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A musical dialogue between the Earth and humanity

By SHI GUANG in New York | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2025-10-29 09:13
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After their performance, composer Vince di Mura, holding a bouquet of flowers, joins the evening's conductor, musicians, vocalists and narrators in taking a bow before an enthusiastic audience at the Patriots Theater at the War Memorial in Trenton, New Jersey. Photo provided to China Daily

A new symphonic jazz work brought together an orchestra, jazz ensemble, choir and Chinese instrumentalists in Trenten, New Jersey, for a performance that blended languages and timbres to explore the fragile relationship between humanity and the Earth.

The Patriots Theater at the War Memorial on Saturday night was filled with about 1,200 people, including local artist groups, community leaders, Princeton University scholars and music lovers from the American and Chinese communities, who gathered for an evening that felt as much a celebration as a premiere.

The 90-minute work, O God… Beautiful Machine, was created by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Yusef Komunyakaa and Vince di Mura, music director and composer at the Lewis Center for the Arts at Princeton.

Presented by the Capital Philharmonic of New Jersey, the concert was dedicated to Larry Hilton, a Trenton arts advocate whose ideas and encouragement helped make the collaboration possible.

Hilton had imagined the work as uniting orchestral, jazz and Chinese musical voices to express both gratitude for the planet and awareness of its vulnerability. Though he passed away in July, his presence was felt throughout the evening, especially when his sister Karen Hilton spoke briefly about his belief that art could bring people together.

One of the evening's most distinctive moments came with The Cassowary, the work's Chinese-language section featuring pipa and Chinese percussion. Di Mura said the section grew from his long collaboration with Chinese musicians and was written "as a tribute to my Chinese friends," carrying what he called a "folkloric flavor inspired by traditional Chinese melodies."

Among the featured performers were several Chinese and Chinese American musicians whose careers have long bridged traditions.

Lina Zha, a soprano trained at the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing, has appeared at Carnegie Hall and co-founded the Summer Breeze Chinese Jazz Band with di Mura, creating innovative projects that fuse Chinese classics with American jazz.

Jing Yang, a violist and violinist educated at London's Royal Academy of Music and the Mozarteum University of Salzburg, brought her refined tone and international experience to the ensemble. She now serves as president of the Chinese String Musicians Association.

Yang Jin, a leading pipa soloist and winner of the Chinese Golden Bell Award, has performed worldwide with Yo-Yo Ma's Silk Road Ensemble and teaches at Bard College and the University of Delaware.

Narration was provided by Bill Engst, who was born in Xi'an, Shaanxi province and raised in Beijing, whose resonant bilingual delivery gave the performance a sense of gravity and warmth.

The music unfolded as a quiet conversation between improvisation and structure, Western harmony and Eastern lyricism. Before the concert, di Mura told the audience that the piece was meant "to entertain, not to break musical ideas," a sentiment reflected in the evening's balance of intellect and warmth.

As the final notes faded, the audience rose together in a long ovation. For many, the evening felt like a moment of connection — across cultures, languages and traditions. Many in the audience expressed similar feelings. As one attendee put it afterward, "When the Chinese instruments joined the orchestra, it felt like the music was speaking two languages, but one emotion."

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