Authentic Chinese Classical Music - Ming Dynasty Court and Taoist music (Yanyue)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024
  • This is court music from the Ming dynasty. It's now only played at Taoist Joss Houses in China. It's a very lively style. It's a dying art though, as the modern Chinese orchestra is becoming more common. But the modern Chinese orchestra is full of western influence, while Yanyue is native to China

Komentáře • 196

  • @andrewchantinglung
    @andrewchantinglung Před rokem +40

    My ancestors had came from Kwangtung in Ming Dynasty before the rise of Manchu, then they move to Vietnam

    • @AllyCurtis
      @AllyCurtis Před rokem

      The old religion and Greek figures are all controlling our bodies and are the voices. They are getting in our bodies to rape, murder and speak thoughts that are not our own.
      The old religious/Greek figures are arranging the marriages/relationships of the populace without consent. The genital rapes are from old religious/Greek figures not a human person. It’s not kundalini as well.
      They are utilizing tactics to manipulate the population against each other and keep us from happiness both here and in heaven. And from knowing the truth about ourselves and humans. What we wanted and are capable of doing.
      They did Mauchausen Gypsy Blancharde both her and her mother with control that put her in jail.
      Christian, Devil, Zeus, Aphrodite etc are responsible for instigating the hate and war. Paedophilia is their responsibility and so is humans coming out the wrong gender.
      It's horrible what's really going on.
      Twin Flame/A predestined one-
      Twin flame is very dangerous. It’s a fate based system where everything is chosen for you on birth. That life is just planned and it actually is by the old religious/Greek figures to be honest. But truly if you think about extreme poverty and acid attacks you’d have to see life is not fated. It’s a mess. The universe couldn’t know you at 0.
      I would never try to take love or potential of love from someone. It's the idea it was created on birth your lover and it's very fate based. The world and you was done the day you were born.
      And it can be used against you the idea of a match up that is chosen in advance of you becoming you by the universe (but is the old religious figures). And that things are set in stone and you don’t choose your partner. It sets you up to not see abuse and to accept any treatment because they are the one. It’s so dangerous. You have a forever someone who will have to work to remain your forever just like you will but it’s not set in stone and no one knows who it is besides you. You just will have a lover.
      And it’s the religious and Greek figures trying to gain points with the universe by controlling people to get together. By forcing souls to be mates with one another without consent. Evil Cupids.

    • @zxcvbn-i3e
      @zxcvbn-i3e Před měsícem

      明鄉人

  • @seniorskateboarder5958
    @seniorskateboarder5958 Před rokem +27

    I worked at the Asian Art museum SF for 23 years. I have a great appreciation for this music and also the literati painting and poetry and music.

  • @kakashi101able
    @kakashi101able Před 4 lety +148

    Sad that the Ming dynasty had to go down in one of the Deadliest wars in history. The transition from Ming To Qing (1618-1683) over 25 million people died in that long brutal war. ;(

    • @gregorjerman973
      @gregorjerman973 Před 3 lety +18

      EVERY DYNASTY FALLS BECAUSE CORRUPTION AND EXTERNAL POWERS EXIST.

    • @kakashi101able
      @kakashi101able Před 3 lety +29

      @@gregorjerman973 China suffered the most bloodiest wars throughout history. But not all dynasties ended as bad.

    • @bambooim9977
      @bambooim9977 Před 3 lety +5

      Actually a external invasion war

    • @elizabethbrower640
      @elizabethbrower640 Před 2 lety +7

      The Qing dynasty was the most powerful and best dynasty of all of them though.

    • @kakashi101able
      @kakashi101able Před 2 lety +24

      @@elizabethbrower640 the Qing we're powerful during the late 17th century & 18th century. But during the 19th century, corruption was becoming more common in the government, the Qing did not keep up with the industrial Revolution in Europe, they were probably technically on par with other European world powers during the 18th century. But by the 19th century the Qing were primitive. Also bad weather and disasters played a major part. The four Famines of 1810-1849 claimed millions of lives. The embarrassing defeat by Britiain & France during the first and second opium wars. China experience Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864). It was the deadliest Civil war in history, more died in the Taiping war than in WW1 for comparison. Ethnic wars and genocides took place such as Maio Rebellion (1854-1873).
      Panthay Rebellion (1856-1873).
      Dungan Revolt (1862-1877).
      These wars each claimed millions of lives. 1876-1879 a famine claimed over 9 million people if not more. 1880s France defeated the Qing and conquered a Chinese island. 1889 a flood claimed over 900 thousands lives. 1894-1895 Japan took Korea from the Qing. Boxer rebellion 1899-1901.
      1907 a large famine claimed millions of lives. By 1911 a revolution to overthrow the Qing dynasty, which only lasted for four months, by 1912 the Qing was taken over.

