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Along the Roaring River : My Wild Ride from Mao to the Met
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Along the Roaring River : My Wild Ride from Mao to the Met Hardcover - 2008

by Tian, Hao Jiang

  • Used

This is the charming memoir of an internationally renowned operatic bass who began life in Mao's China and endured the Cultural Revolution to forge a career at the Metropolitan Opera at a time when very few Asian singers appeared on the world's most prominent stages.

Description

Wiley & Sons Canada, Limited, John. Used - Very Good. Ships from the UK. Used book that is in excellent condition. May show signs of wear or have minor defects.
Used - Very Good
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Details

  • Title Along the Roaring River : My Wild Ride from Mao to the Met
  • Author Tian, Hao Jiang
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition 1st/1st
  • Condition Used - Very Good
  • Pages 336
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Wiley & Sons Canada, Limited, John, Hoboken, N.J
  • Date 2008-04-01
  • Features Dust Cover, Index, Price on Product - Canadian, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 9999352-75
  • ISBN 9780470056417 / 047005641X
  • Weight 1.35 lbs (0.61 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.4 x 6.52 x 1.18 in (23.88 x 16.56 x 3.00 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Tian, Hao Jiang, Basses (Singers) - United States
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2007046849
  • Dewey Decimal Code B

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From the publisher

Since his 1991 debut at New York's Metropolitan Opera, Hao Jiang Tian has appeared on the world's greatest stages, more than 300 times at the Met alone. How he got there is a drama of bittersweet humor, mortal danger, heartbreaking tragedy, and inspiring triumph-more passionate and turbulent than even the grandest opera. In Along the Roaring River, Tian relives his coming of age in China during the chaotic Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s and his dramatic journey from hard labor in a Beijing factory to international opera stardom.

From the jacket flap

Since his 1991 debut at New York's Metropolitan Opera, Hao Jiang Tian has appeared on the world's greatest stages, more than 300 times at the Met alone. How he got there, how-ever, is a drama of bittersweet humor, mortal danger, heartbreaking tragedy, and inspiring triumph--more passionate and turbulent than even the grandest opera.

In Along the Roaring River, Tian relives his coming of age in China during one of its most chaotic periods, the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. Wild and rebellious, nature-loving, emotional, and yearning for beauty, he finds release in underground love songs howled from mountaintops and banned books stolen from boarded-up libraries. Dec-ades after leaving China during the post-MaoAnti-Spiritual Pollution Campaign, he returnsto find his homeland vastly different. Inbetween, more by fate than by design, heachieves success in the most Western of art forms--and takes his place among the influential Chinese artists, film directors, and composers of this era, who were all shaped by that terrible time.

Tian was born to stern revolutionary parents who became important musicians in the People's Liberation Army, enjoying the privileges reserved for officials of New China. The boy showed little promise of living up to his parents' expectations. He hated music. He celebrated the end of his forced lessons at the piano--the "big black beast with eighty-eight teeth"--when his unsmiling teacher was sentenced to isolation for counterrevolutionary tendencies. Then, when Tian's own loyal Communist parents were sent to a far-off coal-mining town to be "reeducated," young Tian found himself abandoned and alone in Beijing. Without parental supervision, outside politics, and, at age fifteen, assigned to hard labor--cutting metal in the Beijing Boiler Factory--the young man found himself spiritually free. He even fell in love with the piano-beast, with which he shared his tiny, lonely room. He taught himself accordion and that most decadent of instruments, the guitar. He became a singer by chance, and, after seven years, tricked his way out of the factory and into a musical audition that changed his life. He smuggled watches with gun-wielding gangsters to scrape together enough money to leave China. And then, on his way to Denver to study voice, on his first day in the United States, he went to the Metropolitan Opera and saw the very first opera of his life. Eight years later, he made his debut at the Met alongside Placido Domingo.

Peppered with charming, frightening, and sobering anecdotes, Along the Roaring River is important and rewarding reading for anyone who loves opera, political history, or a thrilling and powerful true story well told.

Media reviews

Citations

  • Booklist, 05/01/2008, Page 63
  • Library Journal, 05/01/2008, Page 68
  • Publishers Weekly, 03/31/2008, Page 49
  • Reference and Research Bk News, 11/01/2008, Page 227

About the author

Hao Jiang Tian is the first Chinese-born opera singer to achieve a lasting success on world stages. A bass with a voice that is unusually sweet and versatile, he has appeared at the Metropolitan Opera every season since he debuted there in 1991. He performs the major bass roles at the great opera houses around the globe. Recently he and his wife, Martha Liao, have begun to foster new Chinese opera and talent for the world to hear. Now an American citizen, Tian has homes in New York City, Denver (where he used to sing at a piano bar), and Beijing.

Lois B. Morris and her husband, Robert Lipsyte, have written for the New York Times about classical music and opera. Separately, Morris writes about mental health and psychology, including a long running column in Allure. She has written or co-written eight books. Lipsyte is a "New York Times" contributor, former sports and city columnist, and television commentator. He has written seventeen books.