波多野结衣办公室双飞_制服 丝袜 综合 日韩 欧美_网站永久看片免费_欧美一级片在线免费观看_免费视频91蜜桃_精产国品一区二区三区_97超碰免费在线观看_欧美做受喷浆在线观看_国产熟妇搡bbbb搡bbbb_麻豆精品国产传媒

Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
China
Home / China / GBA focus

Can Cantonese tones fit into the Western canon?

Though Western classical-style music in Cantonese stage productions is a rarity, intrepid Hong Kong composers might have found a way of working around the unique challenges posed by the tonal complexities of the language. Rob Garratt reports.

By Rob Garratt | HK EDITION | Updated: 2025-09-12 16:10
Share
Share - WeChat
Performed by the choral group Singfest, and composed by Daniel Lo, Pressed for Love, which premiered in August, is probably the first cantata-style art song cycle ever composed in Cantonese. CHINA DAILY

Cantonese is a colorful, colloquial language — a vibrant and idiosyncratic tongue that is uniquely expressive, and imbued with an inherent singsong quality. Yet paradoxically, these are the very same reasons why Cantonese does not figure widely in formal classical music.

Composer Daniel Lo is among a few trailblazers to attempt an original Cantonese stage production in the Western classical idiom. Premiering in August, the 85-minute Pressed for Love isn't just homegrown choral group Singfest's first attempt at staging an original work. Lo believes the piece could be the first cantata-style art-song cycle ever composed entirely in Cantonese.

The reason why it has taken this long to materialize is owed to the richly tonal nature of Cantonese. Teachers swear that one needs to master nine distinct tones in order to truly grasp the language. And yet that's not the whole story.

"There's a stereotypical idea that spoken Cantonese is not good enough — not highbrow or formal enough — to be taken seriously and used in a high-art context," asserts Pressed for Love lyricist Wong Yi. She was naturally thrilled to settle that score when Lo approached her to work on the project.

In his long and illustrious career as a composer, Chan Hing-yan has set only one Cantonese chamber opera, Kungfood (2023), to music. CHINA DAILY

Getting in tone

The tonal nature of Cantonese — in which the rise and fall of different syllables change their meaning — renders composing melodies inherently complicated. The words in a lyric are required to tonally match the flow of any tune they are set to — a fact that has handcuffed pop lyricists for decades. In the Cantopop industry, traditionally, the music always comes first, leaving gifted lyricists to shoehorn in tonally harmonious words later. Lo says that he "always felt unsatisfied" by the mismatch between the idea contained in words and the music they were set to in the Cantopop numbers he listened to during his growing-up years.

The same music-first philosophy is almost always true of traditional Cantonese Opera, explains Chan Hing-yan, a music professor and head of the University of Hong Kong's School of Humanities. The process is the antithesis of the Western tradition, which in opera typically sees a librettist's work set to fresh music. Art songs often repurpose existing verse — a method perhaps best epitomized in Franz Schubert's recasting of Wilhelm Müller's poems as Winterreise.

Inspired by such storied fare, Lo broke away from the conventions of Cantonese music when he invited Wong to adapt her highly popular short-story collection, Ways to Love in a Crowded City, into a song cycle, at the behest of Singfest resident artist Kenix Tsang. Lo insisted on receiving a finished sheet of verse before getting to work on composing its musical interpretation. He let the natural flow of the text's tones dictate the melodies he would write — an approach many told him was useless. "A lot of compositional techniques usually employed in Western classical music cannot be borrowed directly," explains Lo.

"Our composers are 99 to 100 percent educated in the Western method, where one of the main devices is counterpoint," Chan says, referring to a musical device that sees two vocal lines sing the same lyric while moving in different melodic directions — an impossibility in Cantonese.

To navigate the idiosyncrasies of Cantonese, Lo arrived at his own methods, analyzing the relative pitch of each character based on the tone that precedes it. He found that there was a natural range each word transition could accommodate — while small tone shifts can only cover a few musical notes, at times it was also possible to jump as high as an octave. Meanwhile, rising and falling tones are accommodated by the natural glissando in a native singer's ornamentation. "The singers really have to adapt, as a lot of tones in Cantonese might not be very good for projection," Lo says.

Alongside contemporary Chan Kaiyoung, Chan Hing-yan is one of the few brave souls to have previously tackled the challenge. Notably, he was musical director of the landmark multilingual Hong Kong Odyssey cantata — a piece in which two-thirds of the libretto was in Cantonese — staged at the 2017 Hong Kong Arts Festival (HKAF). It followed the relatively low-profile Cantonese chamber opera Fish in Hand by Alain Chiu, presented at the 2015 New Visions Festival.

Among Chan's five major chamber operas, four are in Mandarin, including Heart of Coral (2013) and Ghost Love (2018). His first such work in Cantonese, Kungfood, debuted in 2023.

Having worked in both languages, Chan estimates that it is three times more difficult to compose in Cantonese than in Mandarin — partly because Mandarin has just four main tones, but mainly because there is a lot more flexibility left up to a vocalist's interpretation. "If you listen to Mandarin pop music, it never follows the tones," he says. "If you did the same in Cantonese, it just wouldn't work."

