|
|
The following discussion of The East is Red is excerpted
from Pianos and Politics in China by Richard Curt Kraus.
Reproduced with permission.
Pianos and Politics in China
Middle-Class Ambitions and the Struggle over Western Music
Richard Curt Kraus
(New York: Oxford University Press, Inc. 1989)
pp. 119-120
"The East Is Red": A Change of Anthems
The Cultural Revolution in music did not begin abruptly with some
arbitrary political event, such as Beijing University's posters of
May 1966. The explosion, when it came, reflected tensions that had
long been building within musical circles. The musical fanfare
which opened the Cultural Revolution, however, was certainly
"The East Is Red," an old revolutionary song
which became the movement's anthem. This stirring hymn was the
title piece of a musical extravaganza for the fifteenth
anniversary of the establishment of the People's Republic on
October 1, 1964. The East Is Red told the history of
China's revolution in song and dance, drawing upon mass song
classics and vigorous dancing to spread Mao's message that the
lessons of past struggle were relevant to China's continuing
problems (73). The song, written in 1942, was based on a northern
Shaanxi folk song by a poor peasant named Li Youyuan (1903-1955).
It was popular at Yan'an, but had been sung less frequently after
Liberation, probably in deference to Party leaders who might
object to its words:
The East is red, the sun has risen. China has produced Mao Zedong!
He works for the people's happiness, he is the people's
savior.
The song's zealous words and stately melody were the perfect
musical accompaniment to the new Mao cult (74).
In fact, China was soon to need a new national anthem. Nie Er's
sturdy "March of the Volunteers" had done good service
since 1949, but the politics of the Cultural Revolution rendered
it unsuitable. Its words had been written by Tian Han, the
former patron of Nie and Xian Xinghai, who had become a leading
cultural administrator in the People's Republic. When he
was swept from power early in the movement, "The East is
Red" became China's unofficial anthem. Meetings opened with
solemn unison singing of this paean to Mao. The clock of
Shanghai's former customs house was adjusted so that "The
East Is Red" sang forth in place of the Westminster chimes
left behind by the British (75). The Central People's Broadcasting
Station began its day with "The East Is Red" played on a
set of bells cast over two thousand years ago in the Warring
States period. And when the Chinese sent their first satellite
into space in 1970, it broadcast "The East Is Red,"
washing an entire planet in the purifying sounds of heightened
revolutionary consciousness.
NOTES
73. See Dongfang Hong Gequji ["The East is Red" Song
Collection], (Hong Kong: Sanlien Shudian, 1965).
74. See Cai Cai, "Shengge 'Dongfang Hong' de bimo guansi" [A War
of Words Over the Hymn, "The East is Red"], Dongxiang [The
Trend], 28 (January 1981), 29; Wei Hsia-an, "The Most Powerful
Song", Chinese Literature 1 (1970): 108-13; Zhongguo
Minjian Wenyi Yanjiuhui, ed.,
"Zhongguo Chuliaoge Mao Zedong:
["China Produced a Mao Zedong"] (Beijing: Renmin Wenyi Chubanshe,
1951], 2: Jiang Qihua and Xiao Xinghua, "Renmin geshou Li Youyuan
he 'Dongfang Hong' de yansheng" [The People's Songsmith Li Youyuan
and the Birth of "The East is Red"], Renmin Yinyue 1 (1978):
34-35.
75. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians , s.v.
"Chimes": Yue Sheng, "Bian Zhong" [Bian Bells], Beijing
Dagong Bao (12 March 1964).
Pianos and Politics in China
Middle-Class Ambitions and the Struggle over Western Music
Richard Curt Kraus
(New York: Oxford University Press, Inc., 1989)
Copyright © 1989 by Oxford University Press, Inc.
|