  • @lelanderickson1045
    @lelanderickson1045 Před 3 lety +31

    Outstanding. And if it is of any reassurance, here in California there is at least one person I and my late wife encountered one evening sitting outdoors at a restaurant who was practicing the erhu, and he was very good at i!. He was so good in fact that my love and I and the other restaurant patrons asked him to keep playing (and he graciously obliged).

    • @lelanderickson1045
      @lelanderickson1045 Před rokem +3

      @corc1130 he was a fellow diner playing for fun in fact, so we simply got to enjoy listening. If he were "singing for his dinner," we would indeed have tipped him well if only on principle.

  • @lichadec6654
    @lichadec6654 Před 2 lety +18

    Magnifique, cette musique tradionnelle ancienne de la Chine, d’une grande finesse et les instruments raffinés. La Chine est riche de culture et de savoir-faires millénaires. Merci pour le partage. On adore. Un bonjour de Paris.

  • @marktoreky3417
    @marktoreky3417 Před 4 lety +56

    Gigantic respect to the Far-East nations - the Chinese, Bhutanese, Vietnamese, Japanese, Korean (and so on) people - !!!!
    For two simple reasons:
    1. Their legendary very very high work moral.
    2. In the sciences they were pioneers it’s well known but true that they had thousands of years before invented lot’s of things which we just for instance reinvented 2000 years later and in certain historical periods (for instance after the fall of the Roman Empire) they were flambeau in the Word in the scientific way.
    So I take the opportunity the pay my Gigantic respect to you!!!!
    Mr. Yeu Nguyen thank you for uploading the music! Greetings’ from Hungary!

    • @jrexx2841
      @jrexx2841 Před 3 lety +4

      Mongolia too

    • @alipali
      @alipali Před 2 lety

      I respect the East too, our continent just wouldn't be the same, from a South Asian's perspective.

    • @chrisjackson8151
      @chrisjackson8151 Před 2 lety

      Yes, and this very, very high work morale that you speak of is also tied to their very, very high rates of suicide. Search up “karoshi” in Japan. Otherwise, you romanticize the “orient” way too much. Yuck!

    • @sanneoi6323
      @sanneoi6323 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Thank you. You should be proud you have a connection to us.

    • @sanneoi6323
      @sanneoi6323 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@chrisjackson8151no that's just a Japanese thing. Japanese are weird. It's China that did most of the work anyway.

  • @guruchoykokkee
    @guruchoykokkee Před 11 měsíci +15

    This is the real traditional Chinese music not like those musical stage conducted western orchestra playing of Chinese music.

  • @legofanguyvid
    @legofanguyvid Před 4 lety +20

    Came here to see what a Ming anthem would sound like if they survived to the modern day.

  • @ugomario
    @ugomario Před rokem +7

    Nothing to envy to our classic music...; perfect, harmonic....**

    • @AllyCurtis
      @AllyCurtis Před rokem

      The old religion and Greek figures are all controlling our bodies and are the voices. They are getting in our bodies to rape, murder and speak thoughts that are not our own.
      The old religious/Greek figures are arranging the marriages/relationships of the populace without consent. The genital rapes are from old religious/Greek figures not a human person. It’s not kundalini as well.
      They are utilizing tactics to manipulate the population against each other and keep us from happiness both here and in heaven. And from knowing the truth about ourselves and humans. What we wanted and are capable of doing.
      They did Mauchausen Gypsy Blancharde both her and her mother with control that put her in jail.
      Christian, Devil, Zeus, Aphrodite etc are responsible for instigating the hate and war. Paedophilia is their responsibility and so is humans coming out the wrong gender.
      It's horrible what's really going on.
      Twin Flame/A predestined one-
      Twin flame is very dangerous. It’s a fate based system where everything is chosen for you on birth. That life is just planned and it actually is by the old religious/Greek figures to be honest. But truly if you think about extreme poverty and acid attacks you’d have to see life is not fated. It’s a mess. The universe couldn’t know you at 0.
      I would never try to take love or potential of love from someone. It's the idea it was created on birth your lover and it's very fate based. The world and you was done the day you were born.
      And it can be used against you the idea of a match up that is chosen in advance of you becoming you by the universe (but is the old religious figures). And that things are set in stone and you don’t choose your partner. It sets you up to not see abuse and to accept any treatment because they are the one. It’s so dangerous. You have a forever someone who will have to work to remain your forever just like you will but it’s not set in stone and no one knows who it is besides you. You just will have a lover.
      And it’s the religious and Greek figures trying to gain points with the universe by controlling people to get together. By forcing souls to be mates with one another without consent. Evil Cupids.

