Skip to main content

Home/ Joseph Tang/ Joseph Tang - a Man who Fathered many Sacred and Secular Rhythms
anonymous

Joseph Tang - a Man who Fathered many Sacred and Secular Rhythms - 2 views

Joseph Tang

started by anonymous on 17 Apr 12
  • anonymous
     

    Joseph Tang, a violinist, who needs no introduction in the music industry and till date luthiers, violinists and musical pundits, admire him for this irreplaceable contribution to the music that he made through his secular and sacred symphonies.



    This living monument of humbleness is born with a sense of articulation, every time his fingers land on the fingerboard and every time he moves the rosined bow nearly halfway between the bridge and fingerboard, he produces an ear-soothing sonata. This music whiz, when on the stage, was capable of giving words to the loneliness and transforming the unspoken emotions into the echoes.



    His audience usually says that, "If your eyelids are not letting your tear pour down and if you really want to know what feelings sounds like, attend Joseph's concerts." When he plays, listener feels like they are listening to the gushes of rills and seems like whole earth is echoing his symphonies.



    His sacred harmonies were like food for soul and when he plays them, it seems like cadences are performing circumambulation around the Jesus Christ and the whole ambiance seems like praising the almighty.



    This man of inherited talent is a perfect elucidation of the meditation that can abate the distance between sensual life and spiritual life.



    Joseph Tang is a real music therapist and he knows how to eradicate the mental sorrows with a dose of music mixed with the wine of silence. Though he quitted from live concerts, yet his passion for music and especially violin, seems like endless. Since last few years, he is teaching and learning this universal language called music. Joseph Tang is a name, which will last until this four-string instrument called violin lasts and its lovers exists.

To Top

Start a New Topic » « Back to the Joseph Tang group