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Over Time

Violin, Viola, Cello, Dizi & Xindi, Pipa, Percussion with fixed media and live video
27 Nov 2021 (Sat)
World Premiere
  • Date & Time
    27 Nov 2021 (Sat) 3:00pm
  • Concert
    Jockey Club Musicus Heritage Alive Concert
  • Venue
    Laundry Steps, Tai Kwun
  • Artists
    , Violin
    , Viola
    , Cello
    , Dizi & Xindi
    , Pipa
    , Percussion

Over Time for violin, viola, cello, dizi & xindi, pipa and percussion with fixed media and live video 

“Time” is an abstract concept and each individual’s perception of – and feelings towards – the passage of time might vary. Nevertheless, through various forms of recollections and the observation of the things involved and around, we can still see the changes – both of the things themselves, as well as the roles they play. The long history of Tai Kwun enables it to witness the changes of its role and function, along with the changes of the community around it. Over Time seeks to express this idea from various perspectives and through different means.   
 
The music is divided into two parts. The first and second movements express the composer's feelings aroused by the sight of Tai Kwun – and the granite used in the building in particular, while the third and fourth movements are inspired by the interaction and relationship between Tai Kwun and the surrounding buildings, as well as between Tai Kwun and the people around. 
 
1. Under Dappled Light 
 When I was the Artist-in-Residence at Tai Kwun, I was particularly fond of the trees in the Parade Ground. Sitting under a tree, I liked to look up to the sunlight through the leaves. I wondered, how many people had enjoyed the same cool, the same sunlight and the shade of the same tree? In the music, similar musical phrases are presented in different patterns and rhythms, representing the occurrence of similar things in different times and spaces.  
 
2. The Voice of Granite 
Granite is used extensively in the Tai Kwun complex and it was the granite prison wall that I walked by practically every day during my residency there. These rocks have been there for more than a century and have endured the forces of nature silently. Unfortunately, only the surface of these rocks can be touched – we have no access to its past. Granite is the core element of this movement: a piece of granite taken from Tai Kwun is used to rub against a piece of sandpaper, so that the piece of stone can tell us about its “past”. Musicians improvise interactively through real time video streaming. The percussionist also uses granite to portray the “inner thoughts” of different individuals (which were gathered earlier), as if expressing feelings that could not be voiced in the past. 
 
3. Collage 
If you look out from Tai Kwun, you can see a collage of buildings in different styles and from different eras standing side by side. When I was the Artist-in-Residence at Tai Kwun, the tall building next to it was displaying a large billboard girl on its outer wall. The sight of this collage of billboard girl and Tai Kwun seems surrealistic to me and hence gave me the idea for this movement. The keyword here is “collage”, where quotations from famous Chinese and Western works can be heard throughout the entire movement.  
 
4. Pulsation 
In the evening, the atmosphere at Tai Kwun is drastically different from that in the morning. Now Tai Kwun practically merges with Lan Kwai Fong, as if the interaction between Tai Kwun and the people around brings about a new image. Each generation’s impression of Tai Kwun differs. What about our generation? Exciting rhythms and electronic sounds are employed here to depict this new image of Tai Kwun.

Luk Wai-chun
English translation by Eos Cheng

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World Premiere Information