Create account Log in

Voice of the Dragon: Once Upon a Time in Chinese America… / Voice of the Dragon: Once Upon a Time in Chinese America...

[Edit]

Download links and information about Voice of the Dragon: Once Upon a Time in Chinese America… / Voice of the Dragon: Once Upon a Time in Chinese America... by Fred Ho. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 56:04 minutes.

Artist: Fred Ho
Release date: 2001
Genre: Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 12
Duration: 56:04
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Prologue: the Way of Shaolin 1:28
2. Overture 5:37
3. A Poisoned Soul: Gar Man Jang Curses Moon and Does Not Bow to Sun 5:05
4. Serpentine Attack On Shaolin 8:07
5. The Five Ancestors: Chen Jak 4:55
6. The Five Ancestors: Miao Hin 1:48
7. The Five Ancestors: Gee Shin 3:28
8. The Five Ancestors: Li Wen Mao 3:23
9. Five Ancestors: NG Mui, the Martial Nun 3:36
10. Outlaws All! All Heroes Are Sisters and Brothers (Loyalty Oath Sworn Underneath a Peach Tree) 3:11
11. Drunken Fist and the Apocalypse 14:05
12. Epilogue 1:21

Details

[Edit]

With Once Upon a Time in Chinese America, saxophonist Fred Ho gave birth to a very strange blend of avant-garde jazz and performance theater. This piece calls for a saxophone section, bass, marimba, vibes, drum set, and an assortment of Western and Eastern percussion, along with a narrator and dancers/kung fu fighters. The stage work was premiered in June 1999. This CD contains a studio session recorded a few months later. Avant-garde jazz licks, funky grooves, and a caricatured narrator surrounded by dancing action figures: Ho's vision blends popular and institutionalized cultures into a maelstrom that some listeners will find somewhat cynical. Once Upon a Time in Chinese America tells how the traitor Gar Man Jang brought down the legendary Shaolin Temple and how he was defeated by five martial artists. The text (included in the booklet) was written by Ho and Ruth Margraff and is narrated by Shyaporn Theerakulstit, with singing vocal inflections playing along every Chinese cliché found in American culture. The music is played by Ho's Afro Asian Music Ensemble, comprised of three-quarters of the Brooklyn Sax Quartet (Ho, Sam Furnace, and David Bindman), Diana Herold (mallet percussion), Ayodele Maakheru (bass), and an uncredited drummer. The music oscillates between Ellingtonian and Zornian big-band approaches. That and its literary side makes this project a second-degree cousin of Charles Papasoff's Catharsis II. Exciting, action-packed, and both disorienting and entertaining (thanks for the latter part to jazz-funk episodes), the whole work is inhabited by a lightness that makes it enjoyable to a wide audience. Jazz purists will have difficulties coping with the theatrical side. Of course, the CD version cannot have the same impact as the stage production — and the narration does get annoying after a couple of listens. ~ François Couture, Rovi