Lin Di has worked with music of different genres for many years, and her latest album shows how she plays the Chinese pipa in a modern and unconventional way. Photos by Zou Hong / China Daily |
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After the premiere show on June 14 in her hometown of Shanghai, the 39-year-old held a live concert in Beijing late last month to showcase the new album.
In the small live-house venue at Post Mountain Art Space, almost 100 people sat on straw mats, facing a white stage where around 10 band members played traditional folk instruments, including flute, ruan (a Chinese plucked string instrument) and guzheng (Chinese zither).
Five of the players were from Cold Fairyland, a rock band Lin co-founded in 2001. The band has released six albums, but this was the first time the rockers in the group "unplugged" and picked up folk instruments.
The other players are Lin's former classmates at the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, where she majored in traditional Chinese music and pipa.
As drummer Li Jia beat a tree trunk in the center of the stage, Lin began to dance, wearing a mask that created an atmosphere of prehistoric times. Words projected on the screen behind the stage introduced the story of each song. Lin also interacted with the crowd, asking viewers to shake sand hammers and make deep, guttural sounds to evoke the wars of primitive people.
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