|
''Xi'an guyue'' (西安鼓乐), also ''Shaanxi guyue'' (陕西鼓乐), is the regional Chinese ritual music genre featuring a type of wind and percussion ensemble named for its place of origin, Xi'an, in Shaanxi Province. It is also, somewhat misleadingly, called Xi'an drum music. A folk genre, sustained by amateur groups before the 1960s,〔Jones, Stephen (2013). ''In Search of the Folk Daoists of North China'', p.95. Ashgate. ISBN 9781409406150.〕 it was placed on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage List in 2009.〔"(Xi'an wind and percussion ensemble )", ''UNESCO.org''.〕 The music is split into two categories based on performance, sitting and walking (the latter including chorus),〔 and into three repertoires based on transmission, Buddhist (''Seng''), Daoist (''Dao''), and secular (''Su'').〔Zhuo, Dr. Sun (2015). ''The Chinese Zheng Zither: Contemporary Transformations'', p.106. Ashgate. ISBN 9781472416674.〕 Though associated with the Tang dynasty (due to its prestige and history), the genre shares more with the late Ming and Qing dynasties.〔Zhuo (2015), p.108.〕 The ensembles formerly included other instruments, such as the ''pipa'' and ''daqin'' (presumably the ''zheng''), as witnessed in ''gongche'' manuscripts.〔 Famous musicians include An Laixu (1895-1977), Daoist master of Xi'an's Chenghuangmiao temple.〔〔 Manuscripts collected during the fifties date as far back as 1689, but the knowledge of how to perform pieces that old is lost.〔 The genre flourished in the thirties and forties, with ensembles going from temple to temple, "but tacitly it was also treated like a competition."〔 The number of musical ensembles and temples of all kinds was greatly reduced during the cultural revolution in the sixties and seventies, beginning to return more as historical preservation, academic research, or tourism then as religious practice in the eighties.〔 ==See also== *Guyue Bridge *Guyue 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Xi'an guyue」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|