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Asian Composers Replicate on Careers in Western Classical Music

Asian composers who write in Western classical musical forms, like symphonies and operas, tend to have a few things in common. Many learned European styles from an early age, and finished their studies at conservatories there or in the United States. And many later found themselves relegated to programming ghettos like Lunar New Year concerts. (One recent study found that works by Asian composers make up only about 2 percent of American orchestral performances planned for the coming season.)

At times, the music of Asian composers has been misunderstood or exoticized; they have been subjected to simple errors such as, in the case of Huang Ruo, who was born in China, repeated misspellings of his name.

For all their shared experiences, each of these artists has a unique story. Here, five of them provide a small sampling of the lessons, struggles and triumphs of composers who were born in Asia and made a career for themselves in Western classical music. These are edited excerpts from interviews with them.

Music is my language. To me “West” and “East” are just ways of talking — or like ways of cooking. I’m a chef, and sometimes I find my recipe is like my orchestrations. It would be so boring if you asked me to cook in one style. Eastern and Western, then, have for me become a unique recipe in which one plus one equals one.

I am in a very special zone historically. I’m 63, and part of the first generation of Eastern composers after the Cultural Revolution to deal with Western forms. But it’s just like rosemary, butter and vegetables. You can cook this way, that way — and that’s why the same orchestras sound so different, from Debussy to Stravinsky to myself.

I’m lucky. When I came to the United States as a student, my teachers and classmates gave me enormous encouragement to discover myself. And I learned so much from John Cage. After this, it felt so easy to compose. And when people approach me for commissions, I re-approach them about what I’m thinking about. I remember when Kurt Masur asked me to write something for the New York Philharmonic — the Water Concerto for Water Percussion and Orchestra — I said, “Can I write something for water?” He said, “As long as you don’t flood our orchestra.”

Yes, we often are misunderstood. It’s like when you cook beautiful black bean with chili sauce and chocolate. They may say, “Hey, this is a little strange.” But you explain why, and that can be very interesting. Thank God I love to talk. And there has been progress for us. I am the first Eastern composer to be the dean of a Western conservatory, at Bard. That’s like a Chinese chef becoming the chef of an Italian restaurant. That’s the future: a different way of approaching color, boundary-less, a unity of the soul.

One thing about composers like Tan Dun: They came out of the Cultural Revolution, after a door had closed for so many years. So there was so much focus on what China was doing, a lot of curiosity — curiosity rather than active racism. Our generation — I’m 44 — is so different.

We learn Western music with such rigorous systems. And we do not close our ears to different traditions or styles; that attitude determines early on that you don’t have that kind of boundary, or ownership. But you still hear those conversation topics about “East meets West.” It’s so tiring. East has been meeting West for thousands of years; if we’re always still just meeting, that’s a problem.

Programming Chinese composers around Lunar New Year is in general very problematic. Do we need to celebrate the culture? Yes. Do we need to celebrate the tradition? Absolutely. But it can be part of the main subscription series, or a yearlong series. Then you can really tell stories, not just group people by a country.

My name does not give me ownership of Chinese culture. There are so many things I don’t know. There are so many burdens and fights — as the woman, the woman of color, the Chinese woman — that I decided to fight nothing and just create my own stuff. I told myself that if I had a great body of work, that would speak to what a Chinese woman can do.

I never wanted to be pigeonholed, to be a reduced representation. I wanted to always open that Pandora’s box of messiness — and I encourage others to celebrate messiness, the unclean narrative of your life. Every immigrant has her own path; your work should absolutely be reflective of that. So if I’m a spokesperson, it’s for my own voice. And through that particular voice, I hope there is something that resonates.

When I left China, it was a time of economic and cultural reform. I’m glad I came to the United States, but I do have a little bit of guilt. I probably could have done more there. At the time, my ambition was to try to learn Western music and become the best composer, pianist and conductor I could be. I was fortunate to work with many fantastic musicians and meet Leonard Bernstein, who took me under his wing for five years. Now, at 65, when someone asks me if I consider myself a Chinese or American composer, I say, in the most humble way, “100 percent both.” I feel well-versed in both cultures.

