Matching Items (4)
ContributorsLaRue, Logan (Performer) / Para, Efrain (Performer) / Wang, Yun (Performer) / Wu, Yu (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2022-11-29
ContributorsWang, Yun (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2022-04-08
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Description
Ge Gan-ru (b. 1954) is considered one of the most innovative composers of his time and is referred to in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians as “China's first avant-garde composer.”[ Stanley Sadie, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press,( January

Ge Gan-ru (b. 1954) is considered one of the most innovative composers of his time and is referred to in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians as “China's first avant-garde composer.”[ Stanley Sadie, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press,( January 29, 2004): 258.] In 1986, Ge composed Ancient Music, a piece employs extended piano techniques to express the composer's reimagination of ancient Chinese music. This project explores the life and music of Ge Gan-ru by providing a historical background of Ge’s life as a composer during the Chinese Cultural Revolution[ The Chinese Cultural Revolution was a decade-long era of political and social upheaval ignited by Mao Zedong's attempt to restore his authority over the Communist Party through the mistreatment of the Chinese people. ] and the changes after he came to America. In addition, a technical analysis and performance guide of Ancient Music are included, in order to discuss how he expresses his individual compositional language and integrates Chinese musical concepts into a western contemporary compositional system. In this document, I take a close look at Ge Gan-ru’s perspectives on Chinese music and the revolutionary reforms he made. Chapter One is a review of sources about Ge’s life and study in China and America and a brief introduction to his Ancient Music. Chapter Two discusses why the concept of composer in the context of Western music is missing in Chinese music, as most traditional Chinese works were not created by a single person and therefore do not reflect the individual voice of one composer. This point can also be extended to explain why Chinese society has historically encouraged homogenization including in music. Chapter Three serves as a performance guide, as well as a musical and technical analysis of Ancient Music. This will involve outlining and comparing the performance of traditional Chinese instruments with the internal piano techniques employed throughout this piece. Chapter Four is a summary of Ge’s Ancient Music and his musical contributions.
ContributorsWang, Yun (Author) / Breslin, Cathal (Thesis advisor) / Solís, Ted (Committee member) / Creviston, Hannah (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
ContributorsChesley, Ann (Performer) / Dicks, Brandon (Performer) / Austin, Alex (Performer) / Holly, Sean (Performer) / Matejek, Ryan (Performer) / Zhu, Weichao (Performer) / Kim, Michelle DaHye (Performer) / Robinson, Michael (Performer) / Baik, Elijah (Performer) / Kelley, Karen (Performer) / Wang, Yun (Performer) / Hsieh, Alison (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2021-10-06