@@somatia350 who really cares who invented what, who influenced who, etc... such petty nonsense. Each culture has its own distinct sound regardless, and all should be appreciated and respected.
You will notice that players of bowed instruments almost always have the same movement mannerisms as they play, as it helps them. The same for flute players with the swirling movements, plucked stringed instrument players like koto/harp/zither/etc will rock back and forth as its just part of their flow as they play. Erhu lady is just doing that same thing violinists etc all do.
The erhu, like the Korean haegeum, was developed in the Qing Dynasty of Manchuria, which accepted and used the instruments of riding people such as Mongolia, and was greatly improved in modern times in the 1930s.
It is true that we have similar musical instruments in China, Korea, and Japan, but each rhythm and range of notes are very different. We hardly find similarities.
Zoe T What do you mean you can’t? “Very different” and “hardly find similarities” are both negative phrases and they mean the same thing, just phrased differently.
When the beautiful Chinese lady starts to play everybody's jaw must drop.my personal favorite is Japanese bcos there music has a dramatic story type.korean sounds multilingual and Chinese definitely traditional as that's where it all started originally!🇨🇳🇰🇵🇰🇷🇯🇵
@@dyflin3246 Chinese lost their traditional musical tune so they've revived from their funeral musical tune. LOL You should read how China revived their old music. There's even academic journal on this.
@@ytn00b3 What a bunch of nonsense to say that Chinese lost their traditional musical tune. So as per your silly comment, what is Chinese traditional musical tune? If you don't know anything, stop writing nonsense.
All the way chinese always been obsessed with chinese and Japanese traditional music. Japanese traditional music sounds like the background music of an ongoing war, while the chinese traditional music sounds like that people were overcoming from the grieving feelings of the outcome of a war, starting for a new beginning. The korean traditional flute sound, sounds like the beginning of harvesting time.
@@haijingzhao6419 no shit…and with an attitude like that it will stay that way. Korea and Japan get along just fine, despite what Japan did to them. I don’t understand why China is still holding so many grudges, while other nations are able to let them go and realize it was generations ago.
@@tickytock2853 Thats because the feud between China and Japan happened in the last world War, that was in the 1940s. Some people who were around back then are still alive today. Also you should look up what Japan did to China, mainly Nanjing and Unit 731, those were horrific events no matter which nationality you are. The fact that it happened so recently means there are documents and photos of those two events.
@@henhen7890 I know very well aware of what happened. My wife reminds me everytime i even admire Japanese cars. Lol. Like I said, I don’t understand why grudges can’t be let go. No one still blames the people of Germany today for the acts of their forefathers.
The erhu is a modified form of a Mongolian musical instrument, and is a modern instrument based on the Mongolian instrument that was established in the Qing Dynasty in Manchuria and improved extensively in the 1930s.
I have to say. Out of all instruments, the shamisen is the most distinctive to it's country. Hearing one note you already know something Japanese is in the house.
Amazing traditional music performance, thank you to all of us, who listen to this lovely music, very beautiful colored dresses to * Thank you to all 💓💓💓
I found this video searching a concert called Rokkasen in Thailand back in the 90s of Chinese, Japanese and Korean musicians playing together traditional asian music as well as European Waltz. I knew at the time how special the concert was, there is no place for me to experience it again. I wish I could share how unearthly and heavenly the sound of the harmony was.
what a special moments hearing the three instrumets together, like living thousand years ago in some asian countryside 😃, very good players, the chinese girl is gorgeous 😍
These instruments are all very different so I'm confused why they didn't directly compare their equivalent for each country. Well, I pick the Chinese instrument this time. It's a beautiful instrument that I can never tire of hearing. That being said, the Shamisen has the most distinctive sound. You immediately know Japan's in the house.
I’m so glad nobody is comparing. Thank the lord. Every is beautiful in its own right. Please refrain ur preferences. But i wished they had performed the same category types of instrument. Like their own flutes, their own strings, their own similar objects. It would’ve been more fair.
I was thinking the same but if they had, there would probably be a lot of trolls fighting over which one's the best so it might be for the best that they're so different so that there's no point of comparison at all.
You're not going to see this everyday. Glad to see these ladies from different Asian countries playing music together. Arirang is the no. 1 folk song in Korea. It has gone international and is gaining in popularity.