Occasionally, there has been racism and misunderstanding, but that is inevitable. Would that be different if there were more Asian people running orchestras? Maybe. My response has just been to try to produce the best music I can. I wrote an opera for San Francisco Opera — “Dream of the Red Chamber,” which they’re reviving. It’s based on a very popular Chinese story, and when I worked on it with David Henry Hwang, we asked ourselves: “Is this for a Western audience or Asian audience?” We decided first and foremost it should just be good, and it had to be touching. Good art should transcend.

Years ago, I wrote an orchestral piece, “H’un (Lacerations),” which premiered at the 92nd Street Y in New York. It is about my recollections growing up during the Cultural Revolution, and is thus sonically harsh and dramatic, with no melody. My mother was there, and she said it brought back a lot of painful memories. I was also sitting next to an old Jewish woman, and after I took a bow onstage, she leaned over and said, “If you changed the title to ‘Auschwitz,’ this would be just as appropriate.” That was the highest compliment.

The Korea of my childhood and adolescence was a very different place from what it is today. In the 1960s, it was an impoverished developing country, devastated by colonialism and by the Korean War, and until the late 1980s, there was a military dictatorship in place. In order to develop as a composer, one had to go abroad, as there didn’t exist an infrastructure for new music. Now 60, and having lived for 35 years in Europe, it remains important for me to contribute to the contemporary music scene in Asia.

When I moved to Germany, there was a tendency to put composers in certain boxes, with all the aesthetic turf wars back then. Since I was neither interested in joining any camp or fashionable avant-garde or other trends, fulfilling exotic expectations, or assumptions of how a woman should or should not compose, I had to start a career in other countries while still living in Germany. Prejudices such as viewing an Asian composer or performing musician only through “sociological” lenses are still relatively common in various countries, but times are changing. Of course, there exist prejudices and complacency in the whole world, including in Asia. Perhaps the only remedy to this apparently, and sadly, all-too-human impulse is try to retain a sense of wonder and attempt to find distance to oneself.

I have worked in different countries for decades, and have felt a need to stay curious about different musical cultures, traditions and genres. I believe in multiple identities and think that without curiosity, any musical style or culture atrophies and risks becoming a museum: Art has always thrived when there has been cross-fertilization.

At the same time, one should be wary of the danger of exoticism and superficial cultural appropriation. I think that a contemporary composer needs to study different cultures, traditions and genres, but make use of those influences in a selective, historically conscious and self-critical manner.

When people heard I came from China, they would often say, “Does your music sound like Tan Dun?” I don’t think they meant any harm, but it shows a certain ignorance. I tried to explain that China is a big country, and we all speak with our own voice.

I started as an instrumental composer, and a lot of those works got programmed at Asian-themed or Lunar New Year concerts. I didn’t notice at first, but you begin to see patterns. I don’t feel my work has any less quality than my other colleagues who are not minority composers, but for conductors, programmers and artistic directors, it doesn’t seem to come to their mind that you can naturally program an Asian composer’s work next to Beethoven or Tchaikovsky.

That’s one of the reasons I turned to opera. I thought, there must be no opera company having a themed season devoted to Asian composers. So finally, I got to be programmed next to “Fidelio” and “Madama Butterfly.” That was my revenge. Also, I’ve wanted to write on subjects that reflect Asian or Asian American topics, to really share these stories. In this case it is actually me making the choice.

Someone once told me I speak English with an accent. I said, “Otherwise, how would you know that’s me speaking?” I feel the same way as a composer. I want to have my own originality, to speak with my own accent — with my love of Western musical styles, but also this heritage I carry of Chinese culture.

Without coming to the United States, I would be a different composer. If I went to Europe instead, I would also be very different. But I feel I made the right decision, and at 44 I fully embrace who I am today, and where I am as well.

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5 Classical Albums to Hear Proper Now

Piotr Anderszewski, piano (Warner Classics)

Piotr Anderszewski is perhaps the most convincing unconventional Bach pianist since Glenn Gould, and he certainly approached his first fascinating recording of preludes and fugues from “The Well-Tempered Clavier” creatively. Not for him the typical step-by-step ascent through each of the keys from C to B minor; Instead, a jumbled selection of contrasts and additions that will raise your eyebrows but will win you over to your ears.

