Nanguan

Nanguan
music genre
Yaɣ sheliChinese classical music Mali niŋ
Tingbani shɛli din yinaChina Mali niŋ
Intangible cultural heritage statusRepresentative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity Mali niŋ
Described at URLhttps://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/00199, https://ich.unesco.org/fr/RL/00199, https://ich.unesco.org/es/RL/00199 Mali niŋ

Tɛmplet:Chinese

Wang Xin-xin playing Nanguan pipa. The Nanguan pipa is held in the ancient manner like a guitar which is different from the near-vertical way pipa is now usually held.
The mouthpiece of the Xiao flute.

Nanguan (Chinese: 南管; pinyin: Nánguǎn; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lâm-kóan; lit. 'southern pipes'; bɛ ni lahi booni shɛli nanyin, nanyue, xianguan, bee nanqu) Chinese yila bee binkumda balishɛli din yina southern Chinese tiŋgbani yaɣili din be Fujian.[1] Di lahi nyɛla din be Taiwan, di bahi bahindi Lukang zaŋ chaŋ west teeku polo, ka lahi be Chinese mɔɣi duya din be Southeast Asia.[2]

Fujian nyɛla zoya ni teeku din be China polo. Di tiŋ'zuɣu n-nyɛ Fuzhou, ka Quanzhou daa nyɛ luɣ'shɛli shitima nima ni zaani pam 7th century CE, saha din gbaai Sui mink Tang saha.

Di nyɛla binkumda balishɛli din tabi "male-only community amateur musical associations" (quguan bee "song-clubs"), din yini ka daa na dalim zolɔŋ, ka bɛ nya ka di tuɣiri biɛhigu, ka yi di ko ka chɛ kɛrikpɛriti baŋdiba ban be dunia.[2] Di tooi nyɛla din niŋdi balimbalim, zamzam, ka di binkumda lura.[3]

Nanguan daa pahila Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity yuuni 2009, UNESCO n daa zaŋ li m-pahi.[4]

  1. Thrasher, Alan Robert (2008). Sizhu Instrumental Music of South China: Ethos, Theory and Practice. Brill. pp. 12–14. ISBN 978-9004165007.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Wang, Ying-Fen (September 2003). "Amateur Music Clubs and State Intervention: The Case of Nanguan Music in Postwar Taiwan". Journal of Chinese Ritual, Theatre and Folklore (141).
  3. Wang, Xinxin. Nanguan Music: Appreciation and Practice (course description). Graduate Institute of Musicology, National Taiwan University.
  4. Nanyin. UNESCO.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Nelliwinne