GNH Community

Community, Nonprofits and Businesses sharing Information

Yale Concert Band to present “Ask the Sky and the Earth” to commemorate 50th anniversary of ‘sent-down youth’ movement of China’s Cultural Revolution

Event Details

Yale Concert Band to present “Ask the Sky and the Earth” to commemorate 50th anniversary of ‘sent-down youth’ movement of China’s Cultural Revolution

Time: March 8, 2018 from 7:30pm to 9:30pm
Location: Woolsey Hall
Street: 500 College St
City/Town: New Haven
Website or Map: http://www.yale.edu/yaleband
Phone: 203-432-4111
Event Type: concert, symphonic
Organized By: Stephanie Hubbard
Latest Activity: Mar 5, 2018

Export to Outlook or iCal (.ics)

Event Description

On Thursday, March 8, at 7:30 p.m. in Yale University’s Woolsey Hall (corner of College and Grove Streets, New Haven), the Yale Concert Band (Thomas C. Duffy, Music Director) and the SYGQ Chorus (Charles Lu, Music Director) will present “Ask the Sky and the Earth: An Oratorio Cantata for the Sent-down Youth” for wind band and chorus. With libretto by Wei Su, music by Dongling Huo (Tony Fok), and orchestration by Dong Yan, this magnificent piece – transcribed by Thomas C. Duffy – commemorates the 50th anniversary of the “sent-down youth” movement of China’s Cultural Revolution. The Yale Concert Band will also present Three Places in New Haven by Thomas C. Duffy, featuring Sam Um, marimba. Admission is free. [Info: 203-432-4111, www.yale.edu/yaleband.]

 

“Ask the Sky and the Earth: An Oratorio Cantata for the Sent-down Youth”

In 1968 during China’s Cultural Revolution, while America’s youth was preparing to launch the “Summer of Love,” 15-year-old Chinese teenager Wei Su witnessed the arrests of his father and brother and repeated beatings of his grandmother and sisters and the vandalism of his home by the military police. Three months later, wanting to “escape” from misery, he joined 17 million of China’s middle- and high-school aged urban youth who streamed into the countryside to participate in the “up to the mountains and down to the villages” movement. In distant borderlands, on remote islands, in harsh wilderness, these young men and women passed the precious years of their youths, sacrificing formal educations to be schooled in hard agricultural labor. This was a unique course of life – full of idealism and hardship, drenched by tears and sweat, by turns tragic, romantic, dazed, and ecstatic.

 

In 2007, Yale Senior Lector on East Asian Languages Wei Su returned to the island of Hainan, where he had spent ten of his prime years in the farms. There he reunited with fellow “farm-mate,” composer Dongling Huo (Tony Fok), and their visit inspired them to create a piece of music to commemorate the 40th anniversary (2008) of the “sent-down youth” movement. Fok’s setting of Wei Su’s epic poem, Ask the Sky and the Earth, conveys the spirit of this epoch, the sentiments of an entire generation as they think back upon their youths and “give thanks to life, give thanks to the land.” The Yale Concert Band and the SYGQ Chorus premiered this arrangement for chorus and wind band in 2011 in Woolsey Hall, repeating it later the same year in Carnegie Hall and Strathmore Hall.

 

Comment Wall

Comment

RSVP for Yale Concert Band to present “Ask the Sky and the Earth” to commemorate 50th anniversary of ‘sent-down youth’ movement of China’s Cultural Revolution to add comments!

Join GNH Community

Attending (1)

Welcome (Bienvenido, Benvenuto, Powitanie, Bonjour! Willkomme,歡迎, ברוךהבא أهلا وسهلا, Bonvenon) to GNH Community. Traducción de esta página

Si no habla inglés, puede
leer el contenido de este sitio
web haciendo clic en
"Select language" arriba y
eligiendo "Spanish".
El contenido, excepto los
archivos adjuntos, aparecerán en español.

~

Non-English speaking residents can read the content of this website by clicking on "Select Language" above and picking their preferred language. Once a language is selected all content with the exception of attachments will appear in that language.

OPPORTUNITY + EQUITY

Imagine. Inform. Invest. Inspire. Working together to build a stronger community - now and forever.

The Community Foundation office at 70 Audubon Street is open to visitors by appointment only; Foundation staff are available by phone and email Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. to conduct business or to schedule a time to visit. To contact a staff member, view our staff directory.

 

 

 

Open Street Project

Local Initiatives Support Corporation

Laying the Cash Tracks for Community Impact

LISC CFO Christina Travers is among the impact investing leaders who contributed commentaries to a new book, The Social Justice Investor, and joined a panel discussion at today’s book launch. In her essay, “Laying the Cash Tracks,” (reprinted here) she explains the evolution of LISC’s capital markets experience—noting how discouraging Wall Street conversations eventually led to transformative, community-focused investments.

Sharing the Story of Social Justice Investing

With the launch of the new book, The Social Justice Investor, LISC’s Christina Travers reflects on the ways that CDFIs have tapped the capital markets to deepen their impact—working to upend lingering misconceptions among some investors. "Whether we are financing affordable housing, small businesses, health, safety, climate resilience, racial equity or jobs, we see financial performance and local impact as part of the same whole."

EPA Awards GRID Alternatives Solar for All Grant

LISC partner GRID Alternatives has been awarded a $249,800,000 Solar for All grant from the EPA to advance renewable and clean energy sources for affordable housing communities across the country. “The grant is an incredible boon to the movement to decarbonize homes and lower energy costs that burden millions of everyday Americans,” said Michael T. Pugh, president and CEO of LISC.

© 2024   Created by Lee Cruz.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service