Grand Chinese New Year Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Grand Chinese New Year Concert
China National Traditional Orchestra

The dragon is one of the twelve animals in the Chinese zodiacal cycle. People born in the Year of the Dragon are considered to be courageous and confident, possessing strong leadership qualities, as well as being intelligent and wise. The Dragon Years are 1952, 1964, 1976, 1988, 2000, 2012, and 2024.

Since the ancient times, civilisations and peoples all over the world have adopted different beliefs and customs, creating their own calendars and festivals. Their multitude forms a celestial map of human civilisation. In the eastern part of the world, Chinese people have continuously contributed to this spiritual heritage of humanity for thousands of years. The Chinese calendar, rooted in an ancient agrarian civilisation, is – as the Chinese people themselves believe – the result of the actions of a dragon, gliding between Heaven and Earth and sowing seeds. These seeds, touching the ground, began to grow, giving rise to Chinese stories, legends and the most important days in the cyclical scheme of the year – the Chinese festivals. Festivals are a testament to how we pass through time, how we experience days and nights, emotions and loves – for family, country and the world.

The ancients used to say that music represents the harmony of Heaven and Earth by bringing the two together. Let us appreciate the Chinese festival music today and let it accompany us throughout the year, harmonising our breath with both – Earth and Heaven.

The starting point of the event ‘The Great Harmony of Heaven and Earth: Chinese Festivals’ is the Chinese Lunar New Year, and its axis is time. It focuses on eight representative traditional Chinese festivals — Spring Festival, Lantern Festival, Qingming Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Qixi Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Double Ninth Festival, and Winter Solstice. This creative concert is a musical reflection of the festive imagery, capturing the essence of each celebration through the power of music.

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Duan Chao

A musician with the China National Traditional Orchestra (CNTO), Duan Chao graduated from the Central Conservatory of Music (CCOM) with a master’s degree in literature. She has won many prizes in major Chinese and international competitions, and her extraordinary erhu playing skills, which she has repeatedly demonstrated in concerts, have been recorded on several solo albums. She is unanimously acclaimed by audiences and critics alike.

As a soloist, Duan Chao has performed over a hundred times in many prestigious venues at home and abroad, including the National Centre for the Performing Arts China, the Great Hall of the People, the Forbidden City Museum, the Forbidden City Concert Hall, the Poly Theatre in Beijing and the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC. She has toured extensively in Russia, the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Greece, Spain, Egypt, Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Nigeria and in countries of South East Asia. She has worked with renowned orchestras in China and abroad: China National Symphony Orchestra, China Film Symphony Orchestra, North Carolina Symphony Orchestra, Taipei Chinese Orchestra, Zhuhai Chinese Orchestra, Chongqing Chinese Orchestra and China Youth Chinese Orchestra.

 

[2024]

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