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笙即兴独奏《摇篮曲》 胡建兵 演奏 Lullaby by Hu Jianbing sheng solo(Chinese Mouth Organ Improvisation)


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The sheng (Chinese: 笙; Pinyin shēng) is aChinese mouth-blown free reed instrumentconsisting of vertical pipes.

It is one of the oldest Chinese instruments, with images depicting its kind dating back to 1100 BCE,[1] and there are actual instruments from the Han era that have been preserved today.[1] Traditionally, the sheng has been used as an accompaniment instrument for solo suona or dizi performances. It is one of the main instruments in kunqu and some other forms of Chinese opera. Traditional small ensembles also make use of the sheng, such as the wind and percussion ensembles in northern China. In the modern largeChinese orchestra, it is used for both melody and accompaniment.

The sheng has been used in the works of a few non-Chinese composers, including Lou Harrison, Tim Risher, Daníel Bjarnason, Brad Catler, and Christopher Adler. Some believe that Johann Wilde and Pere Amiot traveled toChina and brought the first shengs to Europe in 1740 and 1777 respectively,[2] although there is evidence that free reed musical instruments similar to shengs were known in Europe a century earlier.[3]

Chinese free-reed wind instruments namedhe and yu were first mentioned in bone oraclewritings dating from the 14th--12th centuries BCE, and were identified in later texts as types of sheng. The first appearance of the word \"sheng\" is in some of the poems ofShijing (Book of Odes), dating back c. 7th century BCE. Ancient instruments with gourd wind chambers, varying numbers of pipes, with bamboo or metal reeds have been discovered in archaeological finds at the tomb of the Marquis Yi of Zeng (c. 433 BC) in present-day Hubei province, and the Han tombs at Mawangdui (c. 2nd century BCE) inHunan province.

In the eighth century, three yu and threesheng were sent to the Japanese court and these have been preserved in the Shōsōinimperial repository in Nara. All the instruments had 17 pipes with a long curving mouthpiece and are very similar to the traditional sheng in use today. However variants with different numbers of pipes, and chromatic instruments have been documented over the centuries.


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