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    監製:Diana Wan

    06/12/2023

    If you’re a regular viewer of the show you may remember that over the years, we’ve sometimes invited marimba and vibraphone players to introduce us to the repertoire of these percussive instruments. This week we’re featuring a marimba player who adds another dimension to the instrument, combining it with electronic music and visual art.
    But before venturing into new music, a trip back in time and into painting. We’re taking a look at works from Britain’s National Gallery, on show at the Hong Kong Palace Museum.

    Percussion instruments were among the very first to be created by humans. Banging things is easy. But that doesn’t mean all percussion instruments have that long a history. The modern marimba was developed in Mexico in the late 19th century. And there’s not a long history of works composed specifically for them. Paul Creston’s 1940 “Concertino for Marimba” is thought of as the first major orchestral piece to highlight the instrument. More recently still, composers have been combining the marimba with electronic music, and that’s where Ernestina Leung’s interest lies. She’s with us now.


    聯絡: wanyt@rthk.hk

    集數

    EPISODES
    • Daphne Mandel's “Cha Guo” , Palatable Parables@Karin Weber & in the studio: DJ & producer Romain FX

      Daphne Mandel's “Cha Guo” , Palatable Parables@Karin Weber & in the studio: DJ & producer Romain FX

      Later in the show, we are featuring some dance tunes. And the person spinning those tunes is French DJ and producer, Romain FX. He’ll be here to tell us why he considers Hong Kong’s disco scene in the 1970s and 1980s to represent the epitome of desire. But first, while Hong Kong’s disco beats and Cantopop sounds may have attracted Romain, for one of his fellow French expatriates here, architect Daphné Mandel, it’s the city’s quieter side and more distant past that has encouraged her to stay and create.

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      18/12/2024
    • Japanese artist Tenmyouya Hisashi, South East Asian art@Osage & in the studio: Australian Chamber Orchestra

      Japanese artist Tenmyouya Hisashi, South East Asian art@Osage & in the studio: Australian Chamber Orchestra

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      The aim of the Osage Art Foundation’s "South by Southeast" project, initiated in 2015, is to develop and advance perspectives on Southeast Asian art. This exhibition, "Stemflow: South by Southeast" is the third edition. Curated by Patrick Flores and Reuben Keehan, this third edition brings together 19 artists from Asia and the South Pacific to examine not only the interconnectivity but also the cultural subjectivities of the two regions.

      The third edition of Tai Kwun’s Prison Yard Festival is back this month with a programme that highlights both local and international musicians. One group of musicians featured is the Australian Chamber Orchestra. The string ensemble is showcasing music that fuses Vivaldi’s “The Four Seasons” with original compositions by Egyptian-born, Sydney-based oud player and composer Joseph Tawadros. He's with us in the studio now, along with several of the orchestra members.

      11/12/2024
    • Sai Kung Hoi Arts Festival, Japanese Printmakers@HKUMAG & Interview with conductor Elim Chan

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      04/12/2024
    • Cynthia Mak, HKAPA students' programe & in the studio: Singer-songwriter Rachel Sutton & Chris Carpio

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      27/11/2024
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      Gustav Mahler was born in eastern Bohemia, now part of the Czech Republic. On the relationship of Czechs to music, Mahler oncesaid, “Where else can you find a nation that has such a rich musical tradition as the Czechs?” That’s a tradition being celebrated in 2024, in the year of Czech Music, a festival organised once every decade that this year is highlighting the work of Bedřich Smetana, the “father of Czech music”, born exactly two centuries ago. Celebrations in the country, particularly in Prague, have been in full swing throughout the year. Some have even made their way to Hong Kong. In late October, the City Chamber Orchestra of Hong Kong invited two Czech musicians, harpist Kateřina Englichová and oboist Vilém Veverka, to join them in playing some Czech classics.

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    • Asia Art Archive, HKIPF's exhibition & in the studio: Natalia Tokar, Marko López de Vicuña  & Li Yang

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      For more than two decades, the Asia Art Archive has been building, collecting, creating and sharing materials on the recent history of art in Asia. Many of its resources are free for public access. One of its recent projects introduced the archival concept and process to local students.    
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      13/11/2024
    • Japanese monk and musician, Kanho Yakushiji & in the studio: vocalist Sherine Wong

      Japanese monk and musician, Kanho Yakushiji & in the studio: vocalist Sherine Wong

      Japanese Zen monk Kanho Yakushiji is known for taking Zen-inspired music to a worldwide audience. His music videos have earned over 50 million views. He was in Hong Kong for a one-night concert late last month as part of an Asia tour. We went to speak to him.

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    • Artist Max Cheng, Jen Liu@Blindspot Gallery & in the studio: Singer-songwriter Orange Leung

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      We have art for the eyes in painting and sculpture, we have art for the ears in music, but unless you are a master perfumier, you are not likely to be particularly aware of the complexities or potentials of art for the nose. In an ongoing exhibition at the Hong Kong Museum of Art, fragrance, particularly its history in Chinese culture, is placed front and centre. And, unsurprisingly, given that Hong Kong itself is sometimes referred to in English as “Fragrant Harbour” due perhaps to its former position as a producer and trader of agarwood oil, resin, and incense, the exhibition also features contemporary local artists who still like to work in the art of the odour.

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      Singer-songwriter Orange Leung says he wrote his first two songs during a period of depression and anxiety and in the hope of transforming despair through music.
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      16/10/2024