亚洲精品动漫在线_亚洲欧美日韩在线一区_亚洲午夜国产片在线观看_亚洲va久久久噜噜噜久久狠狠

a heart in a field of flowers for china--Linda Neil

Introduction


The topic as presented to us was The Future of East and West. I felt it was very difficult to cover such a large topic in a short paper so I thought I would present my talk as a memoir.


THE FUTURE OF THE EAST AND THE WEST:

A Heart in a Field of Flowers

I grew up in a place called St Lucia in Brisbane, the capital of Queensland, one of the northern states of Australia. My parents were both teachers. My father taught Latin, History, Maths and English at a local grammar school and my mother, who was from the country and had left school when she was fifteen, taught singing and piano.
I grew up a few streets away from the University of Queensland. It is renowned for its beautiful grounds, its wide lawns and green trees, the river along which it lies and especially for the lake which occupies its centre. Growing up near the university meant that long before my four brothers and sisters and I attended to study for degrees, we played in the grounds of the university. I especially loved to walk up to the lake on a Sunday afternoon with an empty container to catch guppies (small fish). It would take me twenty minutes or so to walk to the lake where I would sit quietly for another thirty minutes, watching the ducks swimming in formation before scooping my container through the rippling water and filling it with the tiny, golden fish that swam near the surface of the water. I would then walk home, which took another twenty minutes, show the guppies to my mother or father, and then walk back up to the lake to release the fish back into the water.
This capturing and releasing of the fish was a childhood ritual that meant I spent quite a bit of time on my own beside the lake. I had to learn to wait and watch for the movement of the fish, to observe how they moved together—in “schools”, as my father told me—to be able to move unobtrusively towards the water as I tried to scoop up my prey. I found it soothing to sit beside the lake although perhaps anyone who saw me there—a young girl on her own—might have thought I was troubled or lonely. But as it did for many ancient Chinese poets, the lake became a metaphor for the gentle movement of time, the rituals of the days and years, and the contemplation of seasons and landscape.
A few years after I grew too big for my childish ritual, I attended the University officially— to study Law and Music. The music department was situated right near the lake and students could sometimes be seen and heard practicing their cellos and violins, flutes and oboes under the willow trees by the water. Looking back now, I see what a privileged life it was — with opportunities and freedoms that many young people around the world long for.
In between classes and lessons and rehearsals, I often sat beside the lake with my boyfriend, Sean, who also studied music. As we sat and sipped cool drinks, we read the words of the poet and philosopher, Lao Tzu. His non-western, non-materialistic contemplations seemed to resonate perfectly with our eclectic reading of European writers, such as Hermann Hesse, Thomas Mann and Aldous Huxley, who had also turned towards Eastern philosophy for inspiration.
Sean was studying Chinese poetry at the time and once read me this stanza written in the eleventh century by Su Shih:
Shimmering water at its fill—sunny day is best;
Blurred mountain in a haze—marvelous even in rain
Compare wet lake to a beautiful girl, she will look
Just as becoming—lightly made up or richly adorned.
I look back now on this simple scene of two first year university students sitting and reading by the lake and I understand that in his awkward way, Sean was romancing me with this ancient Chinese poem. We were perhaps more bookish than the average Australian, but we were young and in love, a state of being and feeling that, according to the classic poems and texts from many cultures, is typical across time, culture, gender and class. And at the lake, which resonated with words inscribed centuries ago, Sean was relating this old Chinese text to our lives as young contemporary Australians.
The poetry became a kind of motif that ran through the narrative of our relationship. He sent me these lines written in the eighth century by Zhang Jiu Ling:
I loathe this endless night;
And could not sleep but think of thee.
In this full moon light,
Who cares for candlelight?
Stepping out I don my gown,
And feel dew on the ground.
I wish to offer you moonlight in a handful.
…. and I sent this one back to him from the ninth century poet, Wen T’ing Yun:
A gold finch in my hair
My cheeks brightly rouged
For one brief moment we met among the flowers
You understood my heart
And tender was your love
Only Heaven knew the joys we shared