In 2021, composer Daniel Lo and writer Wong Yi collaborated on the Cantonese chamber opera Women Like Us, adapted from short stories by iconic Hong Kong writer Xi Xi. CHINA DAILY

Close collaborators

Lo and Wong have previously collaborated twice. Wong was the librettist tasked with adapting two of legendary Hong Kong writer Xi Xi's short stories for Lo's score to the 2021 production, Women Like Us — the first Cantonese chamber opera commissioned by HKAF.

While that production adheres to the formal Cantonese of the original text, in Pressed for Love, Wong chose to represent the realities of modern city life by writing primarily in the colloquial Cantonese of the cha chaan teng and social media variety. "I've heard from opera singers that they feel completely different when they sing in colloquial language," Wong says. "There's more direct emotion."

At the song cycle's premiere, at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre over the weekend of Aug 29, bemused nods of recognition were especially evident during the chorale number, Spring Slumber, Unaware of Dawn, which saw Singfest's animated, marching vocalists paint an audio caricature of the city's daily morning symphony of dripping air cons, screaming babies, car horns and construction drills. "The production is very true to everything I thought about and felt and wanted to achieve with the book," Wong says. "It's just in a completely different form."

The source text, Ways to Love in a Crowded City, is a medley of romance-adjacent vignettes in which Hong Kong's cramped environment is the silent character shadowing the narrative. Wong says she wanted to capture how cliches — Hong Kong being a claustrophobic, fast-moving "shopping paradise", for example — translate as a lived reality.

Lo handpicked just seven of the book's 44 stories to adapt. Each chosen story inspired both a chorale piece for 16 unaccompanied voices, typically used to paint a third-person narrative, as well as a stand-alone solo, or duet, piece — backed by musical director Dominic Lam on piano — charting a given character's interior world. This meant stripping the stories to their most basic emotions — a contrasting musical-literary palette of humor, grief, anger and jealousy.

In the centerpiece, Crowded City, the chorus sings out a list of ironic statements. As well as being home to the "most extravagant high-rises", Hong Kong boasts the most "congested tunnels", "prolonged work hours "and "protracted interactions" — a biting yet reductive distillation of the ironic detachment in the source text's title.

Wong says her process could be summed up in a simple allegory: "I figured out that the process of adapting my stories into a song cycle was akin to taking apart a perfectly fine spaceship, and then using the same materials to transform it into a sailboat. The idea is that they're both vessels that carry people through a distance — but the context is completely different."

From left: Composer and academic Chan Hing-yan estimates that it is three times more difficult to compose in Cantonese than in Mandarin; composer Daniel Lo found his own ways of navigating the difficulties of setting Cantonese words to Western classical-style music; and writer Wong Yi, who wrote librettos based on her own stories for Pressed for Love, says the process is akin to taking apart a perfectly fine spaceship and then using the fragments to build a sailboat. CHINA DAILY
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
 
