Ghost Opera
Kronos Quartet
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| Name | Artist | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
Ghost Opera, For String Quartet and Pipa, Movement I: Bach, Monks and Shakespeare Meet In Water | Kronos Quartet & Wu Man | 8:55 | Work Only | View In iTunes |
|
2 |
Ghost Opera, For String Quartet and Pipa, Movement II: Earth Dance | Kronos Quartet & Wu Man | 6:47 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
|
3 |
Ghost Opera, For String Quartet and Pipa, Movement III: Dialogue With "Little Cabbage" | Kronos Quartet & Wu Man | 3:13 | Work Only | View In iTunes |
|
4 |
Ghost Opera, For String Quartet and Pipa, Movement IV: Metal and Stone | Kronos Quartet & Wu Man | 10:09 | Work Only | View In iTunes |
|
5 |
Ghost Opera, For String Quartet and Pipa, Movement V: Song of Paper | Kronos Quartet & Wu Man | 6:40 | Work Only | View In iTunes |
| Total: 5 Songs |
Album Review
For Tan Dun's Ghost Opera, the Kronos Quartet had their instrumental abilities stretched to include various percussion, wind instruments, and vocals and were joined by pipa virtuoso Wu Man. The first sound one hears is a hand being drawn through a bowl of water. Soon, strains of Bach appear, accompanied by the pipa, an ancient Chinese lute, and the voiced prayer of a monk. Bach figures into much of the work, in fact, as if being played by a traveling string quartet making their way through back-country China. The piece slides comfortably between these areas, the strings sometimes taking on an Asian character that compliments the Baroque allusions in an oddly effective manner. The music is generally soft in nature with, aside from the Bach, frequent references to Chinese folk songs of a pastoral quality. It's almost lulling at times, though there's enough subtlety of detail to keep the attentive listener engaged. Those who only cottoned to Tan Dun after his success several years after this recording, with the soundtrack to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, should enjoy this carefully considered, meditative piece.
Customer Reviews
Well done!
Mr Tan has his ups and downs but when he gets it right he nails it. The Ghost Opera is exactly as advertized while managing to mix the best of east and west. Kronos and Wu Man play with persicion and care. A wonderful recording.
A well-played mix
The melding of East (traditional folk song and instruments) and West (Bach, Shakespeare, classical instruments) is just perfect; an enjoyable listen, for sure, if you can get past the fact that this is not your mother's Little Cabbage.
Very well played...
Haunting, enchanting - deserving of headphones and a quiet room. But Ghost Opera has live visual/theatrical elements; any recording is doomed to fall short of the full experience.
Biography
Formed: 1973 in United States
Genre: Classical
Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s













