Current:Home > FinanceA new app guides visitors through NYC's Chinatown with hidden stories -Streamline Finance
A new app guides visitors through NYC's Chinatown with hidden stories
View
Date:2025-04-11 21:23:11
Composer George Tsz-Kwan Lam has always liked writing music inspired by places.
"There are all these places in Chinatown that are both hidden and meaningful," he says, stepping out of the way of passersby while leading a tour of the neighborhood. "To uncover some of those hidden things in a city walk that you might not ordinarily notice — I wondered, is there a piece in that?"
It turns out there's not just a piece, but a whole app.
Lam interviewed five Chinese Americans from around the country, asking them about their experiences in Chinatown, plus questions about their ancestors, their families, their memories. He then set the answers to music, the instruments drawing attention to each person's distinct pattern of speech.
"I was thinking, if I embed these stories within music and also within a place, then you as a listener get to hear them in a different way — you start connecting with, oh well, I've walked by this building so many times, going to work, going to a restaurant, and now I can associate [those places] with this voice that's talking how about this person came here or who their grandfather was," Lam says.
He calls the piece — and the free app — Family Association, after the important civic groups that line the streets of the neighborhood. Chinese family associations have been a bridge between new immigrants and more established ones since the late 1800s. In Chinatowns across the country, they're a place to find resources or an apartment, talk business or politics, maybe get a COVID shot. But they're also a place to socialize with people who share similar experiences — most of the associations are built either around a single family name, like the Wong Family Benevolent Association, or places in China, like the Hoy Sun Ning Yung Benevolent Association.
Lam stops in front of a tall, white building, nestled among squat brown tenements. It's the Lee Family Association — its name is in green Chinese characters on the front — and like many family associations, it has street level retail, with the association on the floors above.
"You can see [the family association buildings] have different facades, with different elements that recall China, different architectural details, and then with Chinese characters naming them," Lam says. "I don't think it's something that you'd recognize in the midst of all the shops and restaurants vying for your attention as you walk down the street."
Five of the neighborhood's associations are anchors for the app. Visitors use the embedded map to see locations of the associations; because the app uses geolocation, as they walk closer to one of the family association buildings, much of the music and competing voices fall away, and the focus is on one of the five oral history participants, telling their story.
These stories aren't about the family associations; instead they're about the Chinese American experience and how they've felt supported by Chinatown, whether their particular Chinatown was in San Francisco, Boston, New York or elsewhere. But Lam says he thinks of the app itself as a kind of virtual family association, connecting these Chinese American voices with each other, even if they've never met.
And he hopes to connect with visitors, too — at the end of the soundwalk, users are given a chance to record their own memories.
"The idea is that later on I can incorporate some of these memories either into the piece or into another part of the piece," he says.
You can download the app onto an Apple device; users who are not in Manhattan's Chinatown can hear some of the oral histories by moving the map to lower Manhattan, and pressing on the blue and white flags.
veryGood! (34)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Man is shot and killed on a light rail train in Seattle, and suspect remains on the loose
- 7-year-old boy crawling after ball crushed by truck in Louisiana parking lot, police say
- Olivia Rodrigo has always been better than 'great for her age.' The Guts Tour proved it
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Famed Cuban diva Juana Bacallao, who ruled the island's cabaret scene, dies at 98
- Mother of missing Wisconsin boy, man her son was staying with charged with child neglect
- Kenneth Mitchell, 'Star Trek: Discovery' actor, dies after battle with ALS
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- Americans are spending the biggest share of their income on food in 3 decades
Ranking
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Canada wildfires never stopped, they just went underground as zombie fires smolder on through the winter
- Grenada police say a US couple whose catamaran was hijacked were likely thrown overboard and died
- Why so much of the US is unseasonably hot
- New Orleans mayor’s former bodyguard making first court appearance after July indictment
- Ricki Lake says she's getting 'healthier' after 30-lb weight loss: 'I feel amazing'
- Magnitude 4.9 earthquake shakes Idaho, but no injuries reported
- West Virginia Senate passes bill that would remove marital exemption for sexual abuse
Recommendation
How breaking emerged from battles in the burning Bronx to the Paris Olympics stage
Texas man made $1.76 million from insider trading by eavesdropping on wife's business calls, Justice Department says
Mother of missing Wisconsin boy, man her son was staying with charged with child neglect
Full transcript of Face the Nation, Feb. 25, 2024
Tropical rains flood homes in an inland Georgia neighborhood for the second time since 2016
Supreme Court to hear challenges to Texas, Florida social media laws
Dishy-yet-earnest, 'Cocktails' revisits the making of 'Virginia Woolf'
NYC journalist's death is city's latest lithium-ion battery fire fatality, officials say