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  2. Chinese musicology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_musicology

    Chinese musicology is the academic study of traditional Chinese music. This discipline has a very long history. This discipline has a very long history. Traditional Chinese music can be traced back to around 8,000 years ago during the Neolithic age.

  3. Shi'er lü - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shi'er_lü

    Shi'er lü (Chinese: 十二律; pinyin: shí'èr lǜ; lit. '12 pitches'; Mandarin pronunciation: [ʂɻ̩˧˥ aɚ˥˧ ly˥˩]) is a standardized gamut of twelve notes used in ancient Chinese music. [1] It is also known, rather misleadingly, as the Chinese chromatic scale; it was only one kind of chromatic scale used in ancient

  4. Music of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_China

    Chinese opera music is mainly composed of singing (vocal singing and aside) and instrumental accompaniment. [30] Chinese opera accent: There are different types of drama in different regions, but they all have similarities. The four major accents in modern times are Kunshan accent (Kunshan), high accent , Pihuang accent, and Bangzi accent. [31]

  5. Zhongyuan Yinyun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhongyuan_Yinyun

    In the earlier rime books, characters are first grouped by tone, then by rime. However, in Zhongyuan Yinyun , the selected 5,866 characters, commonly rhymed in songs of the time, are first grouped into 19 rime groups, then further into four tonal groups : ping sheng yin ( 陰平 "feminine level tone"), ping sheng yang ( 陽平 "masculine level ...

  6. Music theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_theory

    Much of Chinese music history and theory remains unclear. [8] Chinese theory starts from numbers, the main musical numbers being twelve, five and eight. Twelve refers to the number of pitches on which the scales can be constructed. The Lüshi chunqiu from about 238 BCE recalls the legend of Ling Lun.

  7. Chinese musical notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_musical_notation

    Gongche notation, dating from the Tang dynasty, used Chinese characters for the names of the scale. Octave positions are sometimes shown by the addition of an affix or small mark. A chromatic scale could be produced from this by the use of the prefixes gao- (high) to raise a note, or xia- (low) to lower it, by a semitone; but after the 11th ...

  8. The textbook published by People's Education Press was obtained by the BBC. According to the outlet, the reference to Covid appears in the section of the book featuring "changes in social life".

  9. Timeline of Chinese music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Chinese_music

    This is a timeline that show the development of Chinese music by genre and region. It covers the historic China as well as the geographic areas of Taiwan , Hong Kong and Macau . Dynastic periods