1 / 5

Chinese Instruments

Chinese Instruments. Qin . Qin is a seven-strings zither Qin was established by the time of the Tang dynasty(618-907). Qin has three categories of pitch: 1 . Harmonic 2 . Open-strings notes 3 . Pressed notes Qin’s function at ancient time. 1. Enjoyment. 2. Associated tool.

adler
Download Presentation

Chinese Instruments

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chinese Instruments

  2. Qin • Qin is a seven-strings zither • Qin was established by the time of the Tang dynasty(618-907). • Qin has three categories of pitch: • 1 . Harmonic • 2 . Open-strings notes • 3 . Pressed notes • Qin’s function at ancient time. • 1. Enjoyment. • 2. Associated tool. • The Qin in the modern time • The famous Qin pieces: • Meihuasannong (Plum Blossoms in Three Variations) • Guanshanyue (Moon over the Mountain Pass)

  3. Pipa • A four-string, pear-shaped plucket lute • Pipa’s history:originally imported from Central Asia in Han Dynasty • Pipa:was originally used to as a generic term to name all kinds of plucketed lute • The Bent-neck pipa • The Straight -neck pipa • The Straight-necked lute • Performance methods and skills • Famous pieces • Great ambuscade • Moonlight over the Spring River

  4. Sanxian • A three-string plucket lute: oval body, long unfretted neck • Where can you see sanxian: primarily in narrative music as the major accompanying instrument, as in traditional operas • Types of sanxian: • Larger model • Smaller model • History: first mentioned in China during the Yuan dynasty (early fourteenth century)

  5. Zheng • A bridged long zither • Size: approximately 3 feet • Number of strings: varying, but 16-stringed zheng has been the most popular one in recent 200 years • History: dated back to Zhou and Han dynasties (sixth century B.C.) • Modern time:most popular of common-practice instrument in China • Features: • Tuned to pentatonic scale • Applying pressure for vibration and pushing to obtain non-pentatonic pitches • Famous pieces: • Creek in High Mountains • Song of the Fishermen’s Light

More Related