Today I had the most excellent time. Joanne from the British Council here in Chongqing had asked local residents to design a day out for me. The winner was Angelina who is sitting on the left in his picture. It was a packed day and we met with many interesting people from musicians and photographers to actors and the head of the University. I will make another post about this day later but for now I want to communicate a story I heard this evening that touched me deeply. Mr Xiao Nengzhu in the centre of this picture is a very wise and experienced scholar. He is a lover of music and traditional arts in particular. We experienced a qin (Chinese stringed instrument) performance today and I was shown scores for this ancient music. They consisted of stories that you were intended to relate to and then convey in the performance. Mr Xiao told me about a lesson he had had with a very old qin player, he died two years ago having lived to 93. The old masterr said to him “I don’t teach technique, I teach the stories. Once the student understands the stories then they will be able to play.” How far is that from our preoccupation with theory and technique? I feel incredibly blessed to have received that message via Mr Xiao. It’s something you sort of already know but to have it communicated to you across ages in a distant culture helps to confirm your thinking. If Steve Tromans reads this I know he will dig it.
Great tale, reminds me of a time on tour in the middle of nowhere in Poland, night falling around a campfire sharing stories and tunes and having a song sung back to me that was the song my father used to sing to me, hearing it again for the first time years later in a foreign land kind of told me I was on the right track….Glad you’re being well looked after – the food looks pretty good too!
Thanks Max. There are cafes here that specialise in goat meat. Apparently in winter a Chongqing resident must eat goat at least once in the winter as it is believed it contains properties to warm the body. I told them about Wooda Farm and the Goat Hotel. If you’re eating your goat in winter let me know if it works.
I did read it, and it did very much dig it! Good to read about your experiences so far mate. Look forward to the next post…
Cheers, Steve
That’s great. (And I’m with Max, you’ve got us salivating over here).