And how! Anderszewski’s game is a miracle of touch and temperament. When there is a chance for something unusual, something unexpected, Anderszewski takes it, as in the puckish F minor prelude or in the percussive, prickly fugue in F. Regardless of his ability to dance, he has always been a dreamer at heart, and it is also in the agony of the minor fugues that its concentrated intensity captivates and overwhelms. The one in D flat minor is reminiscent of the most deserted solitude imaginable, and a few more. the B minor somehow transforms fear into anger; The G sharp minor wanders robbed and brooding, as if it were the darkest Schumann. This is one of the great Bach recordings from that time. DAVID ALLEN

Antoine Tamestit, viola; Cédric Tiberghien, piano; Matthias Goerne, baritone (Harmonia Mundi)

“Herbstlich” is the word most often used in connection with Brahms’ viola sonatas. These intimate, ruminating works, originally written for the clarinet, are the last chamber pieces that Brahms wrote. And there is the subdued glow of the viola’s timbre, the range of which a human voice can comfortably follow. In a duet, the sound of the viola nestles modestly into that of the piano, without the flights and lightning strikes of a violin or clarinet.

Yet there is no cozy pathos in this profound recording of Antoine Tamestit, a violist with a rare combination of stage magnetism and literal devotion to the practice of historical performance. He approaches the opening of the Sonata in E flat like a consummate dancer – sleek, elegant, and attentive. In slow movements like the dreamy Andante of the Sonata in F minor, he weaves lines of effortless charisma, equal parts light and air. Cédric Tiberghien plays a Bechstein piano from 1899 with a mother-of-pearl-colored, soft tone and is a responsive and expressive partner.

The vocal quality of Tamestit’s viola lends itself well to two arrangements of songs by Brahms: “Nachtigall” (“Nightingale”) and the famous lullaby “Wiegenlied”, which is played with sweet, wavy speed. For the last two tracks, Matthias Goerne gives the “Zwei Gesänge” (op. 91) his silky baritone, two songs in which voice and viola intertwine like lines drawn with a calligraphy brush. CORINNA da FONSECA-WOLLHEIM

Imani winds (bright shiny things)

The metaphor at the heart of this new album by the Imani Winds quintet is written on the cover: “Bruits” in large, bold letters over pronunciation instructions and a definition: “Noises made by blood moving through clogged arteries and onto the Body indicates is endangered. “As a homophone, it is also reminiscent of” Brutes “- brute force, brutality.

“Bruits” takes its name from a work by Vijay Iyer, which, like Reena Esmail’s “The Light Is the Same” and Frederic Rzewski’s “Sometimes”, received its first recording on the album. Iyer wrote it in 2014 for Imani Winds and the pianist Cory Smythe and responded to the murder of Trayvon Martin with a score that smoothly spans fluid improvisation and tight complexity and leads to a climatic, uniform eruption.

Esmail’s piece – its title inspired by the observation of a Rumi poem that in a world of many religions “the lamps may be different but the light is the same” – beautifully interweaves two contrasting Hindustani ragas. One dark and the other light, their sounds flow fluently into the same room before they come together in a blissful dance.

Also in Rzewski, who plays the hopeful words of the reconstruction scholar John Hope Franklin (spoken by his son John Whittington Franklin), there are contrasts to the hopeless lines of Langston Hughes’ poem “God to Hungry Child” (sung by the soprano Janai Brugger). Between the two, the spiritual “Sometimes I feel like a motherless child” is deconstructed through a series of variations in which the theme never returns, and the end is denied a clean solution. JOSHUA BARONE

Boston Modern Orchestra Project; Gil Rose, Conductor (BMOP / Sound)

The four most recent works by Robert Carl on “White Heron” all deal with space in different ways, as the composer emphasizes in the liner notes. The title track of the album was created from Carl’s intimate observation of bird life in the Florida Keys. “Rocking Chair Serenade” for string orchestra is an elegy for “Conversation and fellowship on the veranda in the Appalachians”, inspired by memories of his youth.