And while my cheeks were still un-rouged and powder-free, and to my knowledge I had never seen a goldfinch, I did relate to the lines — we met among the flowers, you understood my heart. Even if I may not have fully understood at seventeen exactly what an ‘understood heart’ felt like, it gave me a vision that I have held inside me ever since—the image of meeting in a garden of flowers and being recognized as my self by another. When further study overseas meant we were separated by oceans for a whole year, Sean sent me lines from the twelfth century poet, Chang K’uei:
This land among the rivers
So quiet and still
I sigh for a friend far away
I’ll always remember the place where we held hands
a thousand trees in bloom press down on the cool green of the lake
then one by one the petals were blown away
when can we see them again?
While we were also aware of the many injustices suffered by Australia’s indigenous citizens, and would become more politically active in this regard as time went on, it struck me even then, that the world is a small place and that in my life in Brisbane, songs and poems and philosophy from the east—and from China in particular—were already part of the fabric of my life.
Sean studied cello at the Queensland Conservatorium of Music in Brisbane. Throughout the last decades of the twentieth century, students of western classical music from Shanghai and Beijing had come to this conservatorium to study with Professors and teachers of music of the western tradition. Perhaps they had been inspired when they were children by the marvelous film, From Mao to Mozart, about violinist, Isaac Stern’s groundbreaking journey to China and his interaction with Chinese music students eager to learn about not just the technique, but the “feel” of western music. As travel and study in China became more accessible, students and composers from Brisbane began to journey over to China to create and produce collaborative works with contemporary and folk musicians in both urban and rural areas of China. Creative acts not only create tangible artistic outcomes, they also create possible futures and these
collaborations, which had their fragile origins over twenty years ago, are ongoing today.
At the same time that the music community in Brisbane welcomed our musical friends from China, Sean and I were still absorbing the ancient texts of Lao Tzu and the philosophy of Taoism. Just as I suspect there was something that the Chinese students of Western music yearned to learn from teachers in Brisbane, there was something appealing to a western music student about these words from Lao Tzu:
Music from the soul can be heard by the universe.
Around this time my mother’s singing teaching practice expanded and some of the overseas Chinese students studying at the University of Queensland came to learn singing from her. They were interested in learning western vocal techniques, but she was also interested in the possibility of them teaching her some simple Chinese songs. In the recitals she held in her music studio underneath our house, I heard students from China--who were usually studying a variety of communication and technological subjects--singing their folk songs in sweet, sometimes wavering voices, before joining my mother at the piano for a rendition of an art song from Schubert or Handel. I recall one of these songs, about a Jasmine flower, even today.
This juxtaposition of so-called high art and popular art, the classical and the folk tradition, enacted across cultures, generations, and musical genres, was always part of my heritage. My father, a man who valued writing and books, and my mother, a beautiful singer and vocal artist, saw equal value in both traditions and we were encouraged to travel broadly in our tastes.
Years later, I began to write and sing my own songs. The instrument I used to accompany myself—the violin—was traditionally used in the classical western music tradition in what some might refer to as its “high art” form. When bowed, it usually plays melody rather than rhythm and its music is considered a high point of western European music, especially regarding the virtuosic works for violin, which range from the architecturally magnificent Chaconne in D minor by JS Bach to the great concertos by Beethoven, Brahms and Tchaikovsky. For me, putting down the bow and strumming the strings with my fingers transformed the violin from this vehicle of singular expression into a kind of folk instrument—with all the rawness and honest simplicity that this implies.
From the first few simple songs I wrote and sang, my project grew to the stage where I embarked on a year-long odyssey through peoples’ lounge rooms and private spaces in which I presented my songs and stories much like a travelling minstrel did in medieval times. This story became a radio documentary and next year it will be made into a film. What began in lounge rooms is now a global journey. My project in Shanghai is called Singing Love Songs in China and next year when I will be living in Paris my project there will be called Singing Love Songs in Paris.
Although the project was conceived in my lounge room in Brisbane today, it was inspired by the lounge room of my childhood, where people freely shared poetry, song and music. The philosophy behind it, though, is not much different from that of Lao Tzu’s, whose words I first read by the lake up the road from where I grew up.
