Music Box Plays "Turandot"
By Michael Wolff
Angelo Rulli reported a stolen music box, dated at 1850 and playing Chinese music written by Puccini for his opera Turandot. A bit unlikely -- Puccini wasn't born until 1858 and he wrote Turandot in 1926. No wonder it was stolen, it's surely unique!
Michael Wolff New Zealand michaelw@ihug.co.nz
[ Editors note: [ [ I think the melodies in "Turandot" were familiar well before 1926. [ Our member, Miss Miho Matsuo, wrote to me in October concerning a [ Swiss music box which plays Oriental melodies: [ [> Today I hit on the idea that I should also check Puccini's [> "Turandot", and it was not useless. As far as I could recognize there [> were 2 [Chinese] tunes included in the opera. This story takes place [> in Beijing, and these melodies were described as Chinese folk songs. [ [ snip - "ascii music" ] [ [> This could be the song number one, which I mentioned as a song [> brought into Japan about 50 years ago. Some books say that it was [> also popular in Europe at the end of 18th century, and was called [> "Moo-Lee-Wha". Judging from the Chinese characters shown in the book, [> it is a kind of chicken often used as a metaphor of dawn. The motiv [> appears through out the whole play, representing a Chinese princess [> named Turandot. [ [> Also, some books had an interesting story. I will try to translate. [> "It is said that Puccini quoted several melodies from a music box [> which his friend, Barone Fassini, a consul long resided in China, [> had owned. It played the newly decided national anthem of Ching [> [the Ching Dynasty], and other old Chinese folk music..." [ [ Robbie Rhodes |
(Message sent Tue 4 Mar 1997, 21:03:58 GMT, from time zone GMT+1300.) |
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