xi's moments
Home | Music & Theater

Singer knows country roads take him home

By Chen Nan | China Daily Global | Updated: 2023-10-09 08:16

Mongolian ethnic musician Gawa plays the morin khuur (the horse-head fiddle). CHINA DAILY

It appeared on Zhang's debut album, Small Town Nileke, which was released in 2011. Featuring eight songs of his songs, it incorporates musical elements from Xinjiang's ethnic groups. The album won numerous awards, giving Zhang and the band the opportunity to perform at outdoor music festivals around the country, among them major events, such as the Midi Music Festival and the Strawberry Music Festival.

Music critics praised the songs as "a map of the folk music of Xinjiang" and fans were intrigued by the far-off lands depicted in them.

"I read lots of comments that touched me deeply. Many people have never heard of Yiqikelike and I am happy to tell stories about the place, and people who once lived there," Zhang says. "I was also amazed when others told me that they had also grown up there and that their parents had spent their entire lives there.

"I taught myself to play guitar when I was a teenager. I also learned to play folk instruments like the dombra from people I met in Xinjiang, who introduced me to the colorful sounds of Xinjiang's folk music," he adds.

In 2013, he released his second album, Bakhtu Port. In the winter of 2008, as Zhang was traveling to Karamay from Tacheng, where Bakhtu port is located, the scenery outside the window inspired an improvised melody. "It suddenly took me back to the boundless wilderness and snowy scenes of Bakhtu port," he says. He recorded the melody and later wrote the song, which features the guitar, the accordion and the mandolin.

Another song on Bakhtu Port, Horseman, was written after a trip to see a friend in Alashankou. They visited the house of an old Kazak man in his 70s, who played his dombra all night and told them his story of falling in love, when he was young, with a woman, who left for a far-off land after marrying another man. In his memories, the girl had black eyes and always sang softly.

The group travels around the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region to collect folk music material. CHINA DAILY

"I enjoy listening to people's stories; they inspire me to write songs. The old man impressed me deeply. I wrote his love story into the song with my dombra and guitar," says Zhang, adding that his debut album was a love letter to his parents and his hometown, and the second was a diary of trips to different parts of Xinjiang, through time and space.

His third album, Sand and Dust, was released in 2019, and was inspired by a sudden sandstorm in the Taklimakan Desert.

Now living in Lijiang, Yunnan province, Zhang returns to Xinjiang to visit relatives as well as to collect examples of folk music. His life in Lijiang is simple. He gets up early in the morning and rehearses with the band members most of the day, and also composes songs.

The band's core members include bassist Wu Junde and drummer Wen Feng, but they work with a variety of other musicians, to inject a diversity of musical elements into their songs.

Zhang is now at work on his fourth album, Lost River, which is about a week he spent on a ranch in Kuqa, Xinjiang, about eight years ago.

"I met a number of different people there, including the owner of a small store and a handsome miner. The seven days I spent on the ranch felt like a dream," he says.

Zhang Zhi (left) and his band members rehearse outdoors in Lijiang, Yunnan province. CHINA DAILY
|<< Previous 1 2   
Global Edition
BACK TO THE TOP
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