China: Lost Sounds Of the Tao: Chinese Masters of The Giqin In Historic Recordings

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (29 ratings)
China: Lost Sounds Of the Tao: Chinese Masters of The Giqin In Historic Recordings album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 61:54

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Beautiful

NevilleA

the more you listen the more there is to hear.

user avatar

teal=a type of small duck

NGWR

At least in English.

user avatar

what is a teal?

lisa and trev

this is very nice. i can leave it on all the time and it is sweet. very many subtleties. if someone knows the translation, please, what is a "teal"?

user avatar

yi lu ping an

ElectroJosh

It is the 17th century and you have walked all day down a country road. At sunset you happen upon a small town teahouse, and this is the music you hear. Transfixed, you sit up all night listening to the artist. At daybreak, as you get up to leave, the musician briefly stops playing to say to you, "yi lu ping an."

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

An album of qin music collected from archives and attics alike, comprising the whole of the known recordings of Lo Ka Ping, a lost qin master privately active before his passing in 1980. A small number of other surviving recordings were unusable due to the poor sound quality. What we have here are a number of traditional works for the qin, as well as a number of original compositions by the performer himself. Also included are two performances taken from Chinese radio around the time of the second World War and delivered to American archives by a Chinese fighter pilot. The ability displayed here by Ping is something quite worth hearing. While the recording quality tends to ebb and flow, the technique remains at a high constant level. There are other recorded qin masters available, and one should certainly avail themselves of any opportunity to pick up a number of them. Ping places himself firmly in their company with these recordings. Pick it up alongside the Hugo masters recordings, and some of the old albums on Ocora and Koch. – Adam Greenberg

more »