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Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

Tan Dun  Main Performer

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1 Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Calandrelli/Dun 3:23
2 Eternal Vow Calandrelli/Dun 3:01
3 Wedding Interrupted Calandrelli/Dun 2:16
4 Night Fight Calandrelli/Dun 3:10
5 Silk Road Calandrelli/Dun 3:08
6 To the South Calandrelli/Dun 2:21
7 Through the Bamboo Forest Calandrelli/Dun 4:23
8 Encounter Calandrelli/Dun 2:40
9 Desert Capriccio Calandrelli/Dun 4:33
10 In the Old Temple Calandrelli/Dun 3:46
11 Yearning of the Sword Calandrelli/Dun 3:34
12 Sorrow Calandrelli/Dun 4:02
13 Farewell Calandrelli/Dun 2:25
14 English lyrics Calandrelli/Dun/Sch 3:44
15 Mandarin lyrics Calandrelli/Dun/Sch 3:42
  • Overview
  • Production Details
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Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

Audio Compact Disc

Label: Sony Classical

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

UPC: 696998934726

Release Date: 11/14/2000

Original Release Date: 11/14/2000

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Eternal Vow, Wedding Interrupted, Night Fight, Silk Road, To the South, Through the Bamboo Forest, Encounter, Desert Capriccio, In the Old Temple, Yearning of the Sword, Sorrow, Farewell, English lyrics, Mandarin lyrics]
Contributors:

Evan Cater

Though it was made in Taiwan, set in China and written in Mandarin, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon is something of a cultural hybrid. The film was the brainchild of a Taiwanese director (Ang Lee) with an impressive Hollywood resume that includes Sense and Sensibility and The Ice Storm. The screenplay was adapted from a Chinese novel by two Asians and an American and it featured international movie star Chow Yun Fat. Stylistically, the movie drew as much from Hollywood romantic epics as it did from Chinese martial arts dramas. The challenge for the film's composer, Tan Dun, was to score the film with music that would represent its multi-cultural origins and multi-faceted influences. His solution was to blend sweeping Western orchestral music with traditional Chinese instruments like rawap, tar drums and Chinese erhu while using another internationally renowned Asian, cellist Yo Yo Ma, as a sort of bridge between the two styles. Dun's strategy works beautifully in the film; striking perfectly the delicate balance between the exotic and the familiar -- exactly what is required by a script that paints a romanticized fantasy version of ancient China grounded in universal emotional experience. The romantic themes ("The Eternal Vow," "Farewell") are stirring without being manipulative and memorable without being repetitive. Even more impressive are the musical pieces for the film's graceful combat scenes. Unlike most American action films, Crouching Tiger does not swamp the audience in discordant suspense music. And though the warriors do fly across their battlefields like stones skipping lightly across a pond, Dun does not attempt an E.T.-like soaring score. Instead, the action scenes are accompanied by vibrant Chinese rhythms, mercifully abandoning melody altogether. The only false moment on the soundtrack is the grating end credit pop ballad "A Love Before Time," which is performed by Asian American singer CoCo Lee. The song is a transparent attempt to mimic Celine Dion's megahit closer for Titanic, "My Heart Will Go On," and it is an infuriatingly commercial conclusion to a gloriously original film. ~ Evan Cater, Rovi

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