmei
Mingmei
attended a recent talk at the China Institute by an expert on calligraphy
found outdoors on rocks. She had been told that there would be some discussion
of qin-related calligraphy, but there was only one item, a large rock face
inscribed with Gao Shan Liu Shui (High Mountains, Flowing Streams).
Mingmei
played three melodies, all according to the versions in Yinyinshi Qinpu,
the handbook of her teacher in Hong Kong, Cai Deyun.
Wuye
Wu Qiufeng
(Parasol Leaves Dance in the Autumn Breeze)
This
melody is first found in Qinxue
Xinsheng
(1664), a handbook of compositions by Zhuang Zhenfeng. Zhuang was a teacher of
Jiang Xingchou , who went to Japan in 1676, where he became well-known as the
monk Shin-Etsu. The melody occurs in 21 handbooks to 1899, and seems to have
changed very little since the
Pingsha
Luoyan
(Geese Settle on the Sandbank)
This
time Mingmei played a different version from the one she played in the
November meeting.
Guiqulai
Ci
(Come Away Home)
Mingmei
again played this famous song with lyrics by Tao Yuanming (see minutes of the November
meeting.)
Stephen
Dydo
Stephen
also played three melodies.
Pingsha
Luo Yan
(Geese Settle on the Sandbank)
This
version, which Stephen learned from Jung-Ping, is different from Mingmei's
version.
Qi
Yan Hui
(Mourning Yan Hui)
This
melody was initially printed in Jinyu Qinkan (1937). Stephen learned it
from
Kongzi
Du Yi
(Confucius Recites the Book of Changes)
See
minutes of the November meeting
John
Thompson
Secretary
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