Not really. they are different. Obviously, due to proximity, there have been cultural sharing. But instruments like the Gayageum have been around for 2000 years. The Shamisen is uniquely Japanese too just as the Daegeum is.
@@dou_june0v037 Nope, the Gayageum is different. As someone coming from an archeological anthropology background with a specialization in Northeast Asia, yes there similarities, but instruments like the Daegeum and Gayageum are unique. The similarities are just from the material. Gayageum is around 2000 years old.
Japanese music, as much of its art, has a refined but restrained approach. One can detect the influence of the native religion, Shinto, and the Buddhist import from China, Ch'an,(Zen), in much of the art. Zen became much more pervasive in Japan then China. The Japanese took it to another level, with rock garden, tea ceremonies, poetry, painting and architecture. It was during the Sung Dynasty, that the Ch'an school reached its zenith and influence in China. Which is why the paintings and ceramics from that time are greatly admired by the Japanese. The art had a simplicity and restrained elegance that suffered decline after the Mongol conquest, and after the Mings, by the Manchus. The Japanese continued to retain many of the arts that would be lost in China. So did Korea. Both of these countries have the honor of preserving the oldest extant forms of music in the world. The Chinese music many listen to today is quite modern in relation to its very long history. People need to understand that during the devastation of the wars that occurred during the Ch'ing Dynasty in the 19th century, (Taiping Rebellion and wars with foreign powers),and in the 20th,much of traditional Chinese culture was destroyed. Not to mention the fiasco of the Cultural Revolution, when anything looked at as old or, "feudal," was done away with. Temples, art works, books, sculptures were brazenly destroyed. This orgy of madness and self destruction went on from the mid 60s into the 70s. Much of what one sees in China, are reconstructions or recreations. The Japanese and even the former Hermit Kingdom have done a much better job of preserving true Chinese culture then the Chinese themselves. Theses cultures were greatly impressed with the beauty and sophistication of the T'ang and Sung, when Chinese culture was at its height and prestige.
@@luissantiago8446 is not completely destroyed however, or we would not know any of these thing today......it still very much exist...and in other place like TW, or Singapore, Vitnam
@@nos8141 Did not post that it was completely destroyed, and yes the overseas Chinese communities continued to keep aspects of the culture alive. But much has been lost. When one thinks about what the Taipings destroyed. Westerners don't realize that this was the biggest Civil War in the 19th century. Over 20 million Chinese died in that conflict, and a third of the country was left in ruin. The Ch'ing Dynasty was weakened by it. The Imperial palace in Nanjing was destroyed. When the English and French sent troops to fight yet another war with China, the foreign troops set fire to the Summer Palace outside of Peking. This was a series of palaces, set in gardens, that were amazingly beautiful and held an immense trove of art. The foreign troops looted the palaces of their art works before setting this jewel ablaze. The looting of the palaces and temples continued with the Boxer Rebellion, and Japanese occupation. Chiang Kai Shek and the Nationalists were able to remove an incredible amount of Chinese art that had been stored in the Forbidden City and take it to Taiwan, where it makes up one of the world's greatest collections of Chinese art. The Imperial Palace still has treasures, but not what it once held. Some of the finest Chinese art you'll find is in other countries, like Japan. In Nara, there survives an old wooden structure that is a warehouse specifically designed to withstand heat, humidity and rot. This storehouse contains items perfectly preserved from the T'ang Dynasty, such as musical instruments and game boards. Beautifully executed. None of this survives in China, where archeological digs are making up for what has been destroyed or stolen out of the country. Th mainland Chinese are presently rediscovering their ancient culture, but much of what one sees in Xian, the old capital city or in other locals are restorations. The same applies to ancient music, clothing or ceremonies.
색으로 따지자면 한국은 확실히 무채색의 느낌 감색의 느낌? 암튼 중국 일본과 달리 화려함보다는 담백하고 맑은 느낌 언뜻보면 소박해보이지만 가만들여다보면 단아하고 우아한 느낌 음악도 그렇고 의상도 그렇고 집이나 전통문양도 그렇고 심지어 여백의 미를 중시하는 문화까지도 다 일맥상통하는 느낌이 있음..