The concept of space is conveyed through extended stretches of these scores unfolding in expansive, trembling, sour sounds, often arising from what Carl calls personalized harmony (a term I like) of all 12 chromatic pitches. This technique is particularly expressed in “What’s Underfoot”. Yet even in seemingly calm episodes, Carl’s music is restless beneath the surface with riffs that stimulate internal intensity and thrust.

It is gripping, almost a relief, when a piece really takes off, as in sections of Symphony No. 5, “Land”, which are bursting with frenzied energy, streams of notes and cut out eruptions. The performances under Gil Rose capture both the tonal appeal and the multilayered complexity of the music. ANTHONY TOMMASINI

Claire Chase, flute; Seth Parker Woods, cello; Dana Jessen, bassoon (New Focus)

If you are aware of the work of composer and improviser George E. Lewis, you may be wondering if you have already heard a substantial portion of his latest album, The Recombinant Trilogy, which focuses on pieces for soloists and plus electronics. (The software used for all of these works uses interactive digital delays, spatiality, and timbre conversion in response to each instrument, as noted.)

And it’s true, two of the pieces were previously released on albums by the same players who are represented here. “Emergent” appeared on the album “Density 2036: Parts I and II” by flautist Claire Chase. And “Not Alone” was part of a 2016 recording by cellist Seth Parker Woods.

That Woods recording, which was pretty definitive, is simply duplicated (although remastered) in “The Recombinant Trilogy”. But Chase took another swing here on “Emergent,” and she found a new lyrical approach to its whispering polyphony. While her earlier take was punchy and harsh – both in its electronic timbres and acoustic play – this one sounds warmer.

The premiere recording on the album – “Seismologic” for bassoonist Dana Jessen – fits the trilogy perfectly. Some of the early motifs of the piece, dark yet seductive, could have come from the Wagnerian forests. Later flights into the advanced technique bring the piece into a zone in which both the influence of Stockhausen and the brisk American jazz can be felt. SETH COLTER WALLS

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Love Classical Music? Anthony Tommasini Recommends Modern Composers

Gilbert asks: I have to say when I hear you describe these performances I miss the size of a concert hall as much as I miss the size of a movie screen. Part of experiencing art outside of my home is the potential to be overwhelmed, and as many speakers I have or as big as my TV, it obviously doesn’t feel that way. I’ve only really started watching live classical music in the last three or four years. You have been doing this for much longer and I have to imagine that the longing is deeper.

You recently wrote a wonderful piece, Notes Toward Reinventing the American Orchestra, which is full of clever suggestions on how classical music organizations could change after the pandemic. What don’t you want to change

Tony replies: Ah, what I don’t want to change about classical music, which in my opinion will never change, is the pure sensual pleasure, even ecstasy, in the sound of a large orchestra, a fine string quartet, a radiant soprano. And to experience that you have to experience this art form live.

As a child I got to know countless pieces through recordings. And during the pandemic, it often feels like we just have recordings. When I was growing up, I was enthusiastic about the pianist Rudolf Serkin and the New York Philharmonic under Bernstein in the Carnegie Hall in Beethoven’s mighty “Emperor” concert. and as a young teenager having a standing ticket to hear the famous soprano Renata Tebaldi in her voluptuous voice as Desdemona in Verdi’s “Otello” at the Metropolitan Opera; or a little later, when I hear Leontyne Price’s soft, sustained high notes rise up in “Aida” and surround me on a balcony seat in the Met. I only vaguely knew what these operas were about. I didn’t care.

And what I say also applies to more intimate music. Only when you hear a great string quartet performing works by Haydn, Shostakovich or Bartok in a hall with only a few hundred seats do you really understand what makes “chamber music” so overwhelming. But hearing a symphony by Mozart or Messiaen in a lively, inviting concert hall makes a big difference.

Gilbert asks: You’ve proven this to me several times over the past three years – I think about the time it took you to listen to “The Rite of Spring” at Carnegie Hall and I walked out amazed. (I know, such a newbie.) Or when my eyes flashed at the end of Samuel Barber’s “Knoxville Summer 1915” at David Geffen Hall. I just don’t think I would have had the same feelings if I’d heard these pieces at home.