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Xian Xinghai: Short-Lived but Not Forgotten
Xian Xinghai (1905-1945), a native of Fanyu,
Guangdong Province,composed one of the greatest pieces of music of the 20th
century. Since Xian's father died before he was born, the impoverished boy
drifted from place to place with his mother. Xian began learning to play the
violin when he was over 20 years old. In the beginning, his peers called him
Chicken Killer due to the terrible sound of his cheap violin, which resembled
a chicken squawk. However, Xian did not give up and soon unleashed his talents.
In 1934 he was the first Chinese student to enroll at the senior composition
class of the Paris Music Academy. In Paris, Xian spent much time working part
time to earn a living. Before he left the academy, Xian became the most
outstanding student in the class and received an award from the college. When
asked which award he preferred, his reply was simple: meal tickets.
As a student
from a weak country, Xian was discriminated against in France. Determined to
invigorate his motherland, Xian used music as a revolutionary tool. In the
summer of 1935, he declined to remain in Paris and returned to China where he
composed the background score for progressive movies, such as Revive, Thunderstorm, Sunrise and Midnight Song, refusing payment. Later,
he came to Yan'an, where he accepted a position as Dean of the Music Department
at the Luxun Conservatory of Music. It was in Yan'an
that Xian achieved the peak of his artistic creation. Although there was not a
single piano in Yan'an at the time, Xian composed some of his most important
works there. The Yellow River, which was composed in 1939, was Xian's most
representative work.
Xian's
reputation is largely built around The Yellow River cantata, a stunning piece
of the late Romantic nationalist agitprop. Allegedly written in a cave in just
six days during the Anti-Japanese War, this seven-movement cantata (text by
Guang Weiran) uses traditional folk melodies, like the image of the mighty
Huanghe (Yellow River), as a symbol of Chinese defiance against the Japanese
invaders.
In May 1940,
Xian went to the Soviet Union for a final-period manufacturing and background
musical composition of the full-length documentary Yan'an and the Eight Route Army. In the
Soviet Union, Xian led a hard life and was poorly treated. He attempted to go
home via Mongolia but was detained and left destitute. (When standing in a queue
to buy rice, Xian fainted on one occasion.) Luckily, he was rescued by a girl
from the Soviet Union who later became his wife. Due to his exposure to the hard
life, lack of nutrition, famine and suffering, Xian died of pulmonary disease on
October 30, 1945 at age 40. Xian's music, however, became a motivational force
for the Chinese revolution.
Xian is a
pioneer of modern Chinese music. Combined with the essence of western music,
Xian's works are rich in both Chinese tradition and modern elements. He threw
light on the new direction of the trend of Chinese culture. Xian composed music
in all major forms (two symphonies, violin concerto, four large-scale choral
works, nearly 300 songs and an opera) and wrote many essays about musical
theory.
On November
1999, a street in Alamutu of Kazakhstan was named after Xian Xinghai.
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