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| distributor =
| distributor =
| released = 2006
| released = 2006
| runtime = 76 min. (original cut), 52 min. (DVD cut)
| runtime = 76 min. (vod cut), 52 min. (DVD cut)
| country =
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| language = Mandarin
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==External links==
==External links==
* {{Vimeo|64240486|A Farewell Song on Vimeo On Demand}}
* [http://www.lpfilms.net/a-farewell-song/ ''A Farewell Song'']
* [http://www.lpfilms.net/a-farewell-song/ ''A Farewell Song'']
* [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0940911/ '' A Farewell Song''] at the Internet Movie Database
* [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0940911/ '' A Farewell Song''] at the Internet Movie Database

Revision as of 09:57, 11 January 2016

A Farewell Song
Promo shot from A Farewell Song
Directed byArthur Jones, Luther Jones
Produced byLuo Tong
StarringLuo Shoucheng, Weng Zhenfa (翁鎮發), Tu Weigang, Chen Dawei
Music byChen Dawei and others
Production
company
LostPensivos Films
Release date
2006
Running time
76 min. (vod cut), 52 min. (DVD cut)
LanguageMandarin

A Farewell Song is a 2006 documentary film about a group of retired Chinese musicians who reunite to perform a series of concerts outside of the state-backed music system. It was directed by Arthur Jones and Luther Jones, and supported by the British Documentary Film Foundation (BRITDOC).

Synopsis

The film is centred on the lives of traditional Chinese musicians, dizi player Luo Shoucheng, pipa player Tu Weigang, sheng player Weng Zhenfa (翁鎮發) and composer Chen Dawei, all based in Shanghai. Following their retirement from local state-backed orchestras, the musicians – all friends – decide to reband and record new material over which they will have complete control. After the first recording sessions, the film follows the men's personal stories: Luo Shoucheng returns to the neighbourhood he lived in as a child; Tu Weigang reminisces about their lives during the Cultural Revolution; Chen Dawei enjoys time with his young son; and Weng Zhenfa continues his reinvention of his instrument (the sheng) with master craftsmen at a local workshop.

Composer Chen Dawei's sudden death takes them all by surprise and the second half of the film follows the remaining musicians' attempts to organize a tribute concert in his name.

The film was shot over three years in Shanghai, and backed by the Channel 4 BRITDOC Foundation. It won the Special Jury Prize for documentaries at the 2006 Syracuse International Film Festival. It has also played at BRITDOC Film Festival, Globians Film Festival, Santa Cruz International Film Festival, Cologne Chinese Film Festival, Pyongyang Film Festival, Chongqing Independent Film and Video Festival, and Action on Film International Film Festival.[1][2]

Soundtrack

Untitled

The soundtrack for A Farewell Song (A Farewell Song – The Soundtrack) consists of complete versions of all the music featured in film. All the music was recorded live during filming, with one of the tracks ("A Farewell Song") coming from a studio recording that features in the film. All tracks are ancient tunes, rearranged by the musicians themselves.

Tracking listing

  1. "Festival of the Flaming Torch" (Chen Dawei) – 3:51
  2. "Pine in the Snow Storm" (Luo Shoucheng) – 1:54
  3. "A Farewell Song" (Chen Dawei) – 6:11
  4. "The Rivulet" (Chen Dawei) – 3:19
  5. "Three Six" (Chen Jingchao) – 3:54
  6. "A Hundred Birds Pay Homage to the Phoenix" (Liu Ying) – 7:07
  7. "The Moon Mirrored in the No. Two Spring" (Hua Yanjun) – 6:45
  8. "The Jin Tune" (Weng Zhenfa) – 5:36
  9. "Ambush on all Sides" (Tu Weigang) – 6:45
  10. "Night Bell from the Old Temple" (Chen Dawei) – 9:36

See also

References

  1. ^ "Farewell Song". Britdoc.org. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  2. ^ "重庆民间映画交流展CIFVF". Cifvf.org. Retrieved 9 June 2010.