SHEN YUN PERFORMING ARTS REVIEWS

Shen Yun’s Humor and Music Make You Feel Better

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Shen Yun’s Humor and Music Make You Feel Better
After seeing Shen Yun Performing Arts at Melbourne’s King Center for the Performing Arts, Linda Hughes (C) felt better in mind and body. Sally Sun/Epoch Times

MELBOURNE, Fla.—Linda Hughes had seen Shen Yun Performing Arts in Jacksonville, Florida, and decided she should see the classical Chinese dance and music company again. So she also attended the Melbourne performance on Jan. 20.

A deeply spiritual person, Ms. Hughes felt better—in both body and mind—after seeing the performance at the King Center for the Performing Arts.

It’s an ancient Chinese belief that music can harmonize our souls and heal our bodies. In fact, in China, one the earliest purposes of music was healing. The character for medicine in Chinese comes from the word for music.

The Chinese word, or character, for medicine actually comes from the character for music. (Epoch Times)
The Chinese word, or character, for medicine actually comes from the character for music. Epoch Times

Shen Yun’s mission is to restore the traditions and beliefs of ancient China, and it does so through story-based dances supported by a live orchestra. The orchestra plays Chinese melodies atop a full Western orchestra.

Ms. Hughes, who will be undergoing surgery soon, felt that Shen Yun music had a healing effect on her.

“I have felt much better since watching the show,” she said, adding that the music had calmed her. It feels “like my mind is finally relaxing and not thinking about other things,” she said.

The therapeutic effects of music have also been verified by scientific research, Mr. Gao points out. Music is known to “lower blood pressure, reduce anxiety, enhance concentration, stabilize heart rate, and more.”

Ms. Hughes believes something other than the music may have been at work in how she feels. Her favorite dance was the “Monkey King and the Dragon Palace,” a tale from the Chinese literary classic “Journey to the West.”

In the dance, the Monkey King, imbued with magical powers, is on a quest to find the perfect weapon, and he finds it at the palace of the Dragon King at the bottom of the sea.

Ms. Hughes was charmed by the piece, finding it humorous.

“Humor helps make you feel better,” she said. “When you get humor, you smile and you laugh. All his little antics were so cute. … All that plays a part in it. When you get something that makes you feel good and it makes you feel lighter, … you forget about everything else because your mind is calming and clear.”

“Clean and clear,” she said.

Reporting by Sally Sun and Sharon Kilarski
New York-based Shen Yun Performing Arts has four touring companies that perform simultaneously around the world. For more information, visit Shen Yun Performing Arts.
Epoch Times considers Shen Yun Performing Arts the significant cultural event of our time. We have proudly covered audience reactions since Shen Yun’s inception in 2006.
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