Music from the soul can be heard by the universe.
And these:
To love someone deeply
gives you strength.
Being loved by someone deeply
gives you courage
According to Lao Tzu then, to sing love songs—to give them and to receive them across the world, as love is given and received— means to engage in music that regenerates both our strength and courage, qualities that can then be heard by the universe. To discover these things in the cultures of both the East and the West offers us a chance to recognize the creative, innovative and communicative spirit in all of us. It echoes—as music from the soul does—around the whole world.
My love songs employ the principles of folk song—they are direct, simple and from the heart. I acknowledge, though, that these songs, as simple as they are, have been enabled by my years of training in the western classical tradition—the same tradition that students from China came to my home town to absorb—that has now allowed me to reach out across the world to communicate and sing to other cultures and to find in this global community the things that connect rather than divide. This is my small way of contemplating the future of the east and west in words and song and to acknowledge that even in my simple life they have always been connected—from those days as a child in Brisbane in the twentieth century when I visited and gazed upon the lake just as Chinese poets from the eleventh century did to inspire their poetry and song. When I was researching recently the subject of love songs in China, I read about a popular folk song phenomenon called Hua’er, which is found in Qinghai province in the northwest part of China. Although Qinghai is historically one of the poorest regions in China, the province is known as the “ocean of Hua’er”, a phrase that signifies its cultural abundance. Hua’er means “flowers” and flowers usually represent the object or subject of these love songs. In the Hua’er tradition, the ability to sing high is also especially valued as singing in the high register carries the voice farther into the open fields and mountain valleys.
I think of the Hua’er now as I contemplate how the singing and sharing of love songs is also a calling out from isolation towards connection, whether it is from one outcast group to another, one country to another, or from one soul to the other. Just as Lao Tzu once expressed, the sound of this calling can reverberate beyond the personal into a global tapestry of different melodies, sounds and calls. And as much as any possible future requires sufficient wealth, security, opportunity, education and stability, it also requires this calling between souls full of music and song. It also perhaps needs to recognize that our shared human feeling is also necessary for our true flourishing.
As I think of the love songs of Hua’er and of the ancient Chinese poets and the incredible vibrancy of life in modern Shanghai, I think again of how much more connected the ancient and the modern, the material and the contemplative, the past and the future are now in the era of the internet and global communication. There is so much to admire in China today: its incredible growth, its super cities and its race to the future. But embedded within its present and future is its magnificent past, its poets, its artists and musicians who inscribed wisdom and thought in poems and songs long before the West of Europe had even come out of its dark ages.
And while in China, as in all parts of the world, writers and artists go in and out of fashion according to the time, parts of China’s past had already found its way to my present when I was a girl in Australia and would, in time, affect my future—as a writer, as a musician and as a student of the world. This particular future has resulted in this particular present talking to you now, here in China. The possible futures that have resulted in our meeting perhaps rely more than we realize on these sometimes tenuous threads not being unraveled or categorized into “Eastern” and “Western” thought, but integrated into a complete—and complex—system of thinking that takes in the past and future, the traditional and the contemporary, high and low art, and the thoughts and ideals of both the east and the west. Perhaps this integration of philosophies and models of thought, as ideal as it might sound, could provide us with a real basis for exchange and understanding and create a map to a truly mutual future.
Recently, as I prepared for this trip to China, I travelled back to the lake of my childhood on the grounds of the University of Queensland. I took my violin with me and as I sat under a willow tree, I sang this simple song which is also about flowers. I sing it here for you now, as an honouring of Hua’er folk music, of the splendour of modern China as its strides towards its future, and of the ancient Chinese poets, who first made me aware that a heart might be understood in a field of flowers.

