Qupai
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A qupai (
meter.[1] Many qupai are centuries old, but only a few of these have been handed down to the present.[2]
Qupai are commonly used in Chinese opera, such as Beijing opera, as well as by folk and ritual ensembles, including Jiangnan sizhu and Taoist ritual music. Qupai have also been used as the basis for 20th century compositions for Chinese instruments, both solo and ensemble. In these contexts, these stock melodies very often serve as a basis for melodic elaboration and variation. This variation is particularly well codified in the taoqu structure of Chaozhou xianshi music.[3]
The Lijiang, Yunnan utilizes 24 qupai.
Notable qupai
- Ba Ban (八板, Eight Beats)
- Huang Ying Liang Chi (黄莺亮翅, Oriole Soaring)
- Jiang Jun Ling (将军令, General's Command)
- Liu Qingniang (柳青娘, Lady Green Willow)
- Qiansheng Fo (千声佛, A Thousand Buddhas)
- Shui Long Yin (水龙吟, Water Dragon Chant)
- Wan Nian Huan (万年欢, Everlasting Joy)
- Xi Jiang Yue (西江月, Moon Over the West River)
- 巫山顶
- 即 (五三点)
- 五梆子
- 巴音杭盖
- 推辘轴
- 十番
- Si Gong Zhu (四公主, Four Princesses)
See also
References
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ISBN 978-0-8047-2658-0.
- ^ "EOL 8: Birth of a New Mode? (Dujunco): Chaozhou Modal Practice", Ethnomusicology OnLine.
External links
- Xi Jiang Yue (西江月) Moon Over the West River in Chinese Calligraphy,Big Seal Script.
- Harris, Rachel (2004). Singing the village: music, memory and ritual among the Sibe of Xinjiang. ISBN 978-0-19-726297-9.
- Witzleben, John Lawrence (1995). "Silk and bamboo" music in Shanghai: the jiangnan sizhu instrumental, p.70. ISBN 978-0-87338-499-5.