We met Guo Yue...
first time at his concerts in duo with Joji Hirota.
It was one of best contemporary act we have ever seen... and the duo flute-percussions was working incredibly well.
So after some time we started a joint venture in live and studio performances.
Guo Yue was born in Beijing in 1958.
His family lived in a traditional courtyard in the maze of old alleys known as the Hutongs, between the beautiful Drum and Bell Towers and the river where he played as a child. His courtyard housed the families of five traditional musicians, mostly from the countryside.
From these musicians who (unlike his father) had received no formal musical training, he learned how to put not just his breath but his whole body into playing the flute. Yue now plays 15 different bamboo flutes.
Not wanting to be confined to traditional Chinese music, since 1990 Yue has worked as a soloist, writing his own music. He has collaborated with musicians and composers from Africa, Italy and Japan.
In 1992 he made the album 'Trisan' (Real World) with Joji Hirota, the Japanese Taiko drummer, and the Irish singer/composer Pol Brennan; this won an American instrumental award. Then in 1995 Yue and Joji recorded the album 'Red Ribbon'.
Yue has also worked on the soundtracks of several international films, including Bertolluci's Oscar-winning 'The Last Emperor' and 'The Killing Fields'.
He also played the soundtrack theme, composed by George Fenton, for the Emmy award-winning Channel Four television documentary 'Beyond the Clouds' which was directed by Phil Agland who commented: 'In the magical hands of Guo Yue, the bawu flute creates sounds that haunt the soul'.
The book is the story of his childood in Beijing during the cultural revolution, and the cd, produced by Richard Evans and partially recorded in China, provides sounds, remembrances and colors from Yue’s tale.
The book closes with a collection of recipes related to the period narrated (Yue is a great cook too!)