關(guān)閉按鈕
關(guān)閉按鈕
亚洲精品动漫在线_亚洲欧美日韩在线一区_亚洲午夜国产片在线观看_亚洲va久久久噜噜噜久久狠狠

        久久这里只精品最新地址| 久久偷看各类wc女厕嘘嘘偷窃| 新狼窝色av性久久久久久| 久久综合九色九九| 国产精品美女久久久久久久| 亚洲一区二区日本| 久热精品在线| 国产精品三区www17con| 亚洲欧美日韩国产中文| 欧美成va人片在线观看| 国产欧美在线播放| 欧美在线免费看| 欧美香蕉视频| 亚洲欧美国产一区二区三区| 欧美日韩精品欧美日韩精品一| 精品成人免费| 女女同性女同一区二区三区91| 国产日本欧洲亚洲| 久久精品国产精品| 国产精品色一区二区三区| 欧美亚洲视频| 欧美一区二区三区在线观看| 欧美久久成人| 中日韩高清电影网| 欧美喷潮久久久xxxxx| 国内精品模特av私拍在线观看| 久久午夜激情| 国内精品久久久| 免费看成人av| 在线播放亚洲一区| 欧美国产亚洲另类动漫| 精品福利免费观看| 欧美激情第10页| 亚洲影院在线| 欧美午夜精品久久久久免费视| 欧美一区免费| 国产欧美在线看| 裸体丰满少妇做受久久99精品 | 久久尤物电影视频在线观看| 国产亚洲精品v| 免费成人网www| 亚洲天堂成人| 国产精品hd| 久久精品在线| 国产日韩在线视频| 免费一区视频| 亚洲视频精品| 国产精品国产自产拍高清av| 久久久999精品免费| 国产视频一区在线观看一区免费| 欧美88av| 亚洲免费在线视频| 国产精品美女主播在线观看纯欲| 久久综合久久美利坚合众国| 影音先锋欧美精品| 欧美日韩亚洲高清一区二区| 欧美一区激情视频在线观看| 国产日韩av高清| 欧美韩日视频| 国产日韩一区二区| 销魂美女一区二区三区视频在线| 国产精品久久久一区二区三区| 久久五月天婷婷| 亚洲视频欧美在线| 国产女优一区| 欧美日韩国产精品| 久久久久国内| 亚洲天堂免费在线观看视频| 国产精品成人一区二区网站软件| 久久一本综合频道| 亚洲欧美美女| 国模套图日韩精品一区二区| 欧美日韩a区| 久久久综合精品| 亚洲一卡二卡三卡四卡五卡| 国产日韩欧美二区| 欧美人与禽猛交乱配| 久久精品99国产精品酒店日本| 一区精品在线播放| 国产伦精品一区二区三区免费迷| 欧美精品二区| 久久久在线视频| 亚洲欧美中文字幕| 激情成人亚洲| 国产精品久久久久久亚洲调教 | 国产欧美亚洲一区| 欧美日韩国产一中文字不卡| 久久嫩草精品久久久精品| 亚洲一区日韩在线| 精久久久久久久久久久| 国产精品青草综合久久久久99| 欧美日韩精品伦理作品在线免费观看| 久久综合色天天久久综合图片| 午夜精品久久久久久久99热浪潮| 在线观看日韩欧美| 国产亚洲福利社区一区| 国产精品v亚洲精品v日韩精品 | 免费观看成人网| 久久成人综合视频| 欧美激情在线播放| 欧美日本一区二区三区| 久久一区二区三区超碰国产精品| 亚洲欧美亚洲| 宅男在线国产精品| 黄色成人av网站| 国产亚洲欧美在线| 国产美女诱惑一区二区| 国产精品美女在线观看| 欧美婷婷久久| 欧美日韩一区二区三区在线看 | 久久人人爽人人爽爽久久| 欧美一二三区精品| 亚洲免费在线视频| 宅男精品导航| 1024成人网色www| 在线观看亚洲| 亚洲视频免费看| 宅男精品视频| 亚洲午夜在线观看| 亚洲少妇在线| 中国女人久久久| 亚洲无限av看| 亚洲男人天堂2024| 亚洲男人的天堂在线aⅴ视频| 亚洲网站在线看| 亚洲伊人久久综合| 亚洲综合激情| 欧美一区91| 欧美综合二区| 久久中文精品| 欧美高清影院| 欧美日韩国产美女| 欧美性生交xxxxx久久久| 欧美三级日韩三级国产三级| 欧美伦理91i| 欧美午夜一区二区| 国产精品欧美经典| 国产日韩欧美a| 影音先锋成人资源站| 亚洲一区二区三区精品动漫| 亚洲欧美在线播放| 国产精品亚洲综合色区韩国| 国产日韩在线一区二区三区| 国产亚洲欧洲| 在线一区二区三区四区五区| 亚洲一级一区| 久久超碰97人人做人人爱| 久久亚洲午夜电影| 欧美+日本+国产+在线a∨观看| 欧美久久精品午夜青青大伊人| 欧美日韩亚洲一区在线观看| 国产精品久久久久久久浪潮网站| 国产喷白浆一区二区三区| 激情国产一区二区| 亚洲在线视频观看| 久久精品国产亚洲高清剧情介绍| 久久综合给合久久狠狠狠97色69| 欧美精品v国产精品v日韩精品| 国产精品jizz在线观看美国 | 久久久福利视频| 欧美高清视频一区二区三区在线观看 | 亚洲一区二区精品| 久久国产精品久久久久久电车| 美女视频一区免费观看| 欧美日韩国产成人在线观看| 国产精品综合视频| 影音先锋在线一区| 欧美一区二区三区喷汁尤物| 美女脱光内衣内裤视频久久网站| 欧美日韩国产另类不卡| 国产视频久久| 亚洲欧美激情视频| 久久躁狠狠躁夜夜爽| 欧美三级网址| 好吊一区二区三区| 欧美在线视频播放| 欧美激情欧美狂野欧美精品| 国产精品亚洲成人| 正在播放亚洲一区| 久久久噜久噜久久综合| 欧美三日本三级少妇三2023| 国产在线播精品第三| 欧美亚洲在线| 欧美欧美在线| 亚洲一区二区高清| 国产精品色一区二区三区| 国产一区二区三区精品久久久| 亚洲欧美综合网| 女同一区二区| 国产欧美日韩激情| 午夜久久电影网| 欧美伦理a级免费电影| 国内伊人久久久久久网站视频| 久久国产精品一区二区三区| 欧美日韩一区二区在线| 伊人色综合久久天天| 裸体一区二区三区| 国产区亚洲区欧美区| 久久成人精品电影| 国产精品久久午夜夜伦鲁鲁|