波多野结衣办公室双飞_制服 丝袜 综合 日韩 欧美_网站永久看片免费_欧美一级片在线免费观看_免费视频91蜜桃_精产国品一区二区三区_97超碰免费在线观看_欧美做受喷浆在线观看_国产熟妇搡bbbb搡bbbb_麻豆精品国产传媒
色综合久久久久网| 五月天国产精品| 国产精品99久久久久久宅男| 日本黄色网址大全| 欧美一区永久视频免费观看| 亚洲mv在线观看| 欧美一级片在线免费观看| 欧美系列一区二区| 亚洲一卡二卡三卡四卡无卡久久 | 欧美性大战久久久| 亚洲精品国久久99热| 91视频观看视频| 欧美日韩综合在线免费观看| 亚洲自拍偷拍网站| 美女伦理水蜜桃4| 欧美一级xxx| 理论片日本一区| 日韩视频在线观看免费视频| 国产婷婷一区二区| 国产成人鲁色资源国产91色综| 国产成人免费在线观看视频| 中文字幕欧美国产| 北条麻妃一区二区三区| 欧洲一区在线电影| 亚洲国产精品久久艾草纯爱| 国产精品久久无码| 精品久久人人做人人爰| 国产美女一区二区| 一本色道久久综合亚洲91| 亚洲精品久久7777| 久久久国产精品无码| 精品av综合导航| 国产69精品一区二区亚洲孕妇| 色香蕉久久蜜桃| 亚洲成人av一区| 在线国产视频一区| 国产精品成人网| 中文字幕99页| www亚洲一区| 成人午夜视频在线观看| 欧美日韩日本视频| 另类调教123区| 色综合一个色综合亚洲| 亚洲国产精品久久久久秋霞影院| 国产aⅴ激情无码久久久无码| 国产精品嫩草影院av蜜臀| 无码人妻丰满熟妇区毛片蜜桃精品 | 国产大片一区二区| 欧美吻胸吃奶大尺度电影| 日韩va亚洲va欧美va久久| 亚洲图片第一页| 一区二区三区欧美日| 熟女少妇一区二区三区| 国产精品美日韩| 韩国三级hd两男一女| 久久一区二区视频| 91麻豆国产在线观看| 欧美成人福利视频| 波多野结衣中文字幕一区| 91精品欧美久久久久久动漫| 国产精品一品视频| 欧美精品久久久久久久多人混战 | 日韩午夜在线影院| 福利一区在线观看| 91精品国产色综合久久| 丁香天五香天堂综合| 91精品国产一区二区| 成人免费高清在线观看| 91精品国产乱码| 不卡影院免费观看| 精品国产凹凸成av人网站| 99re免费视频精品全部| 2017欧美狠狠色| 中文字幕无人区二| 国产精品三级久久久久三级| 最近中文字幕无免费| 亚洲三级电影网站| 99精品欧美一区二区| 亚洲一卡二卡三卡四卡| 91麻豆免费视频网站| 久久久久99精品一区| 亚洲天堂av网站| 亚洲三级免费观看| 懂色av粉嫩av浪潮av| 丝袜国产日韩另类美女| 一本色道久久综合精品竹菊| 韩国av一区二区三区| 91精品国产福利在线观看| eeuss国产一区二区三区| 久久天天做天天爱综合色| 中文字幕三级电影| 亚洲精品国产第一综合99久久 | 日本不卡的三区四区五区| 色94色欧美sute亚洲线路二| 国产麻豆日韩欧美久久| 欧美一级黄色片| 亚洲日本久久久| 亚洲激情网站免费观看| 污软件在线观看| 国产毛片精品一区| 精品日产卡一卡二卡麻豆| 国产xxxx视频| 亚洲午夜一区二区| 欧美影院午夜播放| 99久久99久久免费精品蜜臀| 国产精品三级av在线播放| 超碰人人干人人| 久久精品72免费观看| 日韩视频一区二区| 懂色av粉嫩av蜜乳av| 午夜伊人狠狠久久| 欧美日韩精品一区视频| 亚洲国产综合av| 亚洲欧美日韩国产综合| 男女羞羞免费视频| 成人在线视频一区二区| 中文字幕第一区二区| 天美传媒免费在线观看| 精品亚洲porn| 久久久午夜电影| av永久免费观看| 国产在线不卡视频| 久久九九久久九九| 91ts人妖另类精品系列| 国产乱子伦视频一区二区三区 | 久久色成人在线| 美国黑人一级大黄| 韩国精品免费视频| 国产欧美精品一区二区色综合朱莉 | 欧美浪妇xxxx高跟鞋交| 激情小说欧美色图| 亚洲bt欧美bt精品777| 欧美日韩高清一区二区| 国模无码视频一区| 日本中文在线一区| 欧美精品一区二区三区一线天视频| 国产免费无遮挡吸奶头视频| 激情深爱一区二区| 国产精品乱码一区二区三区软件 | 国产一区二区伦理| 国产欧美一区二区精品婷婷| 疯狂撞击丝袜人妻| 99久久夜色精品国产网站| 亚洲人成精品久久久久久| 欧美亚洲国产bt| av2014天堂网| 国产一区二区三区美女| 国产精品久久久久毛片软件| 欧美性色黄大片手机版| 久久精品在这里| 一区二区在线免费观看视频| 亚洲一区二区四区蜜桃| 4438x成人网最大色成网站| 国产美女精品久久| 国产中文一区二区三区| 中文字幕一区av| 欧美日韩精品三区| 亚洲av无码成人精品国产| 国产一区在线观看视频| 综合激情成人伊人| 91精品国产综合久久久蜜臀图片| 国产真实乱人偷精品人妻| 国产成人高清视频| 一区二区欧美精品| 精品国产一二三区| 麻豆视频在线免费看| 2025中文字幕| 狠狠色丁香婷婷综合久久片| 亚洲素人一区二区| 欧美一区二区三区视频免费 | 色噜噜狠狠成人网p站| 人妻换人妻a片爽麻豆| 精品夜夜嗨av一区二区三区| 亚洲欧美日韩综合aⅴ视频| 91精品婷婷国产综合久久竹菊| 丁香六月激情综合| 女同性αv亚洲女同志| 韩国三级在线一区| 亚洲精品欧美激情| 精品sm在线观看| 欧美午夜电影网| 欧美精品日韩在线| 日本性生活一级片| 国产盗摄女厕一区二区三区| 亚洲123区在线观看| 国产精品视频一区二区三区不卡| 欧美美女喷水视频| 中日韩一级黄色片| 五月婷婷综合在线观看| 不卡的av在线| 夫妇交换中文字幕| 国产在线观看免费一区| 一区二区三区免费看视频| 久久婷婷成人综合色| 欧美日韩国产在线观看| 秋霞欧美一区二区三区视频免费| 国产麻豆精品theporn| 亚洲777理论| 日韩理论电影院| 26uuu色噜噜精品一区二区|