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Biographie

Tan Dun was born in 1957 in the Chinese province of Hu Nan. After working as a provincial band organizer for the Peking Opera, he spent eight years at the Central Conservatory in Beijing. In 1986, a scholarship allows him to move to New York where he completed a doctorate in music composition. He currently lives in New York.


Tan Dun works are known for their "sense of drama...their wonderfully expressive harmonies... colours full of imagination" (London Times). Composer and conductor with many facets, a supporter of conceptual art, Tan Dun has left his mark on the world music scene through a repertoire that embraces creativity, at the same time crossing the boundaries of classical traditions and multi-media of the West and the East. Covered in the most prestigious awards - the Grawemeyer Award for classical composition, a Grammy, an Oscar and named "Musician of the Year" by Musical America - Tan Dun sees his special music played around the world in places as prestigious as the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Lincoln Center in New York, Suntory Hall in Japan, the Royal Festival Hall in London and the Opera Bastille.

< br /> Famous for his film scores, like "Tiger and Dragon" and "Hero" by Ang Lee, he is also the author of original contemporary creations. He is particularly interested in the creation of new programs and works that can reach a diverse audience that would have broken the boundaries between classical and non-classical, East and West, avant-garde and indigenous art forms.


Tan Dun's works of the 1980s fit into the spirit of a cons-culture similar to that of Toru Takemitsu or John Cage, who challenged the dominance of Western music. Tan Dun's writing changes in the late 80's. He begins to integrate into a single work, stylistic elements and cultural variety of sources. Its simple and refined style will greatly influence other Chinese composers.


His opera Marco Polo, created in 1996, is a very good example of his style of musical writing that looks like a "mosaic" of sound. It incorporates musical themes borrowed from various cultures and from other works, including Le Chant de la Terre of Mahler, texts of Shakespeare (recited in the style of Peking Opera)...

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His Symphony 1997 is also filled with the most diverse musical quotations. We hear, among others, the famous Chinese bells, quotes from Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, a melody of a street opera in Hong Kong and a quote from his Cello Concerto ... Tan Dun cites, reproduces and imitates other music in order to "re-contextualize" these melodies.


In addition to classical compositions, Tan Dun is known for his experimental projects: music for ceramics, for water (Water Concerto for Water Percussion and Orchestra), for paper (Paper Concerto for Paper Instruments and Orchestra), for stones. He also works with artists from other disciplines, choreographers, directors.


Opera has occupied a significant place in the works of Tan Dun for a good ten years: Marco Polo (1995-1996) Peony Pavilion (1998), Tea (2002) with a libretto by Xu Ying and Tan Dun set to music using ceramic, stone instruments paper and orchestra.

Œuvre

Le premier empereur

Opéra

NOTICE

Le premier empereur, opéra en deux actes sur un livret de Ha Jin et Tan Dun, a été créé le 21 décembre 2006 au Metropolitan Opera de New York par l’Orchestre et les choeurs du Metropolitan placés sous la direction de James Levine. Placido Domingo assurait le rôle titre et la mise en scène était signée par Zhang Yimou.


L’ouvrage met en scène le premier empereur de Chine, Qin Shi Huang, bâtisseur de la Grande Muraille, despote impitoyable attaché à la construction du futur empire, imposant une langue officielle unique et faisant table rase du passé. Au premier acte, le maître du Yin-yang procède à des sacrifices accompagnés de chants rituels ; cette musique, celle du passé, déplaît à l’empereur Qin qui désire qu’un hymne nouveau vienne inaugurer son règne et qui sera le point de départ d’une « musique de l’avenir »….


L'oeuvre a nécessité dix ans de travail, entre Shanghai et New York. L’ouvrage respecte les formes classiques de l’opéra (choeur, ensembles, airs, duos et même un ballet) tout en les réinventant à travers une influence orientale : du narrateur grimé issu de l'opéra de Pékin aux baguettes de tambours remplacées par des pierres en passant par la cithare chinoise ou l’utilisation très inventive des percussions. On notera en particulier le recours à une gigantesque cloche de 5 mètres de haut qui rythme de manière lancinante toute la dernière scène.


"Je veux que cet opéra soit à la fois mélodique et dramatique, romantique et difficile, je  eux que le coeur du public tremble!", dit Tan Dun qui nous offre finalement une musique accessible, plutôt dans la lignée de la musique du film Tigres et Dragons que d’une oeuvre plus ardue comme la Water Passion After St Matthew .


Durée : environ 1h35