Teahouse (2016)

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024
  • Wu Man, pipa, Feras Charestan, qanun, Abbos Kosimov, doira
    Arranged from folk sources by Wu Man (b. 1963)
    “Teahouse” is an homage to the sound of the traditional silk and bamboo
    instruments played in teahouses in Wu Man’s hometown area of Zhejiang
    Province, in China’s southeast. Not long ago, Wu Man taught the
    quintessentially Chinese pentatonic melody of “Teahouse” to qanun player Feras
    Charestan, who embellished it with his own improvised counterpoint. The
    beautifully integrated sound of the two instruments seems so natural that a
    listener could be excused for thinking that pipa and qanun have always been
    played together - and indeed, in a sense, they have. The pipa traces its ancestry
    to the Persian barbat, the short-necked lute with a bent scroll that may well have
    also provided the prototype for the Middle Eastern oud, and the melded sound of
    lutes and zithers is at the very center of traditional music from Iran and the Arab
    lands.
    Wu Man is an acclaimed performer on the pipa, a four-stringed Chinese lute with ancient
    roots that, due in large part to her efforts, has become a leading instrument of
    contemporary music in both East and West. Wu Man performs both traditional and
    contemporary music on the pipa, and many new works have been commissioned specially
    for her. She was a founding member of the Silk Road Ensemble, and has played an active
    role in cross-cultural music making, in particular with members of China’s Uyghur
    minority.
    Feras Charestan is from the city of Al-Hasakeh, in the northeast of Syria, and studied
    qanun at the High Institute of Music in Damascus. He has performed as a qanun soloist
    with symphony orchestras and has been a member of popular bands as well as
    contemporary music ensembles, creating new music rooted in Middle Eastern traditions.
    Feras Charestan currently lives in Stockholm, Sweden.
    Abbos Kosimov was born in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, into a musical family. A disciple of
    the honored Uzbek doira player Tuychi Inogomov and winner of the Competition of
    Percussion Instruments of Central Asia and Kazakhstan, Kosimov established his own
    doira school in 1994 and his ensemble, “Abbos,” in 1998. Kosimov performs
    internationally with Zakir Hussain and Randy Gloss’s percussion group Hand’s
    OnSemble and recorded with Stevie Wonder.

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