List of Chinese musical instruments

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Template:Short description Chinese musical instruments are traditionally grouped into eight categories (classified by the material from which the instruments were made) known as Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang".).[1] The eight categories are silk, bamboo, wood, stone, metal, clay, gourd and skin; other instruments considered traditional exist that may not fit these groups. The grouping of instruments in material categories in China is one of the first musical groupings ever devised.

Silk

Silk (Script error: No such module "Lang".) instruments are mostly stringed instruments (including those that are plucked, bowed, and struck). Since ancient times, the Chinese have used twisted silk for strings, though today metal or nylon are more frequently used. Instruments in the silk category include:

Plucked

Bowed

File:ConcertGroupPano.jpg
Re-enactment of an ancient traditional music performance
File:Paintings on north wall of Xu Xianxiu Tomb.jpg
A mural from the tomb of Xu Xianxiu in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, dated 571 AD during the Northern Qi Dynasty, showing male court musicians playing stringed instruments, either the Template:Transliteration or Template:Transliteration, and a woman playing a Template:Transliteration (harp)

Struck

Combined

Bamboo

File:Gu Hongzhong's Night Revels 2.jpg
A half-section of the Song Dynasty (960–1279) version of the Night Revels of Han Xizai, original by Gu Hongzhong;[3] the female musicians in the center of the image are playing transverse bamboo flutes and Template:Transliteration, and the male musician is playing a wooden clapper called Template:Transliteration.
File:Bawuphoto.jpg
A Template:Transliteration in the key of F

Bamboo (Script error: No such module "Lang".) mainly refers to woodwind instruments, which includes;

Flutes

Free reed pipes

Single reed pipes

Double reed pipes

Wood

File:Chinese Muyu QM r.jpg
A set of Template:Transliteration, or Chinese wooden slit drums. The sound produced is affected by the instrument's size, type of wood, and how hollow it is.

Most wood (Script error: No such module "Lang".) instruments are of the ancient variety:

Stone

The stone (Script error: No such module "Lang".) category comprises various forms of stone chimes.

Metal ()

  • Bianzhong (編鐘) – 16 to 65 bronze bells hung on a rack, struck using poles
  • Fangxiang (Template:Lang-zh) – set of tuned metal slabs (metallophone)
  • Nao (musical instrument) () – may refer to either an ancient bell or large cymbals
  • Bo (; also called chazi, 镲子) –
    • Xiaobo (小鈸, small cymbals)
    • Zhongbo (中鈸, medium cymbals; also called naobo (鐃鈸) or zhongcuo
    • Shuibo (水鈸, literally "water cymbals")
    • Dabo (大鈸, large cymbals)
    • Jingbo (京鈸)
    • Shenbo (深波) – deep, flat gong used in Chaozhou music; also called gaobian daluo (高边大锣)
  • Luo (Template:Lang-zh; pinyin: luó) – gong
    • Daluo (大锣) – a large flat gong whose pitch drops when struck with a padded mallet
    • Fengluo (风锣) – literally "wind gong," a large flat gong played by rolling or striking with a large padded mallet
    • Xiaoluo (小锣) – a small flat gong whose pitch rises when struck with the side of a flat wooden stick
    • Yueluo (月锣) – small pitched gong held by a string in the palm of the hand and struck with a small stick; used in Chaozhou music
    • Jingluo (镜锣) – a small flat gong used in the traditional music of Fujian [1]
    • Pingluo (平锣) – a flat gong[4]
    • Kailuluo (开路锣)
  • Yunluo (Template:Lang-zh) – literally "cloud gongs"; 10 or more small tuned gongs in a frame
  • Shimianluo (十面锣) – 10 small tuned gongs in a frame
  • Qing () – a cup-shaped bell used in Buddhist and Daoist ritual music
  • Daqing (大磬) – large qing
  • Pengling (碰铃; pinyin: pènglíng) – a pair of small bowl-shaped finger cymbals or bells connected by a length of cord, which are struck together
  • Dangzi (铛子) – a small, round, flat, tuned gong suspended by being tied with silk string in a round metal frame that is mounted on a thin wooden handlephoto; also called dangdang (铛铛)
  • Yinqing (引磬) – an inverted small bell affixed to the end of a thin wooden handlephoto
  • Yunzheng (云铮) – a small flat gong used in the traditional music of Fujian [2]
  • Chun (; pinyin: chún) – ancient bellphoto
  • Tonggu (铜鼓) - bronze drum
  • Laba (喇叭) – A long, straight, valveless brass trumpet

Clay ()

Gourd ()