  • @user-ak7as2hi9q
    @user-ak7as2hi9q Před dnem +1

    All of them are so calm 😌

  • @RedGeist
    @RedGeist Před 7 lety +44

    love this, nice alternative to the quieter melodies traditionally associated with the culture.

  • @chang1865
    @chang1865 Před 8 lety +50

    Wow! This shares so many similarities with Thai music!
    Many phrases in this sounds so similar to the ones played in Thai traditional yet distinct enough to distinguish between the two.

    • @kihuu4055
      @kihuu4055 Před 7 lety +3

      lol

    • @dimaswirantoraharjo2547
      @dimaswirantoraharjo2547 Před 5 lety +22

      Isnt thai music somewhat influenced by chinese musics asweel?

    • @Rin-ir9bu
      @Rin-ir9bu Před 5 lety +6

      Thai culture is very influenced by ancient china so

    • @krittikaamornvivat5805
      @krittikaamornvivat5805 Před 4 lety +6

      @@Rin-ir9bu but for music, Thai was more influenced by India and Kmher, not China

    • @MCLARENracerful
      @MCLARENracerful Před 4 lety +5

      krittika amornvivat it’s not fair to say Thai culture isn’t influenced by China. It’s a mixture of Burmese, Indian and Chinese culture. Get your facts straight

  • @flixilp1457
    @flixilp1457 Před 9 lety +69

    oh man i love chinese culture

    • @saltyconjure9442
      @saltyconjure9442 Před 5 lety +16

      Unfortunately, most Chinese around the world just neglected these treasures. (Including music, educations, theory, clothes, festivals,some of customs,etc)
      Hanfu becomes qipao and cheongsam,like WTF???

    • @mr.cebuano2843
      @mr.cebuano2843 Před 4 lety +12

      @@saltyconjure9442 hanfu becomes qipao WTF
      Barbarian qipao is from fucking Manchu qing dynasty
      In todays time many young people in China wear hanu

    • @mr.cebuano2843
      @mr.cebuano2843 Před 4 lety

      @@Insularish many han people hate qipao and many young people wear hanfu than qipao in China czcams.com/video/B6U_TRhQkR8/video.html

    • @mr.cebuano2843
      @mr.cebuano2843 Před 4 lety +1

      @B Mu [8.1., 13:16] 弗雷德里克: czcams.com/video/7v_DGXtQ110/video.html
      [8.1., 13:17] 弗雷德里克: czcams.com/video/RelrTXPd7EA/video.html
      [8.1., 13:17] 弗雷德里克: czcams.com/video/44C13_fZAmI/video.html
      [8.1., 13:17] 弗雷德里克: czcams.com/video/3GsCEnMEM30/video.html
      Yup mean this han culture wat is Destroying von china

    • @mr.cebuano2843
      @mr.cebuano2843 Před 4 lety +9

      @B Mu of course it is true that there was the chinese cultural revolution, but there are many artifacts and places like beijing forbidden city or in nanjing and some places where chinese culture exists. and if you think the CCP wants to destroy the han culture i know not why they allow to do han chinese historical dramas or to rebuild the daming palace in chang'an or why they give traditional retuals and dances in tv shows and more

  • @adampapaj4513
    @adampapaj4513 Před 9 lety +14

    Piękne. Prawdziwa, tradycyjna, chińska muzyka. Czegoś takiego właśnie szukałem. Szkoda że tak mało jest takich filmów.

    • @tisiscale
      @tisiscale Před rokem +2

      Ależ są! Chociaż mnie też trudno było na początku na nie trafić. Zobacz profil dbadagna, wyszukuj też nazwami instrumentów, dynastii, czy regionów.

