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  2. Dizi (instrument) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dizi_(instrument)

    Dizi music of the Northern school is characterized by a fast, rhythmic and virtuosic playing, employing techniques such as glissando, tremolo, flutter tonguing, and fast tonguing. Southern school (Nanpai) – In Southern China, the qudi is the lead melodic instrument of kunqu opera and is also used in music such as Jiangnan sizhu .

  3. Di mo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Di_mo

    The dimo (Chinese: 笛膜; pinyin: dímó; lit. 'di membrane') is a special membrane applied to the transverse Chinese flute called dizi (or di), giving the instrument its characteristic buzzing timbre. Di mo papers with packaging. Dimo, made from the tissue-thin membrane from the interior of a specific variety of bamboo, are supplied as ...

  4. Twelve Girls Band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelve_Girls_Band

    The band has been a big hit in Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore. At the beginning of 2017, they held a concert in Japan and tickets sold out in 8 minutes. [3] Among the instruments used by the women: erhu (Chinese fiddle), pipa (pear-shaped lute), guzheng , yangqin (hammered dulcimer), dizi (transverse flute), and xiao (vertical flute).

  5. Fue (flute) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fue_(flute)

    Also called the bamboo flute, it is used for nagauta, the background music used in kabuki theatre. Kagurabue: Transverse This fue is used in a type of Japanese music called mikagura. At 45.5 centimetres (17.9 in) long, it is the longest fue. Minteki (also known as the Seiteki) Transverse Used in ceremony. The sympathetically vibrating membrane ...

  6. Transverse flute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transverse_flute

    Transverse flute with B Foot, also with C Foot available (Buffet Crampon) Transverse flutes include the Western concert flute, the Irish flute, the Indian classical flutes (the bansuri and the venu), the Chinese dizi, the Western fife, a number of Japanese fue, and Korean flutes such as daegeum, junggeum and sogeum.

  7. Guo Yue (musician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guo_Yue_(musician)

    Guo Yue (simplified Chinese: 郭 跃; traditional Chinese: 郭躍; pinyin: Guō Yuè; born 1958) is a virtuoso of the dizi (Chinese bamboo flute) and bawu (Chinese free reed pipe). [1] He was born in Beijing, China. He plays a wide range of the bamboo flute and currently lives in London.

  8. List of woodwind instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_woodwind_instruments

    Western concert flute; Fife; Alto flute; bass flute; Contra-alto flute; Contrabass flute; Subcontrabass flute; Double contrabass flute; Hyperbass flute; Bansuri (India) Irish flute; Koudi (China) Dizi (China) Native American flute; Daegeum (Korea) Nohkan (Japan) Ryūteki (Japan) Shinobue (Japan) Švilpa (Lithuania) Venu (India) Kaval (Anatolian ...

  9. Shinobue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinobue

    Ron Korb's Asian Flute Gallery (features description and drawing of the Shinobue and other Japanese flutes); Syoji Yamaguchi's web site on Japanese transverse flutes Archived 2011-06-07 at the Wayback Machine (features articles on making and playing of the Shinobue and other Japanese transverse flutes: yokobue or fue)

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