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The Butterfly Lovers -- Violin Concerto
The music of Liang Zhu, or
"Butterfly Lovers," is undoubtedly the best-known and most popular in all of China. It
is also one of the few Chinese pieces that have often appeared on the
international stage. Almost everyone in China can hum a few lines of the violin
concerto, which can be traced to a Chinese folk legend "Liang Shanbo and Zhu
Yingtai".
According to the legend, Zhu Yingtai assumes a male identity so she may
travel to study in Hangzhou,
a southern city in China, where she meets Liang Shanbo. In the course of their
studies, Zhu and Liang become very close friends. From a Confucian perspective,
the notion of "Junzi" (gentleman) is a well-exemplified ideal in Chinese history
and its quality and characteristics are well expounded upon by Confucian
scholars. Basically, this implies the highest integrity, morality and demeanor,
coupled with well-refined abilities and skills both in martial arts and academia
-- the kind of relationship that Zhu and Liang had achieved. When the time came
for Zhu to return home, the pair is overcome with much suppressed sadness. Zhu
offers her younger sister's hand in marriage and entreats Liang to visit her
residence to discuss the issue with her parents. Liang is unaware that Zhu is
female nor that she does not have a younger sister. (She is, in fact, offering
her own hand in marriage.)
A year passes before Liang makes his way to Zhu's residence. He is overjoyed
to realize Zhu's true identity and that she is in love with him. However,
happiness turns into sorrow as the two soon discover that Zhu has been betrothed
to another man. In great sadness, the two lovers meet at the tower and lament
their great misfortune. Upon his return to Hangzhou, Liang falls ill in his
great misery and dies. When Zhu hears of this on her wedding day, she flees to
his grave. There, legend has it that her tears move the heavens so much that the
clouds themselves shed tears over Zhu's grief. Then, the earth beneath her
cracks open and the ill-fated Zhu commits suicide by jumping into the open
grave. Miraculously, the pair is transformed into butterflies. Arising into the
sky, they flutter and dance side by side among the flowers, never to be
separated again.
Butterfly Lovers was composed in 1958 by Chen Gang and He Zhanhao who were
studying at the Shanghai
Conservatory of Music. The pair was exploring the feasibility of setting
Chinese music to a (Western) symphonic medium, incorporating borrowed devices
from Chinese folk theatrical music as well as vocal techniques of Zhejiang's Yu
Theatre. The end result was a free-form concerto for the violin in one movement.
Remaining true to the legend, the concerto may be divided into three sections as
follows:
Part I describes Liang and Zhu's meeting (Liang is represented by the cello
and Zhu, the violin), their joining hands in brotherhood, the blossoming of
their love; their study and sad separation when Zhu goes home.
Part II portrays their resistance to the arranged marriage, their meeting at
the tower, and the eventual deaths of the lovers. The violin's free rhapsodic
sounds incorporate many syncopated chords (Zhu and her resistance to marriage)
pitted against the orchestra (Zhu's father forcing the marriage) into a dramatic
play. The meeting at the tower is exemplified by the interplay between the cello
solo (Liang) and the violin solo (Zhu). The ensuing section employs borrowed
theatrical devices to bring across the Liang's illness and death and further
drama in Zhu's suicide (Chinese gong and reprise).
Part III wraps up the saga as the flute and harps spark the mystery of the
imminent metamorphosis. The play of the butterflies is heard following a
recapitulation of the love theme and mortals echoing their
happiness.
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