Beijing Review

A Musician Without Borders

Canadian composer and pianist strikes harmonic notes in China

- By Tao Xing

During his concert tour across seven Chinese cities in December 2023, Steve Barakatt, a Canadian-Lebanese composer and pianist, performed a piece titled Riding Around the Forbidden City every night. The Forbidden City, formally known as the Palace Museum, is the largest and best preserved ancient wooden palace complex in the world.

The ode to the structure that housed China’s emperors from 1421 to 1911 can be found on Barakatt’s 2011 album Someday Somewhere. The entire album was about visiting different places and creating music based on a specific location. Barakatt visited the Forbidden City in Beijing around 2010, on his first visit to the Chinese mainland.

“When I was in the Forbidden City, I really enjoyed its spirit. I composed the piece right after. I also listened to some traditiona­l music of China,” Barakatt told Beijing Review. “I think it’s one of the Chinese audience’s favorite pieces of music, they really enjoyed it.”

“I was actually missing China a lot. I’ve been to China many times over many years. I started to come here on a regular basis around 2010,” Barakatt added.

Riding across China

Barakatt described his most recent trip as “amazing.” “This tour started in Shanghai and wrapped up in Beijing. And it went extremely well. I felt that the people were extremely open, truly kind. And it wasn’t only my experience during the tour, but also during my ‘outside’ activities, I visited cities, I met amazing people,” Barakatt recalled.

The musician said he experience­d the warmth of the Chinese people during the trip. “I saw the people, I went to the train station, I went to the restaurant­s, and I found the people to be very open,” he continued. “One day,

nd my music publisher took me to a nice place in the hutong area of Beijing (a hutong is a type of narrow alleyway found in northern Chinese cities, especially Beijing). And then I went to a bar where many musicians hang out. I started playing with them. We all played together. It was a great evening.”

During this time, Barakatt also took up some traditiona­l Chinese musical instrument­s, such as the pipa, a plucked string instrument with a fretted fingerboar­d, and the Chinese harp. “I’m learning, let’s say. I already have my mind set on going back to China in the months to come to do something with a traditiona­l Chinese instrument,” he said.

During the concerts, Barakatt realized there were many families in attendance, parents and small children, something he considers a positive sign for any country. “The country wants to bring culture to the kids and the family,” he explained.

“Every time [I come to China], it is definitely surprising. China is developing so fast. I have seen all the changes. The past 10 years saw a lot of infrastruc­ture constructi­on and subsequent­ly the developmen­t and boom of transporta­tion,” Barakatt said. One example here is the rapid developmen­t of transporta­tion in Beijing, with more and more electric cars, most of them silent, now on the road. A positive change Barakatt, for one, thoroughly enjoys.

In addition to Beijing and Shanghai, Barakatt also visited the cities of Chongqing, Chengdu, Hefei, Jinan and Tianjin in the last month of 2023.

He elaborated that because most of his friends are there, Beijing is the place he knows best. “For sure, Beijing is like my Chinese home. But I need to discover more because China is so diverse. For instance, you can eat a different Chinese dish every day for the rest of your life,” Barakatt marveled, adding he is still exploring the country.

“The regions I haven’t visited yet are mostly located in the south, I wish to discover more,” he said. And that future exploratio­n also includes more

 ?? ?? Steve Barakatt, a Canadian-Lebanese composer and pianist
Steve Barakatt, a Canadian-Lebanese composer and pianist

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