  • Sheng (Template:Lang-zh) – free reed mouth organ consisting of varying number of bamboo pipes inserted into a metal (formerly gourd or hardwood) chamber with finger holes
    • Baosheng (抱笙) – larger version of the Sheng
  • Yu (Template:Lang-zh) – ancient free reed mouth organ similar to the sheng but generally larger
  • Hulusi (Template:Lang-zh; pinyin: húlúsī) – free-reed wind instrument with three bamboo pipes which pass through a gourd wind chest; one pipe has finger holes and the other two are drone pipes; used primarily in Yunnan province
  • Hulusheng (Template:Lang-zh; pinyin: húlúshēng) – free-reed mouth organ with a gourd wind chest; used primarily in Yunnan province
  • Fangsheng – Northern China Gourd

Hide-skin ()

File:Chaozhou large drum 20060218.jpg
A Chaozhou dagu (large drum)
File:Bolang-gu-chinese-instrument.jpg
A Chinese Bolang Gu[5]
  • Dagu – (大鼓) – large drum played with two sticks
  • Huzuo Dagu (虎座大鼓)
  • Huzuo Wujia Gu (虎座鳥架鼓)
  • Jian'gu (建鼓)
  • Bangu (板鼓) – small, high pitched drum used in Beijing opera; also called danpigu (单皮鼓)
  • Biangu () – flat drum, played with sticks
  • Paigu (排鼓) – set of three to seven tuned drums played with sticks
  • Tanggu (堂鼓) – medium-sized barrel drum played with two sticks; also called tonggu (同鼓) or xiaogu (小鼓)
  • Biqigu (荸荠鼓) – a very small drum played with one stick, used in Jiangnan sizhu
  • Diangu (点鼓; also called huaigu, 怀鼓) – a double-headed frame drum played with a single wooden beater; used in the Shifangu ensemble music of Jiangsu province and to accompany to kunqu opera
  • Huagu (花鼓) – flower drum
  • Yaogu (腰鼓) – waist drum
  • Taipinggu (太平鼓) – flat drum with a handle; also called dangu (单鼓)
  • Zhangu (战鼓 or 戰鼓) – war drum; played with two sticks.
  • Bajiaogu (八角鼓) – octagonal tambourine used primarily in narrative singing from northern China.
  • Yanggegu (秧歌鼓) – rice planting drum
  • Gaogu (Template:Linktext) – large ancient drum used to for battlefield commands and large-scale construction
  • Bofu (搏拊) – ancient drum used to set tempo
  • Jiegu (羯鼓) – hourglass-shaped drum used during the Tang Dynasty
  • Tao (; pinyin: táo) or taogu (鼗鼓) – a pellet drum used in ritual music
  • Bolang Gu (波浪鼓; pinyin: bo lang gu) – a traditional Chinese pellet drum and toy
  • Linggu (铃鼓)

Others

  • Gudi (骨笛) – an ancient flute made of bone[6]
  • Hailuo (海螺) – conch shell [3]
  • Lilie (唎咧) – reed wind instrument with a conical bore played by the Li people of Hainan
  • Lusheng (Template:Lang-zh; pinyin: lúshēng) – free-reed mouth organ with five or six pipes, played by various ethnic groups in southwest China and neighboring countries
  • Kouxian (口弦) – jaw harp, made of bamboo or metal.
  • Yedi (叶笛) – tree leaf used as a wind instrument.
  • Shuijingdi (水晶笛) - crystal flute.
  • Zutongqin (竹筒琴)

Playing contexts

Chinese instruments are either played solo, collectively in large orchestras (as in the former imperial court) or in smaller ensembles (in teahouses or public gatherings). Normally, there is no conductor in traditional Chinese music, nor any use of musical scores or tablature in performance. Music was generally learned aurally and memorized by the musician(s) beforehand, then played without aid. As of the 20th century, musical scores have become more common, as has the use of conductors in larger orchestral-type ensembles.

Musical instruments in use in the 1800s

These watercolour illustrations, made in China in the 1800s, show several types of musical instruments being played:

See also

References

Notes

Template:Reflist

Sources
  • Lee, Yuan-Yuan and Shen, Sinyan. Chinese Musical Instruments (Chinese Music Monograph Series). 1999. Chinese Music Society of North America Press. Template:ISBN
  • Shen, Sinyan. Chinese Music in the 20th Century (Chinese Music Monograph Series). 2001. Chinese Music Society of North America Press. Template:ISBN
  • Yuan, Bingchang, and Jizeng Mao (1986). Zhongguo Shao Shu Min Zu Yue Qi Zhi. Beijing: Xin Shi Jie Chu Ban She/Xin Hua Shu Dian Beijing Fa Xing Suo Fa Xing. Template:ISBN.

External links

Template:Asian musical instruments Template:Traditional Chinese musical instruments

革胡

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  3. Patricia Ebrey (1999), Cambridge Illustrated History of China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 148.
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  5. Chinese Musical Instrument-Bolanggu
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