![]() ![]() The 35-year-old Tokyo-based virtuoso is on a mission to "bring the erhu to the world." If you tell him Chinese music doesn't travel, Xu retorts: "Music has no nationality. ![]() To both images, Chinese erhu master Xu Ke would say "Fiddlesticks!" For others, the Chinese two-stringed fiddle is associated with shabbily dressed buskers on street corners. T O THE YOUNGER GENERATION, the erhu may seem like a relic from the past - an old-fashioned instrument played by old-fashioned people. Xu Ke is happily out of tune with puristsīy Sangwon Suh and Angelica Cheung / Hong Kong From Our Correspondent: Hirohito and the WarĪ conversation with biographer Herbert Bixįrom Our Correspondent: A Rough Road Aheadīad news for the Philippines - and some others
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