The
idea that Chinese performers on Chinese instruments playing Chinese music might
be guilty of whitewashing seems preposterous, yet I'm going to suggest that
whitewashing occurs here, and to no small extent.
Within
China, over the past close to two centuries, with Westernisation of the Chinese
society, European culture has become the idea of a representation of high
culture, modern organisation, a system focused on scientific rigour and
understanding. This perceptual shift is a widespread movement throughout
various levels of the Chinese society and not restricted to music alone. Western
science, western systems of thought, and even western musical systems were
being hailed as advanced, as the direction the Chinese had to go in order to be
a part of the modern world. This was understandable, with China losing out
swathes of land and power since the Opium Wars to the Europeans. What was in
the past an ancient and powerful civilisation was so reduced, it was inevitable
the Chinese believed that a different way of government, education,
philosophies, an entire different way of doing things had to be implemented for
their civilisation to be on par with the rest of the world.
Music
was no different. The early 20th century saw promotion of singing in schools,
bringing music education to the younger generation of Chinese. What is known as
school-songs (学堂乐歌) were in fact Westernised melodies with new
lyrics. Music education reform was carried out by many idealistic individuals
who had the opportunity to go abroad to further their studies. Having learnt
the musical tradition of European art music and seeing its systematic
organisation of theoretical knowledge, most of them wholeheartedly embraced
these philosophies, believing that this was the reform that the Chinese culture
needed. From the early 20th century onwards, music in China took on a whole new
set of ideas, philosophies, aesthetics, and structure. This was not to say that
traditional Chinese music was totally wiped out or that the philosophies and
aesthetical ideas of the past few thousand years no longer influenced the
people, but it was a fact that this new music from Europe impacted the ideas
and musical culture of China significantly from the early 20th century.
While
there is the constant revival, conservation and work done for the folk and
classical traditions of China, it is an indisputable fact that a significant
extent of the idea that people have of Chinese music is the music of the
"Chinese orchestra". The development of the Chinese orchestra will
not be detailed here but readers can be directed here for slightly more
detailed description of its development.
With
the basic premise of the Chinese orchestra modelled upon the symphony orchestra
of European art music tradition, the aesthetics of how the sound should be like
is gradually being influenced as well. The full Chinese orchestra set up as we
know of now is not built from a single group of instruments from a particular
folk instrumental ensemble, but from different kinds of ensembles all around
China. One difficulty arising from this is the fact that these instruments were
not built to blend together because they did not originate within the same
ensemble in the first place.
Within
folk instrumental ensembles, there are various instruments that have very
unique sounds and it is precisely because of these unique sounds that
contribute to the particular ensemble's defining characteristic. When they
come together in the Chinese orchestra however, all these various
characteristic sounding instruments unfortunately might not work very well
together. In attempting to emulate the symphony orchestra, instruments are
being grouped into four instrumental families, much like the instruments in the
symphony orchestra. With the creation of these instrumental families, it is
inevitable that people also tend to parallel them in comparison.
Take
the bowed string section for example. Although both groups of instruments
produce sound through the bowing of strings, the similarity pretty much ends
there. While performers especially competitive young professional musicians
fresh from years of gruelling training from the conservatory will like to
emphasise that whatever the violin can do, so can the erhu, and that is quite true - almost all the violin techniques can
be performed on the erhu, and there
are numerous technically virtuosic pieces in the violin repertoire that have
been played just as well by performers on the erhu - they are still fundamentally different instruments. The
structure of the instruments are very different with the erhu sounding with a membrane versus the wooden soundboard of the
violin. There is no fingerboard on the erhu
as well and the angle the bow makes on the strings is different from that of a
violin. With all these fundamental differences, it is a sad fact of life that
many erhu performers still take the
ability to perform virtuosic pieces from the violin repertoire as one of the
important goals in erhu performance.
While finding ways to challenge and break technical limits is important and
always welcome, it is unfortunate that sometimes it overshadows other forms of
achievement in the performance of a Chinese musical instrument.
Chinese
instruments have been seen as being built less scientifically than western
musical instruments. Although this idea is slowly changing, it is nevertheless
a very deeply ingrained one. The idea of musical instruments from another
culture being less "well-built" is hard to shake off when the
standard is being set with the ability to perform pieces equivalent to the
European art music repertoire in musical systems based on the European art
music culture. Definitely it is a boost to the ego when one can say that one is
able to perform a certain piece of music just as well on the erhu as any other good violinist can on
the violin, it is unfortunate however that this in fact perpetuates the believe
that for the musical culture of the Chinese to be good, one has to aspire
towards the achievement of European art music standards. This in fact is a
circularity that turns in on itself. Instrument makers and researchers are at
the same time constantly developing various ways of improving on Chinese
musical instruments and many of the improvements sought after are precisely how
to make them "comparable" to western musical instruments. Making
instruments whose sounds "blend" better together in the orchestra,
trying to increase the instruments' resonance and sound (an erhu can never match a violin in terms of
volume) and even experimenting with different materials for the instruments are
some examples of these developments. The results are instruments that sound good
in the orchestra, instruments which are easier to play, and so on, and these
are definitely welcome for performers. But at the same time, isn't "sounding
good in an orchestra" a very Eurocentric point of view? What does a
"good sound" imply?
All
these build up an extremely intricate web that is very difficult to unravel.
With the development of the Chinese orchestra being so influenced by European
art music, the direction musical aesthetics of the Chinese orchestra takes has
already been set, from the early days. While not set in stone, it is still a
direction which, unless the entire performance practice of the Chinese
orchestra were to change radically, is still going to be moving in the same
general course. Yet at the same time, even with its borrowing of all the
European traditions, there are elements that are different. While I argue that
the whitewashing of Chinese music is a matter of historical fact, I am also at
the same time, believing that music, art, and culture are always evolving, and
always borrowing from other traditions and cultures. With communications and
huge ease of accessibility, this is going to be even more so in the current
time. And that should not be something to be feared but recognised. Influences should be
acknowledged and new developments embraced.