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Chinese
Music --- I,
II, III, IV
To
Sample Chinese Music, Click here
The origins of Chinese music can be traced
back to antiquity. Around 3,400 years ago, when European music was just
experiencing its first rustlings of life, a complete musical theory and
sophisticated musical instruments began appearing in Shang Dynasty China,
owing largely to the orthodox ritual music advocated by Confucius. By
the Han Dynasty (206 B.C. - 220 A.D.), the imperial court set up a Music
Bureau which was in charge of collecting and editing ancient tunes and
folk songs.
Though remarkable for its stability, the music
of China has not been stagnant and has all the variety and richness to
be expected in the art of a vast, ancient and populous land.
The importance of Chinese music extends beyond
China's national borders.
The presence of Chinese musical instruments, as well as repertoire and
style characteristics, is conspicuous in Korea, Japan, and throughout
Southeast Asia.
At the same time, because of commercial contacts
with Central Asia, foreign music entered China in the form, for example,
of the pipa, or lute and the huqing, a vertically-held violin. Influenced
by this foreign-originating music, composers of the time modified and
improved Chinese music.
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