  • @angelofthedead1886
    @angelofthedead1886 Před rokem +11

    Chinese emperor when his quest for immortality ended up in disaster.

  • @firescarab1050
    @firescarab1050 Před 7 lety +26

    This it's the true chinese music no the generic shit on CZcams

  • @ReformedKnight
    @ReformedKnight Před 4 lety +9

    This is what emperor Jiajing listened to

  • @jasonhuang6078
    @jasonhuang6078 Před 3 lety +35

    Why do organizations have to fund those stupid westernized “Chinese orchestras” please fund real traditional Chinese musical culture and let it live, I am tired of seeing all that “traditional modern music”.

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 Před 3 lety +4

      You have a valid objection to so called, "Chinese traditional orchestra." An authentic Chinese orchestra does not have western violins, cellos, or pianos. If one wishes to hear and see what these orchestras once sounded and looked like, attend the ceremonies celebrating Confucius in Qufu. The very large and imposing Temple dedicated to Confucius and his burial ground. They have revived the ancient Confucian ceremonies. Korea has never relinquished these ceremonies, and they were performed intact for centuries. China had to refer to Korea to reconstruct these ceremonies as they were once performed in China. Ancient court music also survives and has an unbroken tradition in Japan. The Chinese have a vast storehouse of written literature which describes and records much of their ancient culture, which includes food, clothing, music and architecture. They have always been skilled in imitating and recreating. Its a long tradition. The current Hanfu movement is an ongoing manifestation of this. So unless they can re-enact or reconstruct how court music with large orchestras sounded like, you're not going to hear the real thing. Just a musical mish mash or pastiche of Chinese, western music. Like Shen Yun for instance. It bills itself as "traditional Chinese," but its not.

    • @chrisjackson8151
      @chrisjackson8151 Před 2 lety

      Personally I cant stand the westernized “Chinese orchestras” crap. Nothing about it is remotely traditional, it’s just trying to imitate western orchestras while using Chinese instruments-absolutely nothing of interest. It’s a shame that Chinese people dont preserve their culture because they’re desperately trying so hard to be western.

    • @ddhh-rj1iz
      @ddhh-rj1iz Před rokem +3

      说得是啊 哎

  • @elizabethbrower3191
    @elizabethbrower3191 Před 3 lety +1

    Very pretty. So are the buildings

  • @savantianprince
    @savantianprince Před 5 lety +3

    Beautiful music

  • @konliner9286
    @konliner9286 Před 5 lety +9

    Beautiful ! Glad they preserve it.

    • @peppapaul
      @peppapaul Před 3 lety +1

      It's not really "preserved", just more authentic.

    • @fuanasantuary1277
      @fuanasantuary1277 Před 2 lety +1

      @@peppapaul I agree, the actual music from the ming dynasty would have sounded different from this. It just sound more authentic compared the modern Chinese orchestra with western influence. To my ears it still sound very similar to the mco. I imagine the ming court music to sound more slow and ritualistic.

    • @peppapaul
      @peppapaul Před 2 lety

      @@fuanasantuary1277 Yes, I agree. Of course there was more fast and elegant folk music, court music in general was probably slower, as evident by Japanese Gagaku, which managed to preserve many of China's Tang dynasty music. Not only that, the tuning would have been significantly different. As a flute player myself, the modern day dizi has holes that are not equal in distance, which means it can play music more fitted for the western orchestra. However, flutes from the early 20th century and earlier had tone holes that were "equal" in distance from each other. This meant the player could play in many keys on just 1 flute, and each key had its own quality and timbre, and not to mention its obvious intonation difference.

    • @fuanasantuary1277
      @fuanasantuary1277 Před 8 měsíci

      @paulxu51 late reply but the dizi flute part you included was very insightful. Does this mean the older classical dizi produces more nuanced notes melody? The modern ones has a very earthy warm tones already.

  • @Ohmagat69420
    @Ohmagat69420 Před 2 lety +6

    Ming Dynasty trap remix got me actin unwise 😔

  • @user-ak7as2hi9q
    @user-ak7as2hi9q Před dnem +1

    Best part ❤ 3:12

  • @DamnChinn
    @DamnChinn Před 3 měsíci +2

    Restore the Ming!!

