Nanguan ndwom

Wang Xin-xin a ɔrebɔ Nanguan pipa. Wɔkura Nanguan pipa no wɔ tsetse kwan do tse dɛ guitar a ɔyɛ soronko wɔ ɔkwan a ɔkame ayɛ dɛ ɔda fam a mprempren wɔtaa kura pipa no ho.

Nanguan (China kasa: 南管; pinyin: Nánguǎn; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lâm-kóan; lit. ‘anafo fam paipu’; nanyin, nanyue, xianguan, anaa nanqu nso) yɛ Chinafo tsetse ndwom kwan a efi China kesee fam mantɔw mu a ɔwɔ Fujian.[1] Ɔyɛ dza agye dzin so wɔ Taiwan, tsitsir Lukang a ɔwɔ atɔe fam mpoano, na Chinafo a wɔwɔ Amanandze a wɔwɔ Asia Kɛse Fam Epuei so mu.[2]

  1. Thrasher, Alan Robert (2008). Sizhu Instrumental Music of South China: Ethos, Theory and Practice. Brill. pp. 12–14. ISBN 978-9004165007.
  2. Wang, Ying-Fen (September 2003). "Amateur Music Clubs and State Intervention: The Case of Nanguan Music in Postwar Taiwan" (PDF). Journal of Chinese Ritual, Theatre and Folklore (141). Retrieved January 2, 2014.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Nelliwinne