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:82/LP music/up/DJ/2006 1 12637039 1 . WMA

Ode to the Red Flag-Shanghai Symphony Orchestra

/u 1/2007/0 1/23/20070 1230 1 1455 16897024 . MP3

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Lv Qiming's Ode to the Red Flag

At the invitation of the opening ceremony of "Shanghai Spring" in the spring of 1965, China composer Lv Qiming composed a one-movement orchestral ensemble "Ode to the Red Flag", which was successfully premiered. The composer rationally used the national anthem, Dongfanghong, Internationale and other musical materials in his music, and skillfully cooperated with the theme of "Celebrating the Red Flag". The melody is sometimes impassioned and sometimes melodious, which fully expresses the people's infinite love and loyalty to the motherland.

Lv Qiming, the author of Ode to the Red Flag, is a famous composer of film music in China, who was born in 1930. He likes music since he was a child. At the age of ten, he went to Huainan Anti-Japanese Base with his father to join the New Fourth Army, and served as a member of the Anti-Japanese Troupe of the Second Division, the Art Troupe of the Seventh Division and the Art Troupe of the East China Military Region. His father, Lv Huisheng, was a revolutionary martyr who died in the bonfire in War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression. 1945 * * Joined China. From 65438 to 0949, Lv Qiming worked as an actor in Shanghai Film Studio. 195 1 year transferred to Beijing film studio, 1955 returned to Shanghai film studio as a composer. 1964 graduated from the department of composition and command of Shanghai Conservatory of Music. He used to be the head of Shanghai Film Orchestra and the director of the music studio of Shanghai Film Company. The fourth and fifth directors of China Music Association. He has composed music for nearly 40 feature films and more than 10 documentaries such as Flying Tigers, Home, Red Sun, Dr. Bethune, Legend of Lushan Mountain, Nanchang Uprising, Thunderstorm and Extraordinary President, and also composed music for Xiang Jingyu, Haitang and Ruan. Among them, the episode "Romance on Lushan Mountain", "Ah, Hometown" and the song "What Should You Leave" won the National Excellent Song Award. In the creation of the film "Old Things in the South of the City", the film's music is in harmony with the picture style, with unique musical ideas and melodies with a sense of the times, and won the Best Music Award of the Third Chinese Film Golden Rooster Award with 1983. Other musical works include more than ten symphonies such as Zheng Chenggong (cooperating with others), Flying Tigers, Symphonic Poem, Sentinel under Neon Lights, Ode to the Red Flag, Symphonic Narrative Poem Bethune, and more than one hundred songs such as Playing My Favorite Pipa and Who Doesn't Say My Hometown is Good (cooperating with others).