  • @user-ak7as2hi9q
    @user-ak7as2hi9q Před 14 dny +1

    I love China 🇨🇳

  • @tcbcrotmg
    @tcbcrotmg Před 22 hodinami

    POV it’s 82bc in the Han dynasty and Su Jing Wan just dropped this banger🔥🔥🔥

  • @Jobe-13
    @Jobe-13 Před 4 měsíci

    Sounds awesome

  • @mikelaw9872
    @mikelaw9872 Před 5 lety +1

    beautiful..

  • @agastya7770
    @agastya7770 Před 9 měsíci

    Beautiful

  • @roselyngabrielapadronmagda188

    Fascinante 😍💜

  • @simmeringdowns6008
    @simmeringdowns6008 Před rokem

    super duper fantastic

  • @znba8823
    @znba8823 Před 4 měsíci +1

    han chinese great 🥰

  • @kathad1332
    @kathad1332 Před 9 lety +1

    Good idea. Thank you!

  • @mariaencarnacionsarmientos4900

    Esta música es perfecta para aquellos que quieran sentirse emperadores en ascenso

  • @call-me-special
    @call-me-special Před rokem

    Sounds like an ancient Chinese yayue omg you’re a GENUIS

  • @weiyouzeng5588
    @weiyouzeng5588 Před 7 lety +24

    It's religious Taoism music.

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 Před 3 lety +4

      Taoist monks were exempted during the Ch'ing Dynasty from laws that prohibited the wearing of hair in the traditional Chinese manner, and Chinese dress. They preserved the full sleeved gowns as opposed to the form fitting Manchu garments. Buddhist monks were also exempted and continued to wear the robes worn for centuries.

  • @thanhtrong6006
    @thanhtrong6006 Před 17 dny

    Người xưa lập văn tự: Nguyên nghĩa chữ NGỤY mot bên bo nhân,mot bên bo vi, chữ Vi ý bao bọc, công phu tu tập; chữ và nghĩa rất hay ( sau này chắc là mot số tu tưởng dien sai lạc mà người đời cho chu Ngụy là sau?)

  • @mangalsingh2050
    @mangalsingh2050 Před 3 lety

    Chinese music takes me somewhere faaaaaar.....

  • @kathad1332
    @kathad1332 Před 9 lety +3

    Hmm that's interesting. May I use this song for a music class investigation? I'd mention the source and everything. Also (if it's okay) do you know if there's any sheet music for this kind of music or where to find some?

  • @Gryfder
    @Gryfder Před 4 lety +3

    What's the Chinese name of this piece? Or this video? I'm searching for it but to no avail.

    • @Mass.T
      @Mass.T Před 10 měsíci

      白云观 It's available in chinese version of CZcams bilibili.

    • @Gryfder
      @Gryfder Před 9 měsíci

      @@Mass.T 喔喔 謝了!thanks a bunch!

  • @ddhh-rj1iz
    @ddhh-rj1iz Před rokem +3

    国人应该多听这些

    • @GalaxyInvasion
      @GalaxyInvasion Před 8 měsíci

      Sb dong xi, ting ni Ma de zhong guo gu dai yue qu, bie ren kao gu ni rang ting zhe la ji wan yi. cao ni ma de sb dong xi!

  • @mantouu
    @mantouu Před 8 lety +4

    how big of a court do you need to play court music?

    • @GazRockK
      @GazRockK Před 8 lety +5

      About thiiis much court

  • @jasonhuang6078
    @jasonhuang6078 Před 3 lety +4

    May I ask where this was filmed?

    • @Terasurn
      @Terasurn Před 11 měsíci

      China?

    • @Mass.T
      @Mass.T Před 10 měsíci +2

      白云观.It's the temple Genghis Khan built for Qiu Chuji in Beijing.

  • @agungr3911
    @agungr3911 Před 6 lety +2

    Yêu NGuyễn cho tôi xin bản nào hao hao như này đi

  • @aceplayz3901
    @aceplayz3901 Před 8 lety +1

    P.S. sorry for spelling dank wrong

  • @MrRrrr698
    @MrRrrr698 Před 8 měsíci

    ❤❤❤

  • @DiamondLightN
    @DiamondLightN Před 9 měsíci

    Me siento en una fiesta imperial super importante

  • @whilaprep6732
    @whilaprep6732 Před 4 lety +1

    My teacher is making me watch this.

  • @anasibrahim8178
    @anasibrahim8178 Před 5 měsíci

    are there other versions of this and where can I find them

  • @kathad1332
    @kathad1332 Před 9 lety +1

    What is the name of the song and the composor?

