After delivering two highly lauded performances at Carnegie Hall in May, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra returned to New York City on Sunday afternoon, taking the stage at Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall to commence the 2013 Beijing Modern Music Festival. Before a quasi-full house, the orchestra performed a riveting matinee program entitled “Songs of the Earth”, which was dedicated entirely to the eclectic vocal and symphonic works of contemporary Chinese composer Xiaogang Ye.
The concert opened with the world première of Ye’s Twilight of the Himalayas, Op. 68, which the composer completed, in part, after he was named a Guggenheim Fellowship recipient in 2012. For this performance, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra was joined by the New York Choral Society, who together accompanied soloists Yijie Shi (tenor), Liu Shen (boy soprano) and Ji Wei (zheng), under the conductorship of Yongyan Hu.
Twilight of the Himalayas is one of six compositions inspired by Ye’s years of travel through Tibet and Nepal, and takes listeners on a sonic journey across a region of the world renowned for its beauty, serenity, and rich tradition. Yet, what is perhaps most intriguing about this work is its tasteful marrying of Eastern and Western musical styles, which are used in conjunction to convey the piece’s Tibetan-inspired themes.
Indeed, the scoring of this work, which includes parts for zheng and dizi, provided concert-goers with a taste of the composer’s close Asian and American ties, satiating their palates with the diverse timbres and textures of both Eastern and Western instruments and stylistic techniques. For instance, throughout the work tenor Yijie Shi performed in a Western operatic style, while thirteen-year-old boy soprano Liu Shen delivered shrill, thin vocal lines more akin to the ancient Chinese vocal tradition. And while no Tibetan instruments were included in the scoring of this work, Ye adeptly crafted lines in the percussion and brass sections to closely imitate traditional Tibetan sounds.
Overall, Shi and Shen delivered a beautiful rendition of the composition’s vocal texts. The performance demonstrated Ye’s keen ability to paint words with sounds, bringing them to life through both the distinctive vocal timbres of the singing soloists, and the varied textures supplied by the zheng, orchestra and full chorus. All parts were carefully constructed to best capture the work’s dynamic swells, which moved in concurrence with moments of tension and release and resulted in a chilling performance.
Following this elaborate work were two United States premières that were equally impressive in their texture and effect. The first of these was Ye’s Konzertstück for violin and orchestra entitled The Last Paradise, Op. 24 (1993). This single-movement composition exemplifies Ye’s ability to convey a story without the aid of a vocal text.