@@user-rc9zq1yc7r 반일도 정신병이 맞는데 님처럼 말하는 분들이 흔히 말하는게 조선은 매우 가난하고 백성의 반 이상을 노예로 만들고 나라도 돈이 없고 힘이 없었다. 라는 말을 다들 하는데 조선 후기야 재정이 안 좋았지만 조선이 전체적으로 보면 그렇게 못 산 나라도 아니고 동시대 중진국 이상은 한 국력인데 무슨 꼭 보면 드라마에서 극적인 모습 연출하려고 그린 거지소굴 같은 모습에 탄압 받는 모습으로만 생각하며 말 하는 것도 문제이죠. 백성의 반 이상을 노비로 만들었다. 라는 말도 노비는 국방의 의무와 노역의 의무를 지지않는데 나라의 반 이상을 지배층이 노비로 만든다는 것도 말이 안 되죠. 윗분 말대로 조선이 검소와 검양 단정 단아를 강조한 건 돈이 없고 염색 기술이 없어서 그랬던 것도 아니고 국교를 바꾼게 가장 큰 이유죠. 삼국시대를 거쳐 고려시대까지 1천년이상 이땅의 역대 왕조의 국교였던 불교는 건축 예술 생활양식에서 화려함을 추구하는데(현재의 동남아 불교국들을 보면 쉽게 알 수 있음) 이런 영향으로 조선이전의 궁궐이나 의복이나 문물등이 발굴되는 유물만 봐도 화려함의 결정체고 고려의 궁궐도 만백성이 우러러 불 수 있게 언덕위에 계단식으로 층을 준데다가 건물 자체도 복층으로 크고 높게 만들어 더 웅장해 보이게 지었는데 이런 국교였던 불교의 부패로 인해서 신학문이었던 유교를 받아들인 신진사대부들이 불교를 배척하고 유교를 국교로 하는 조선을 세우면서 궁궐도 백성의 눈높이와 마음을 고려해 지붕이 담을 넘어서는 안 된다는 철학으로 평지에 높지 않게 짓고 의복과 문물들이 단조로워지고 시내의 알짜베기 땅 한가운데에 있던 불교 사찰들도 숭유억불정책으로 산골짜기 외진 곳으로 다 쫒겨나서 지금처럼 절들이 산 속에 있게 되는 계기가 됩니다.
I love the moment they're playing altogether. It's beautiful.
so wonderful!
Very harmonious indeed. Love it.
Same here
Agreed so relax from Vietnam 🇻🇳
はい!
The shamisen has a magically eerie sound. It’s beautiful
TheNoobFlutistTM Ear Rape Recorder guess who invented it
Snovaltica who did?
@@thenoobflutisttmearraperec10 According to my research shamisen actually originated from China and it is called 三弦
@@ilikecherries3866 then korean daegeum too. Many korean and japanese culture from china. Because china is oldest ancient
@@somatia350 who really cares who invented what, who influenced who, etc... such petty nonsense. Each culture has its own distinct sound regardless, and all should be appreciated and respected.
The sound of Erhu is so gorgeous.
The look of the Erhu instrumentalist is so gorgeous.
Thank u for appreciating ❤️
Agree
Yeah you should totally see Lang Lang and his father’s performance for piano and Erhu it is so gorgeous
Yeah erhu is so melodic. All of them are beautiful
I can't help but think the lady playing the shamisen is playing rock music lol
Im wheezing
ikr
Lmao
Love u
It's very fun
i feel like the lady playing erhu is enjoying herself
You will notice that players of bowed instruments almost always have the same movement mannerisms as they play, as it helps them. The same for flute players with the swirling movements, plucked stringed instrument players like koto/harp/zither/etc will rock back and forth as its just part of their flow as they play.
Erhu lady is just doing that same thing violinists etc all do.
That Korean woman seemed to be genuinely appreciating the sound of the erhu
The erhu, like the Korean haegeum, was developed in the Qing Dynasty of Manchuria, which accepted and used the instruments of riding people such as Mongolia, and was greatly improved in modern times in the 1930s.
The name erhu itself means that it is a foreign instrument.
@@hanbaedal Er Hu, and especially your haegeum known as 嵇琴(Ji Qin)... Related to this guy 嵇康(Ji Kang)
@@hanbaedal Not foreign anymore when the foreign being fused into one. Chinese society is way hybrid than you think
that lady is really SHREDDING her shamisen like badass
No wonder Japan has so many great guitarists, shredding is in their blood. 😂
This comment is underrated
pls search chinese pipa in youtube. get yourself knowledgeable for good.