  • @czar-das
    @czar-das Před měsícem

    me asf after playing go

  • @rubymistbell
    @rubymistbell Před 9 lety +2

    Does anyone know the name of this song and the composer?

    • @dbadagna
      @dbadagna Před 8 lety +4

      +rubymistbell
      The composers of such pieces are usually anonymous. From 3:13 to the end is a Kunqu qupai called "Jie Jie Gao" 《节节高》 (Growing Higher and Higher), which is used to indicate banquet scenes in Kunqu operas such as "The Peony Pavilion."

    • @yug4836
      @yug4836  Před 8 lety

      +dbadagna Hmm. I did not know that was a Kunqu piece. All I knew was that the first part was Taoist music. To be fair, the part from 3:13 onwards did sound different from the rest. Thanks for providing information

    • @dbadagna
      @dbadagna Před 8 lety +3

      +Yєu Ɲgนุуєท
      Interestingly, many of the same qupai used in Kunqu are also used in Daoist ceremonial music, played by shifan (十番) bands such as the one in this video. This piece is one of them. Another such piece is "Wan Nian Huan" 《万年欢》 and another is "Chao Tianzi" 《朝天子》.

  • @oofamism
    @oofamism Před rokem +4

    The reason I found this is uhh.... quite unfortunate.

    • @anasibrahim8178
      @anasibrahim8178 Před 5 měsíci

      are talking about the jiajing emperor who wanted immortality?

  • @Zoeynisblackgenesis
    @Zoeynisblackgenesis Před 6 lety

    What are the Chinese characters for Yanyue?

  • @bv2c735
    @bv2c735 Před 7 lety +2

    道教音乐。

  • @Kriegter
    @Kriegter Před rokem

    Time to shred

  • @aceplayz3901
    @aceplayz3901 Před 8 lety +1

    dank

  • @ArbitratorTemplar
    @ArbitratorTemplar Před 6 lety +2

    这些演奏者的表情自然多了,不像一般的演奏者他们的表情太做作,根本看不下去。

  • @iananthonydesilva6127
    @iananthonydesilva6127 Před 6 měsíci

    Chu lie chu chi sue tousan çort kong ching sue,

  • @jeffreysommer3292
    @jeffreysommer3292 Před 4 lety

    Do you mean Yin1 Yueh4? It simply means "music."

  • @aceplayz3901
    @aceplayz3901 Před 8 lety +1

    much dank or as Jack says all the dank. But now he is in Lift so according to simon he sucks. But thats okay :). I personally would just say dank but miles would say much dnk and go away. By anyway. Ace out:)

  • @Genghis_Khan_leader
    @Genghis_Khan_leader Před 9 měsíci

    western music

  • @MrSuperunix
    @MrSuperunix Před 6 lety +6

    宗教音乐吧。道家音乐

    • @Mass.T
      @Mass.T Před 10 měsíci

      明清皇家音乐祭祀都是神乐观掌管的

  • @aceplayz3901
    @aceplayz3901 Před 8 lety

    sloth pope fuzy

  • @thegreatestshenfan6484

    愛‧主‧沈‧內‧都‧V‧路多
    ‧‧父
    ‧‧兒
    ‧‧神
    ‧‧友
    ‧‧夫
    祇‧令‧愛‧從‧主‧沈‧可‧杜‧壞

  • @dojokonojo
    @dojokonojo Před 6 lety +4

    Clearly whoever composed this piece of music was pandering to the tastes of his audience instead of innovating new forms of music like those philosopher-scholars do. That's why those philosopher-scholars and their solo pieces are so obscure.

    • @SWToDi-qc8hb
      @SWToDi-qc8hb Před 6 lety +4

      All music is pandering to audiences because of the much-needed bread & butter for the musicians. From Hayden to Stravinsky, who doesn't need the money to live on?

    • @Alusnovalotus
      @Alusnovalotus Před 5 lety +4

      dojokonojo and I’m grateful for that. Not everyone in China had time to contemplate the ancient classics while admiring scroll paintings!!!
      Life was vivacious with common merchants, farmers and soldiers!!!!!
      This celebrates that!!!
      It is and is not THE DAO!

    • @meusisto
      @meusisto Před 2 lety

      Who are the philosopher-scholars?

    • @__seeker__
      @__seeker__ Před 7 měsíci

      I hope you became less stupid during these past five years.

