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Guqin, his other name is the harp, and his playing method was not professional at that time, but everyone according to different production processes, as they liked.
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Guqin, the official name is "qin". Because of its long history, it is also known as "guqin".
The piano generally has seven strings, also known as the "lyre".
The piano uses paulownia wood as the body and silk strings as the strings, so it is also called "silk paulownia".
It is also known as "Yaoqin".
In addition, in ancient times, there were famous qins "Luqi" and "Jiaowei", so they were also used to refer to all guqins.
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The headstock of the guqin is called the forehead. The lower end of the forehead is inlaid with hardwood with strings, called "Yueshan", also known as "Linyue", and is the highest part of the piano. At the bottom of the piano, there are two large and small dubbing slots, the larger one in the middle is called "Dragon Pond", and the smaller one in the tail is called "Fengnuma".
This is called going up the mountain and going down, and there are dragons and phoenixes, symbolizing all the things in heaven and earth.
At the side end of the headstock, there are "phoenix eyes."
and "Guard". From the waist down, it is called the "tail". The tail is inlaid with a shallow groove of Sakura's hardwood "dragon gum" to set the strings. The trim on both sides of the dragon's gum is called the "crown horn", also known as the "scorched tail".
Originally, the guqin had only five strings, which were combined with five virtual fingers, metal, wood, water, fire, and earth; The outer combination of five tones, palace, business, horn, sign, feather. Later, King Wen was imprisoned in Jinli, missing his son Bo Yi Kao.
Add a string, which is a literary string; King Wu is defeated.
Add a string, it is for the martial string. Collectively known as the civil and military lyre.
The seven strings start from the exposed part, pass through the Yue Mountain and the dragon gum, and turn to a pair of "goose feet" at the bottom of the piano, symbolizing the seven stars. There are thirteen "emblems" on the surface of the piano, symbolizing the twelve months of the year and a leap month.
The speaker of the guqin is not made of sticky boards like zhengs and other musical instruments, but is hollowed out of a whole piece of wood. Its speaker wall is thicker and relatively rough, so its sound has a unique charm and a sense of historical vicissitudes.
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Guqin, also known as Yaoqin, Yuqin, Silk Tongzhizi and Lyre. The guqin is a traditional plucked string instrument of the Han nationality in China, with a history of more than 3,000 years, and belongs to the silk in the eight tones. The guqin has a wide range, a deep timbre, and a long aftersound.
Since ancient times, "qin" has been its special reference, and in the 20s of the 20th century, it was renamed guqin to distinguish it from the piano. The qin has the saying that "the scholar does not withdraw the qin for no reason" and "the left qin and the right book". The qin is the first of the four arts of traditional Chinese culture, "qin, chess, calligraphy and painting", and is regarded as a representative of elegance, and is also an accompaniment instrument for literati singing, and has been an essential knowledge and compulsory subject for many literati since ancient times.
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Guqin, also known as Yaoqin, Yuqin, Sitonghu and Lyre. The guqin is a traditional plucked string instrument of the Han nationality in China, with a history of more than 3,000 years, and belongs to the silk in the eight tones. The Guqin has a wide range of sound, a deep timbre, and a long aftersound.
Since ancient times, "qin" has been its special reference, and in the 20s of the 20th century, it was renamed guqin to distinguish it from the piano. The qin has the saying that "the scholar does not withdraw the qin for no reason" and "the left qin and the right book". Regarded as the first of the four arts of traditional Chinese culture, the qin is regarded as a representative of elegance and an accompaniment instrument for literati singing, and has been a necessary knowledge and compulsory subject for many literati since ancient times.
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Guqin, also known as Yaoqin, Yuqin, and Lyre.
The guqin is a traditional Chinese plucked string instrument, with a history of more than 3,000 years, and belongs to the silk in the eight-tone sail. The guqin has a wide range, a deep timbre, and a long aftersound.
Ancient books record that Fuxi made the qin, and there are legends such as Shennong making the qin, the Yellow Emperor making the qin, and Tang Yao making the qin; Shun Dingqin is five strings, King Wen adds one string, and King Wu adds another string to seven strings; It can be seen that the Chinese guqin culture has a long history and is broad and profound.
There are more than 3,360 piano songs, more than 130 piano scores, and 300 qin songs. On November 7, 2003, the UNESCO World Heritage Committee announced that the Chinese guqin had been selected as a world intangible cultural heritage. In 2006, it was included in the list of China's intangible cultural heritage.
Chinese guqin culture has a long history, and Chinese traditional culture believes that there are five stars in the sky, five elements on the ground, and five tones for the sound of hail in the world. Legend has it that Emperor Yan "Ding Huang Zhong" at the foot of Jingfeng Sheep's Head Mountain in Qinyuan, discovered **, Emperor Yan Shennong's and "cut the tung for the piano, the rope for the string", and created the original piano.
Zhong Yi of the Western Zhou Dynasty is one of the earliest professional qin players in the extant records. There are also a large number of records about the qin in literary works such as the Book of Songs, and with the development of the first in the Warring States Period, the qin music has also been greatly developed and popularized, resulting in the emergence of a large number of qin people, such as the classic recitation of the mountains and rivers in the Boya and Zhongzi periods. As the main musical instrument, the qin is endowed with the function and aesthetics of ritual cultivation, the so-called "gentleman's close to the qin, this ritual is also, not to be compassionate" and "the scholar does not withdraw the qin".
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