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PAN Project - Premium 3D Printer Filament for High-Quality Prints | Perfect for DIY, Cosplay, and Prototyping Projects
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PAN Project - Premium 3D Printer Filament for High-Quality Prints | Perfect for DIY, Cosplay, and Prototyping Projects PAN Project - Premium 3D Printer Filament for High-Quality Prints | Perfect for DIY, Cosplay, and Prototyping Projects PAN Project - Premium 3D Printer Filament for High-Quality Prints | Perfect for DIY, Cosplay, and Prototyping Projects
PAN Project - Premium 3D Printer Filament for High-Quality Prints | Perfect for DIY, Cosplay, and Prototyping Projects
PAN Project - Premium 3D Printer Filament for High-Quality Prints | Perfect for DIY, Cosplay, and Prototyping Projects
PAN Project - Premium 3D Printer Filament for High-Quality Prints | Perfect for DIY, Cosplay, and Prototyping Projects
PAN Project - Premium 3D Printer Filament for High-Quality Prints | Perfect for DIY, Cosplay, and Prototyping Projects
$6.04
$10.99
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Description
In Greek, ‘Pan’ means ‘everything.’ But in Korean, ‘Pan’ means ‘coming together,’ and that is exactly what the PAN Project Ensemble is about: bringing together many East Asian traditions under one big canopy. Not merely a strip mall restaurant catch-all, this cross-cultural musical experiment brings together stars from Chinese, Korean, and Japanese traditions into a new and exciting blend with deep roots and intertwining tendrils. This Neuma release not only introduces PAN Project as an ensemble, but also shows that what seems new and experimental to modern ears has its origins in the ancient Silk Road era. Take, for instance, the meeting of Chinese guqin and Japanese shakuhachi in the track ‘Yi Gu Ren’. Both instruments connect to meditative practices of a once-foreign Buddhist religion whose traditions developed separately in China and Japan. They now come together in the modern day to be re-explored and reinterpreted. Or the tracks of the musical Korean pansori story-telling suite ‘Sugungga’. Here we have historical and modern intercultural-experimentalism at its most essential: ancient rhythmic cycles of Korean Shaman ritual, the telling of a farcical folk-tale conveying timeless morals through speech and song, and an intercultural blend of Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Western instruments expressing the drama through modern free improvisation. Improvisation is indeed an essential element of the experimental process, and also of PAN Project Ensemble’s music. The enduring spirit of spontaneity and experimentation exists in the very core of East Asian traditions; from the spiritually induced spontaneity of the guqin and shakuhachi traditions, to the both sparse and driving rhythms of Korean Shaman ritual, and the spontaneity of the instrumental ritual improvisation called sinawi. The six members of PAN Project Ensemble – each renowned masters in their own right – are spread across the USA, Canada, and East Asia.
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Conceived in Seoul in 2015 as an improvisation experiment, PAN Project is now a sextet of collaborators who hail from the USA, Canada and East Asia. “PAN” is a Korean word that means “to gather” or “come together,” and the group’s moniker is also derived from p’ansouri, a Korean vocal style of musical narration and percussion that’s highly regarded in that country. Playing a variety of stringed and percussion instruments from Korea, China and Japan, PAN Project’s debut album was recorded on both sides of the Pacific.Some of their haunting, plaintive music is based on traditional folk music (such as “Kangwon”), but PAN Project also takes improvisatory sounds into the territory of neo-traditional adaptations for modern life and beliefs. “Kangwon” is an excellent tune to introduce the eerie Korean double-reed bamboo wind instrument played by gamin known as a piri, five-holed Japanese shakuhachi flute blown with considerable technique by Ned Rothenberg, and Jeff Roberts’ Chinese plucked guqin. The opening track also features erhu (Chinese two-stringed bowed fiddle) of Ying-Chieh Wang, and janggu (Korean double-headed barrel drum) played with a thin stick or hand by Woonjung Sim.The sound of human breath through bamboo shakuhachi conveys expressive sounds of life itself. Rothenberg has studied the instrument to a point of mastering its proper tone and vibrato. Subtly fragmented melodies in a duo arrangement of “Yi Gu Ren” (“Thinking of an Old Friend”) are suggestive of other-worldly mystery as the flute’s tones blend with the gentle melancholy of the guqin. Microtonal shadings color this piece in a very organic way, as does a trio arrangement of “Si Xiang Gi” (“Thinking of….”) to reflect nostalgically on one’s longing for home as the shakuhachi and erhu converse with the saenghwang, a Korean free-reed polyphonic mouth organ capable of playing 2-4 notes simultaneously.A captivating story that spans five tracks, “Sugungga (Song of the Sea Palace)” presents the tale of a dragon king’s selfish desire for immortality and adventures of a rabbit and turtle. The five movements create moods of tension, wit, wisdom and joy. It’s enlightening to read the story synopsis for each 1-3 minute track to appreciate how musical narrations of vocalist Sae-Yeon Jeong interpret one of the few surviving stories of p’ansouri. English translations are provided in the liner notes. Her vocal form, while perhaps hard for westerners to decipher, is only a taste of the operatic dramatic solos that can be sung for hours to the accompaniment of a drum, and with only a fan and handkerchief as props. For further exploration of Korean p’ansouri, you might also want to check out performer Kim So-Hee who has been recognized as a “living national treasure.”Later in PAN Project’s set, “Gutgeori” features the five stellar instrumentalists in a piece based on a 12-beat Korean rhythmic cycle with origins from shamanistic ritual music and culture of the rural dispossessed. To close the journey, “The Bell Rings Deep Blue” introduces very pleasant sounds from the quintet. Some are so subtle that PAN Project creates aural impressions of a musical garden with different sounds, textures, colorings, ornamentations and melodic phrases. While this isn’t music for karaoke parties and sing-alongs, its timeless quality and place stem from its poignant messages, folk tales, fables and dominant images for quiet introspection and relaxing meditation. (Joe Ross, Roots Music Report)

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