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Chinese Musical Instruments (Chinese Music Monograph Series) - Softcover

 
9781880464038: Chinese Musical Instruments (Chinese Music Monograph Series)
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Pursuing our exploration of the almost limitless caverns of Chinese music and musical instruments, so much of which has never yet come to the knowledge of the rest of the world, we approach the subject from both the angles of principles and practice. Functional discussions of musical interest, cultural molding of musical psychology, instrumental effects and acoustics are emphasized. The exploration centers on the principle of cultural acoustics, i.e. the impacts of musical acoustics is strongly modified by our ear and brain which are products of culture. This popular book is written so that it requires no prior knowledge of Chinese music or acoustics. Also, no knowledge of the Chinese language is assumed. With the opening chapter we find ourselves at a focal point in the present study: The Cultural Acoustics of Chinese Musical Instruments? The cultural preference of harmony, and thus intervals and tones and rhythms used in music, distinguishes one music from another. Chinese music, however, is unique in its uninterrupted history of more than 8000 years and very early development of theoretical systematics, acoustical and material science, and orchestral practice. The bronze bell chime is perhaps the ultimate percussion instrument. The world's first double reed instrument, the guanzi, is really not a double reed using present day nomenclature. The qin is timeless in the true sense of the word. The Chinese orchestra is several dozens of acoustically unified and musically interesting orchestras, primarily based on reeded wind and plucked strings as orchestral tone quality bases. The principal instrumental subgroups of reeded wind, plucked string, and bowed string are then studied in detail in succeeding chapters. The orchestral roles, acoustics, performance practice, orchestration techniques and repertoire of each group form the key areas of discussion. Numerous practical examples are used throughout to aid the discussion.
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From Chapter 1: Years ago, while we were still developing the field of Cultural Acoustics, many colleagues asked me, "I've been playing the erhu for a while now - how come I still can't get the proper tone - It just doesn't sound Chinese!" There the connection between tone and cultural acoustics is but one aspect of the problem. The music of China is built on a specific harmonic system, and that harmonic system is not only different but also broader than what is known in the West, especially when the current prevalence of the equal-tempered scale system is included. Chinese music came from natural and physically just intervals. That is why Chinese string tuning is stacked fifth-fourth in all respects rather than the fifth-fifth stacking as is practiced in the West today, and exemplified by the violin family, which includes the violin, the viola, and the cello. The primary difference between musical systems of different culture is their preference for intervals, and thus a difference in the breadth of their harmonic system. Let me now explain the meaning of the breadth of one's harmonic system. In all compositions, there are intentional conflicts between harmony and discord. But what is harmonic and what is not is extremely culture- specific. In present-day European and American music, the second is a discord while it is not in China. Here we are dealing with specific intervals, but in reality it is always the combined effect of many intervals, while your brain still remembers them whether they are sounding at the same time or slightly apart, that causes your brain to be stimulated in desired fashion. In the performance of a single instrument, such harmonic stimulation comes into play in the interaction between the player and the instrument - thus his or her tone. Frequently, musicians do not think of the tone as a harmonic entity when it absolutely is. The cultural acoustical preferences of a race or a nationality determines the types of tones of instruments it accepts. This explains why certain instruments sound Chinese, whether you are familiar with it or not. However, with a Chinese instrument, the way you play it can still make it sound utterly bland and thus not Chinese. One example is to ask a violin player to play the erhu. Without becoming accustomed to the acoustical resonances of the erhu, the violin player may think it is just another string instrument on which you are to divide the strings. The erhu and the violin are wildly different instruments in that the performance of the erhu actually requires the production of acoustics that maximizes the contrast between its major resonance components, whereas the philosophy behind the development of the violin was to even out register differences as much as possible.

Chinese music is built on a totally consistent harmonic system which controls melodic progression, orchestration, and temperament use. It is perhaps the only major musical system in the world that has such all-encompassing requirements on all aspects of its music, and at the same time allowing the largest flexibility in the acceptance of harmonic intervals into music. In the 1960s and the early 1970s, through the work of the Chinese Music Society of North America, we discovered the cyclical harmonic skeletons known as zhi, shang, yu, jue, gong in the Chinese harmonic system. Before this work, those terms were for a long time referred to as scale steps. This set of harmonic skeletons is self generating, always in tune without equalizing temperaments because its system does not believe in the twelve tones alone. The same harmonic intervals which are the basis of the Chinese harmonic system were found to appear prominently in the design of the overtone structure of the ancient dual-pitched bronze zhong bells....

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  • PublisherChinese Music Society of
  • Publication date1999
  • ISBN 10 1880464039
  • ISBN 13 9781880464038
  • BindingPaperback
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages208

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