tri2061990
02-24-2012, 04:07 PM


The Yellow River Cantata (Chinese:黄河大合唱 Pinyin: Hu�ngh� D�h�ch�ng) is a cantata by Chinese composer Xian Xinghai (1905–1945). Composed in Yan'an in early 1939 during the Second Sino-Japanese War, the work was inspired by a patriotic poem by Guang Weiran, which was also adapted as the lyrics.

The Yellow River Cantata laid the ground for Chinese contemporary large-scaled vocal music composition. In late 1960s, it was adapted into a piano concerto entitled the Yellow River Piano Concerto by the pianist Yin Chengzong

There are altogether four different versions of the Yellow River Cantata that had been performed in public. The first was the initial composition by Xian Xinghai while in Yan'an. Accommodations were made for the lack of musical instruments at that time, as the orchestra consisted of only the violin, Chinese flute, harmonica, sanxian, erhu and dahu, among a few percussion instruments.
A year after Xian departed for the Soviet Union in 1940, he amended his composition for performance by a fully equipped Western orchestra, aided by a few Chinese ethnic instruments. He also made some amendments to the choral arrangement. In addition, a prologue was added, increasing the number of movements to nine.
The third and fourth revisions were respectively made by Xian's students, Li Huanzhi and Yan Liangkun. Li simplified the "Soviet" version for performance by the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, while Yan incorporated the prologue into the first movement to return the cantata to its initial arrangement of eight movements for performance by the Central Orchestra during the 1980s. Yan also made heavy amendments to the Third Movement, Water of the Yellow River comes from Heaven, such that the new melody was vastly different from the original. This last revision became the most played and heard version today.


Tracklist
"Yellow River" Cantata 01-07
01. Song of the Yellow River Boatman [0:04:20.35]
02. Ode to the Yellow River [0:05:32.30]
03. Ballad of the Yellow Water [0:05:11.05]
04. Dialogue Song by the Yellow River [0:03:26.70]
05. Lament to the Yellow River [0:06:29.27]
06. Defending the Yellow River [0:03:20.55]
07. Shout Aloud Yellow River [0:05:59.38]
08. The East is Red [0:04:31.65]
09. National Song of the People's Republic of China [0:01:01.30]
10. Internationale [0:05:51.30]
11. My Motherland [0:04:53.45]
12. Blood Dyed Gallantry [0:03:35.15]

Cao Ding(cond)
Shanghai Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus

FLAC

https://www.adrive.com/public/uEudVY/MPYell.rar

samy013
02-25-2012, 03:17 AM
Thanks.

frdrck86
03-17-2012, 09:16 PM
OMG!!!!!!!! I LOVE THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thanks!!!!!

blaaarg
03-18-2012, 03:07 PM
Thank you so much! I love 20th c Chinese 'classical' music.

Isaias Caetano
05-20-2012, 10:32 PM
[QUOTE=tri2061990;1924654]

The Yellow River Cantata (Chinese:黄河大合唱 Pinyin: Hu�ngh� D�h�ch�ng) is a cantata by Chinese composer Xian Xinghai (1905–1945). Composed in Yan'an in early 1939 during the Second Sino-Japanese War, the work was inspired by a patriotic poem by Guang Weiran, which was also adapted as the lyrics.

The Yellow River Cantata laid the ground for Chinese contemporary large-scaled vocal music composition. In late 1960s, it was adapted into a piano concerto entitled the Yellow River Piano Concerto by the pianist Yin Chengzong

There are altogether four different versions of the Yellow River Cantata that had been performed in public. The first was the initial composition by Xian Xinghai while in Yan'an. Accommodations were made for the lack of musical instruments at that time, as the orchestra consisted of only the violin, Chinese flute, harmonica, sanxian, erhu and dahu, among a few percussion instruments.
A year after Xian departed for the Soviet Union in 1940, he amended his composition for performance by a fully equipped Western orchestra, aided by a few Chinese ethnic instruments. He also made some amendments to the choral arrangement. In addition, a prologue was added, increasing the number of movements to nine.
The third and fourth revisions were respectively made by Xian's students, Li Huanzhi and Yan Liangkun. Li simplified the "Soviet" version for performance by the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, while Yan incorporated the prologue into the first movement to return the cantata to its initial arrangement of eight movements for performance by the Central Orchestra during the 1980s. Yan also made heavy amendments to the Third Movement, Water of the Yellow River comes from Heaven, such that the new melody was vastly different from the original. This last revision became the most played and heard version today.





Pode Re-Upload, por favor?

Obrigado

krmpradeep
11-20-2012, 07:50 AM
Can I request you to re-upload this interesting score? Thanks!!

G
11-20-2012, 09:06 AM
Link Gone

tri2061990
11-20-2012, 04:34 PM
New link added.

krmpradeep
11-20-2012, 06:42 PM
Thanks a lot tri2061990! I really appreciate it!

G
11-21-2012, 10:30 AM
New link added.

Bravo! You are great...Thank you..

wimpel69
11-21-2012, 10:48 AM
Thanks.The HUGO version appears to be different, but the conductor's the same.

Cristobalito2007
11-21-2012, 11:30 AM
amazing. thank you!

Yen_
11-22-2012, 12:16 AM
This is a fantastic share and is more than just the cantata as tracks 8-12 are famous individually in China. Thanks for sharing.

I have the Hugo CD version and only the first 7 tracks are the same.

The last track 12 is also known as "If I Die for My Country" and is sung with chorus by DONG Wenhua. I have a different orchestral version by her, with the choir replaced by erhu, from a CD I bought in China 19 years ago. It is melodic and dramatic. So powerful are the words and music that mainland Chinese women will often cry listening to it.

Does anyone know how I can split this FLAC into individual tracks so I can convert to MP3-V0 and copy to CD to play in my car?

Yen_
12-01-2012, 12:55 PM
This is so good I just bought the CD from Presto Classical, so I don't need to split the FLAC now.

thegrizz70x7
10-26-2015, 07:16 PM
would love a new link to this if anyone still have one available. Thanks!