  • @Sogesu
    @Sogesu Před 4 lety +3

    It sound like Vietnamese Court music

    • @joenroute9646
      @joenroute9646 Před 4 lety +10

      Vietnmases court music certainly preserved much of some elements of Ming period music !

    • @joenroute9646
      @joenroute9646 Před 4 lety

      @Lanla Colan . I know these , he was not the sole architect by the way.

    • @MinhNguyen-ff6xf
      @MinhNguyen-ff6xf Před 4 lety +1

      AKM M4 Now you have the Chinesevirus, let’s keep being a fool yourself, loser.

    • @MinhNguyen-ff6xf
      @MinhNguyen-ff6xf Před 4 lety +1

      The Vietnamese court music (nhã nhạc) consists of two different types: đại nhạc (grand music) and tiểu nhạc (little music). The grand music is played at important ceremonies and sounds just like this song, you can check out the song “đăng đàn cung” (national anthem of the Nguyen’s). The little music is played at a courtiers’ banquet or smaller event with less formal vibes. A typical song that best represents the little music should be “lưu thuỷ kim tiền, xuân phong long hổ”

    • @joenroute9646
      @joenroute9646 Před 4 lety +5

      @@MinhNguyen-ff6xf . Does not change the fact that Vietnamese is part of the Sino sphere civilisation. You may even have chinese blood !

  • @iananthonydesilva6127
    @iananthonydesilva6127 Před 6 měsíci

    Chu how icj cort murda ,tousan ni hi everyone children bank workers accountants ,still arrest them

  • @jamesmackenzie3111
    @jamesmackenzie3111 Před 8 lety +26

    this is too hip for me - head banging stuff. I want something a bit more retro. Say, something from the Zhou. This sounds like the shit they play in a restaurant

    • @yug4836
      @yug4836  Před 8 lety +24

      +James Mackenzie Look up "Chu state music", you'll find music played by the Chu state during the Warring states period. The stuff you'll hear in the restaurants is flashy folk music using high pitched instruments like Xiaodi, Gaohu, and Jinghu, of which is pain to my ears. This music though is authentic Ming and Qing dynasty Yanyue orchestra

    • @jamesmackenzie3111
      @jamesmackenzie3111 Před 8 lety

      *****
      thank thee muchly. I will check it out. Are your letters Greek?

    • @Floatian
      @Floatian Před 7 lety +6

      +James Mackenzie
      You are right, this style was mostly used for plays or during family banquets, meals, or wedding meals etc.. or mostly used for among ordinary people. Rich and powerful families will use different style.

    • @dttth7192
      @dttth7192 Před 5 lety +3

      The music style of the Zhou Dynasty has long been lost, but the court music of the Tang and Song dynasties is more elegant.

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 Před 3 lety +2

      @@dttth7192 It is to these Chinese Dynasties(T'ang and Sung), that the Japanese defer to in much of their culture. Japan, with all if its earthquakes, feudal clan warfare, typhoons, has preserved the oldest wooden buildings in the world, and they date from the T'ang. The large, wooden storehouse in Chosin, preserves T'ang instruments, and gameboards and other items imported to Japan. Japanese women wore their hair differently in different periods, but during the Tokugawa Period, they adopted a style very similar to what women wore during the T'ang. The ceramics, paintings and style of tea culture during the Sung was so admired by the Japanese, that they value and admired this time period of Chinese art, which declined after the Mongol invasion, and was not quite the same with the ascent of the Mings.

  • @chrisjackson8151
    @chrisjackson8151 Před 2 lety

    How the fuck is this shit authentic when theyre using a relatively modern pipa that was constructed with equal temperament in mind? Otherwise, it’s nice.

    • @Veronica-pv3qh
      @Veronica-pv3qh Před 6 měsíci +5

      Remember that Mao Zedong tried to destroy the four olds. He destroyed the collective memory of old china from the people. The fact that they can even reproduce this music and these kinds of processions is a miracle.

    • @skraskraa._.5371
      @skraskraa._.5371 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Veronica-pv3qh That's literally false, he TRIED to do it but he NEVER could. It is impossible to erase Chinese culture in one decade. Many traditional elements of Chinese culture were combined with communism but never erased. It is very patronising to propagate the lie that Chinese culture was destroyed during the cultural revolution. Only those who have a death wish on Chinese culture say that shit.