lilac,給你送月餅來了。 祝lilac和家人度過一個溫馨快樂的中秋節。 http://space.wenxuecity.com/media/1198617448.wma 小提琴曲:在銀色的月光下 專輯:弦情歲月 作曲:王洛賓 演奏:張毅 專輯《弦情歲月》簡介: 《弦情歲月》是一張以小提琴為主奏樂器,伴以多種配奏形式的純音樂欣賞唱片。它以柔和、舒展、流暢的音樂風格和“以弦喻情”的表演手法向聽眾朋友傳送流金歲月留給人們那些難以忘懷的旋律。 小提琴演奏家張毅在本唱片的獨奏音色純淨,柔潤,風格典雅,秀美,他用時而低回委婉,時而高揚亮麗的琴聲“以弦喻情”傳送音樂的純真精髓. 一組你無法拒絕的經典旋律;她熟悉而悠遠,就像記憶中那一縷抹不去的殘霞;她親切而細膩,就像環繞在你耳邊的喃喃細語;她純淨而幽婉,讓你淋浴在寧靜,舒緩的月夜港灣...(摘自網絡) **************** 張毅簡介: 張毅,國家一級小提琴演奏家。自幼學習小提琴,1980年考入廣州星海音樂學院附中,師從李超泉先生;1986年進入星海音樂學院管弦係,師從沈在勤先生、勞思陽先生、張強先生;1990年畢業後考入廣州交響樂團;他為多家唱片公司錄製的十多張小提琴獨奏、重奏音樂鐳射唱碟,都獲得廣大聽眾的讚譽和喜愛,尤其是其中由太平洋影音公司錄製的小提琴專輯《弦情歲月》。 《音響技術》雜誌的評論是:“廣州交響樂團首席小提琴家張毅奏出十一首發人心弦的動聽樂章,由這位天才橫溢的小提琴家用心地演繹,令人如癡如醉,深深被他奏出的每個音符所吸引。小提琴最甜美的音質和寬廣的音域都隨著張毅手中完全發揮出來。(摘自網絡) ************** Wang Luobin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Wang Luobin (王洛賓; 28 December 1913 - 14 March 1996) was a renowned Han Chinese songwriter who specialized in composing Mandarin-language songs based on the music of various ethnic minorities in western China. Wang was born in Beijing on 28 December 1913. He graduated from the Music Department of Beijing Normal University in 1934 and actively participated in the Second Sino-Japanese War on China's behalf beginning in 1937 in Shanxi Province. In 1938, in Lanzhou in Gansu Province, Wang composed his first Xinjiang-inspired song, "The Girl from Dabancheng" (達阪城的姑娘). He took up residence in northwestern China for more than 50 years since then, and devoted his time there to composing, collecting and revising western Chinese folk songs. In all, Wang wrote seven operas and published six songbooks, and wrote some 700 western-style songs, the most famous of which include "Alamuhan" (阿拉木漢, inspired by a Xinjiang Uyghur song), "Awariguli" (also supposedly a Uyghur song), "Flowers and Youth" (pinyin: Hua'er Yu Shaonian, a Hui Muslim folk song), "At a Faraway Place" (在那遙遠的地方; pinyin: Zai Na Yaoyuan De Difang, a song from Qinghai Province), "Lift Your Veil" (掀起你的蓋頭來), "Duldal and Maria" (a Kazakh folk song), "Mayila", and "The Crescent Moon Rises" (半個月亮爬上來; pinyin: Ban Ge Yueliang Pa Shang Lai). Wang began to win accolades for his work towards the end of his life. In 1993, "At a Faraway Place" and "The Crescent Moon Rises" were selected as the Chinese music classics of the 20th century. A year later, in July 1994, Wang received the Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Exchange of Western and Eastern Cultures from UNESCO. Wang was made the honorary town head of Dabancheng in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region by the local government in December of that year. Wang married Huang Yulan in Lanzhou in 1945 and had three sons, Wang Haiyan, Wang Haixing and Wang Haicheng. Huang died in 1951 as a result of tuberculosis. Wang had lived in Australia for a period of time with his son Haiyan who immigrated in 1981, and stated that some of his later work was inspired by the Australian landscape and natural flora and fauna. Wang died of cancer on 14 March 1996 at the age of 83. His songs continue to be popular today, and modern adaptations of them have been recorded by the Beijing Angelic Choir, a Chinese children's choir that has earned recognition both at home and abroad; by China's popular Twelve Girls Band; and by the famous Chinese rock singer Dao Lang, who is known for his western China-themed pop music.