Crimson candlelight illuminates the heavy night. Silence is replaced by the cacophony of chatter and cups hastily placed on tables only to be lifted away immediately. The gentle song of a biwa somehow breaks through all of it, as if on a different plane. The ethereal shakuhachi emits its song from beneath a gauze canopy. The generous roar of the drums resonates throughout the floors of the inn, piercing deep into its corners, making way for the wave of memories that ensue. Even after more than a millennium, the huqin still plays its aching song, the moon above following it through dynasty after dynasty, long after the city has fallen to ruin and disappeared from living memory.
Rhymoi Music producer Ye Yunchuan, who has been fascinated by classical Chinese music since his childhood, has since gone on to hold a deep understanding and affection for it. In 2018, with his album Moonlight glow over Dunhuang, he showed the world the marvel that is the rich history of Dunhuang and the Tang Dynasty. Here, he once again is propelled by his deep admiration for Chinese classical music, to bring the listener to the most important successor of Tang culture—Japan. Though the original palaces of Chang’an no longer stand, its spirit still lives on. Mr. Ye calls upon a group of talented musicians from both Japan and China, and in a 1200-seat music hall in Kanagawa, reveals a stunning portrayal of Chinese folk music and Japanese hogaku, featuring improvised performances of classic pieces. The shakuhachi, Japanese flute, Japanese biwa and taiko drums all originated from Tang China, and today Japan is the world’s greatest showcaser of extant classical songs from this era. Outstanding young instrumentalist Mao Ya plays the guzheng and other Chinese instruments, which forms a dialogue with a range of Japanese instruments, for an incredible cultural exchange spanning millennia.