Decca Classics has signed the multi award-winning composer and conductor Tan Dun.

Tan Dun says, “Decca has always been a dream for me. As a young artist, I could never have imagined that one day we would embrace each other. I’ve worked with many recording labels over the years, but now, connecting with Decca, I understand. It is so pure and classical and, yet cool and fresh and open to all sorts of music and cultures, it is a very special place. I feel deeply honoured to be part of it.”

From planting rice during Mao’s Cultural Revolution, despite years of discouragement, Tan Dun has earned a global reputation as “a kind of rock star of the modern music scene.” (New York Times).

In the 1960s Tan Dun was a young boy running barefoot through the fields of remote Hunan in China, yet always aware of the sounds and traditions surrounding him. Today, based in New York, he is one of the world’s most exciting composers. Having been catapulted into the mainstream by his Oscar, Bafta and Grammy-award winning score for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, the UNESCO Global Goodwill Ambassador has scored music for global events such as the reunification of Hong Kong with China, the world's celebration of the new millennium and the Beijing Olympics. He has also written music for some of the biggest names in music, such as Lang Lang, and for many of the world’s leading orchestras, and was the first composer ever commissioned by Google/YouTube.

When the Cultural Revolution broke out in 1966, Tan Dun’s parents were sent away and he stayed at home with his grandmother. He would go down to the river when she would wash the clothes and find it infinitely soothing. Today, the world-renowned composer frequently uses the sound of water as an instrument in his compositions. Ever curious about the connection between sound and the earth itself, Tan Dun also employs other organic materials as instruments, such as stones and paper.

Aged 16, Tan Dun was also sent to the country to work planting rice. On arrival he had to sign a statement saying that he would work in the rice fields for the rest of his life. One day a local Peking Opera troupe lost some members after a ferry disaster. They came to the village asking if anyone could play an instrument – Tan Dun had taught himself the violin so joined the travelling opera troupe. The Cultural Revolution came to an end after Chairman Mao’s death in 1976 and it was announced that the music conservatories would open again for the first time in 10 years. Having no money for the fare, Tan Dun smuggled himself onto a train to audition for Beijing’s Central Conservatory of Music.

Since then Tan Dun’s success has been meteoric.

On 3rd March Decca releases ‘Five Souls’, which Tan Dun describes as a “a journey from the universe to the metaverse where we discover our spirit, who we are and what we are meant to be”. The five movements for small ensemble include water percussion, harp, brass, strings and digeridoo. Listen to the first single from Five Souls, which is released today.

The first major new album from Decca, to be released on 7th April, will be the world premiere recording of Tan Dun’s ‘Buddha Passion’: a tale of wonder, of truth and of gentle but irresistible transformation. The monumental work, involving massed choirs, large orchestra, six percussionists and an array of soloists including indigenous singers, traditional Chinese instruments and a dancing pipa player, is the first such ‘Passion’ on a Buddhist rather than Christian narrative.

Another major world premiere recording, ‘The Tears of Nature’, follows in September. The 25-minute percussion concerto was written in the wake of three major natural disasters – the Sichuan earthquake in 2008, the Japanese Tsunami in 2011 and Hurricane Sandy in 2012, all of which affected Tan Dun personally.

Co-Presidents of Decca Label Group, Tom Lewis and Laura Monks, say, “We are so proud to welcome Tan Dun to Decca. He is a global statesman for classical music; arguably one of the most inventive, energetic and warm-hearted composers alive. His story is quite extraordinary. He embodies the sometimes unimaginable and unique way in which music can change your life.”

“I have two goals in my heart: I don’t just want to establish a musical idea…. I want to develop a cross-cultural idea that brings nature and classical music, ancient and modern, together.” – Tan Dun

LATEST NEWS