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2 - Orientalists from France: Jesuit priests in Beijing, Salvador-Daniel in Algiers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 December 2023

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Summary

European musical explorers had China in their sights three centuries before the era of recording; prominent among them were Jesuit priests. And the influence of their discoveries could be far-reaching: by introducing the sheng mouth organ to Europe in 1777, Father Joseph Amiot paved the way for the invention of the harmonica and the accordion. Chinese musicologists, who beat their European counterparts in the race to solve the mathematics of equal temperament, were in many ways ahead.

The Jesuit project was to win souls for Christ, but in China they realised they would only achieve that by going native. One of the first of these explorer-missionaries was an Italian named Matteo Ricci (1552–1610), who wore the traditional silk robes of the Confucian literati and was one of the first Western scholars to speak and write Mandarin; his intellectual feats included translating Euclid into Chinese, and mapping the world in Chinese characters. It was this cultural immersion that earned him the honour of being, in 1601, the first European allowed to enter the Forbidden City of Beijing. The clavichord with which he charmed the reclusive emperor Wan Li was his hook to engage the monarch’s interest in both Western music and the religion of which that music was the expression.

Ricci was an omnivorous diarist, and although he didn’t make a formal study of Chinese music he did observe it, even if his reaction was lordly disdain. While living in Nanjing he witnessed a rehearsal for a Confucian ceremony in which priests played ‘elegant’ music, as opposed to its raucous ‘banquet’ counterpart. ‘The priests who composed the orchestra were vested in sumptuous garments,’ he noted,

as if they were to attend a sacrifice, and after paying their respects to the Magistrate they set to playing their various instruments; bronze bells, basin-shaped vessels, some made of stone, with skins over them like drums, stringed instruments like a lute, bone flutes and organs played by blowing into them with the mouth rather than with bellows. They had other instruments shaped like animals, holding reeds in their teeth, through which air was forced from the empty interior. At this rehearsal their curious affairs were all sounded at once, with a result that can be readily imagined, as it was nothing other than a lack of concord, a discord of discords.

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Musics Lost and Found
Song Collectors and the Life and Death of Folk Tradition
, pp. 25 - 34
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2021

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