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The world premiere of Hanneke van Proosdij's composition "Wu Song and the Tiger with dance and choreography from BALAM Dance Theatre. Live, 8K video from our award-winning Metamorphoses program, April, 2023. Composer Hanneke van Proosdij, in colaboration with BALAM Dance Theatre, Kaili Chen, Yihan Chen and Peter Maund, has written a new work that transforms and combines the Chinese story of Wu Song with music and dance elements from Balinese, Chinese and baroque traditions. Simultaneously, Carlos Fittante and Kaili Chen have created a new choreography for the music work, and tonight you will see the world premiere of both the music and the dance. BALAM Dance Theatre: Guest artist: Kaili Chen as Wu Song, dance and choreography Carlos Fittante, director & choreography, as the tiger and the innkeeper Robin Gilbert: The Goddess of the Lake Shelby Yamin: The Fiddler Voices of Music: Hanneke van Proosdij & David Tayler, directors Hanneke van Proosdij, composer & conductor Guest artist: Yihan Chen, pipa Isabelle Seula Lee, baroque violin & concertmaster Aniela Eddy, Linda Quan & Shelby Yamin, baroque violin Mitso Floor and Gail Hernandez, baroque viola Eva Lymenstull, baroque cello Farley Pearce, violone Peter Maund, percussion David Tayler, archlute March 31–April 2, 2023 The Water Margin (水滸後傳) is one of the earliest Chinese works written in Mandarin, and is attributed to Shi Nai’an. Wu Song is the legendary hero, and one of the characters in the Water Margin. During his travels, Wu Song passes by a tavern in Yanggu County with a banner that reads “After Three Bowls, Do Not Climb the Mountain”. The bartender explains that the wine is so strong that customers would get drunk after having three bowls and could not cross the mountain ahead. Wu Song argues with the bartender and drinks eighteen bowls of wine. Wu Song climbs the ridge, falls asleep and then battles the tiger. At the end, the Goddess of the Lake restores order. Audio engineer and ambisonics: Boby Borisov 8K Video: Lloyd Hryciw, Rob Clevenger, Mitso Floor & Didier LeGall Post production: David Tayler, Andrew Levy & Hanneke van Proosdij Historical research and tavern poster design: Eiko Jin #WuSong