This morning, I
woke up to the sweet sound of distant thunder. After a day of sweltering heat
and a night of suffocating humidity, this sound was (pardon the cliché), music
to my ears. It reminded me of a piece of Chinese classical music that I used to
enjoy. The title was; 旱天雷, or Thunder
in Dry Season. This piece was in my first Chinese Classical LP record by (I think)
the Singapore Chinese Orchestra which I bought in 1969.
旱天雷, as you
can probably guess from the title, depicts the excitement and elation which
farmers felt when they heard the distant rumblings of thunder during a time of
drought. I believe this piece originated in Guangzhou in Southern China; and we
used to know it by its Cantonese name, “Hon Tin Loi”. Here’s a version performed
by the China Broadcasting Traditional Orchestra (中国广播民族乐团). Please listen to the end to see the
sudden switch in mood brought on, no doubt, by the thunder.
Interestingly,
this tune was also used to accompany the programmes by the famous Redifussion
story-teller, Lee Dai Sor. I remember there was a very funny Cantonese song
version titled; “Ping kor wah ngor sor” – "Who says I am stupid?" Maybe that was
how Lee Dai Sor got his nickname of Big Fool Lee.
Yesterday,
I posted this photo of a cloudless sky on my Facebook page with this
description; Not a cloud in the sky. But with temp at 33 deg C, nobody is
singing; "I'm on the top of the world". (Top of the World is a famous song by the Carpenters)
2 comments:
You can listen the version of this tune play on Lee Dai Sor's programmes here.
I think the fat actor, Leong Sing Poh sang “Ping kor wah ngor sor” song also.
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