Zhu Jian'er
Zhu Jian'er (Chinese: 朱践耳; pinyin: Zhū Jiàn'ěr; October 18, 1922 – August 15, 2017) was a Chinese symphonic composer and songwriter.
Biography
Zhu was born in Tianjin[1] and brought up in Shanghai, China. He began composing in 1940 and pursued composition studies at the Moscow Conservatory in 1955. He was a professor at the Shanghai Conservatory. He composed for both Western and Chinese instruments and his works have been performed around the world. In 2000 he was commissioned by Yo-Yo Ma's Silk Road Project to compose Silk Road Reverie.
His 1950 revolutionary work Days of Emancipation (翻身的日子, Fānshēn de Rìzi; for banhu and Chinese orchestra) is well known in the West from its appearance on the 1981 CBS Masterworks compilation Phases of the Moon: Traditional Chinese Music.
Zhu died on August 15, 2017 in Shanghai.
List of major works
Orchestral:
- 节日序曲(Festival Overture), Op.10(1958)
- Symphony-Cantata:英雄的诗篇(Poems of heroes), Op.14(Original:1959 - 1960; First Edit:1964; Second Edit:1993)
- Ballet Music:南海长城(Great Wall beside the South China Sea)(1965)
- 怀念(In Memoriam), for Strings, Op.18(1978 - 1988)
- 交响幻想曲:纪念为真理献身的勇士(Symphonic Fantasia:a Commemoration to the Brave sacrificed for verity), Op.21(1980)
- 交响组曲:黔岭素描(Symphonic Suites:Sketches of Mount.Qian), Op.23(1982)
- 蝴蝶泉组曲:二胡与管弦乐队(Suite for Erhu and Orchestra:Butterfly Spring), Op.24(1983)
- 交响音诗:纳西一奇(Symphonic Poem:Wonders of Na'xi), Op.25(1984)
- 交响诗:百年沧桑(Symphonic Poem:Vicissitude of a century)
Symphonies:
- Symphony No.1
- Symphony No.2
- Symphony No.3,"Tibet"
- Symphony No.4,"6.4.2-1", for Dizi and Orchestra
- Symphony No.5, for China Drum and Orchestra
- Symphony No.6,"3Y", for Tapes and Orchestra
- Symphony No.7,"天籟、地籟、人籟(Sounds of paradise, earth and mankind)"
- Symphony No.8,"求索(Seek and Quest)", for 16 percussions and a Cello
- Symphony No.9, for Boy Choir and Orchestra
- Symphony No.10,"江雪(Snow on river)", for Guqin(Tape), Chantrt(Tape) and Orchestra
Students
External links
- Zhu Jian'er page from Silk Road Project site
- Baidu Baike article (in Chinese)
References
- Kay, Benjamin (1999). Who's Who in Asia and the Pacific Nations: 1999. International Biographical Centre. p. 484. ISBN 0948875631.