@@parishmagnificent5206 :o came from a pipa video of Wu Man and just wow
The erhu, Sound Of Heaven
It is true that we have similar musical instruments in China, Korea, and Japan, but each rhythm and range of notes are very different. We hardly find similarities.
혼자걸어요 emmmmm, it is different, but u cannt say “very different” “hardly find similarities”
@@zoet8651 thank you
Zoe T What do you mean you can’t? “Very different” and “hardly find similarities” are both negative phrases and they mean the same thing, just phrased differently.
That because culture play big in there.. Because of that even using same instrument we will find many different style and tone inside.
Pretty much the same
erhu looks like the cry of the angels
The Erhu seems like a voice itself singing 😱😍❤
Love them 3 💙
When the beautiful Chinese lady starts to play everybody's jaw must drop.my personal favorite is Japanese bcos there music has a dramatic story type.korean sounds multilingual and Chinese definitely traditional as that's where it all started originally!🇨🇳🇰🇵🇰🇷🇯🇵
ironically, Chinese music isn't so traditional but Korean and Japanese are traditional.
@@ytn00b3 What do you mean?
@@dyflin3246 Chinese lost their traditional musical tune so they've revived from their funeral musical tune. LOL You should read how China revived their old music. There's even academic journal on this.
@@ytn00b3 What a bunch of nonsense to say that Chinese lost their traditional musical tune. So as per your silly comment, what is Chinese traditional musical tune? If you don't know anything, stop writing nonsense.
🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳🇯🇵🇯🇵🇯🇵🇰🇷🇰🇷🇰🇷 asian power peace and love
franklin rosevelt just saying like china
@@smyoo8868 China beautiful
👍👍👍
🇯🇵❤🇰🇷❤🇨🇳
East Asian not Asia
That's not all the countrys in Asia..-
I like all the instruments. The sound of Erhu deeply touched my heart. ❤
The sound of shamisen is so satisfying and gorgeous
This is awsome 💗💝😙❤️🥰
I love Chinese traditional music 🧡
I love Japanese traditional music 💙
I love Korean traditional music ❤️
chinese music seems to come straight from the soul
I felt so relaxed from the daegeum performance, was not prepared for that lady to go so hard on that shamisen though..
All the way chinese always been obsessed with chinese and Japanese traditional music. Japanese traditional music sounds like the background music of an ongoing war, while the chinese traditional music sounds like that people were overcoming from the grieving feelings of the outcome of a war, starting for a new beginning. The korean traditional flute sound, sounds like the beginning of harvesting time.
I hope for harmony between Korea, China, and Japan.
No China and Japan“s relationships are bad
@@haijingzhao6419 thats why he's hoping for harmony lmao
@@haijingzhao6419 no shit…and with an attitude like that it will stay that way. Korea and Japan get along just fine, despite what Japan did to them. I don’t understand why China is still holding so many grudges, while other nations are able to let them go and realize it was generations ago.
@@tickytock2853 Thats because the feud between China and Japan happened in the last world War, that was in the 1940s. Some people who were around back then are still alive today. Also you should look up what Japan did to China, mainly Nanjing and Unit 731, those were horrific events no matter which nationality you are. The fact that it happened so recently means there are documents and photos of those two events.
@@henhen7890 I know very well aware of what happened. My wife reminds me everytime i even admire Japanese cars. Lol. Like I said, I don’t understand why grudges can’t be let go. No one still blames the people of Germany today for the acts of their forefathers.
For me, the Chinese instrument has the best sound😍
Which one is Chinese is that old lady one or which onr
The middle one
@@NekookeN thanks
Me too
The erhu is a modified form of a Mongolian musical instrument, and is a modern instrument based on the Mongolian instrument that was established in the Qing Dynasty in Manchuria and improved extensively in the 1930s.
The artist performing ErHu is so cool
OMG now i realized that each music of these 3 countries are really different . japan , korea , china ... they are completely different
Not Really
@@KJ-yv6gy do you mean good or bad?
Bruh, theyre 3 different type of instruments. How could u tell if its really different
@@KJ-yv6gy I hope that the virus will not spread any further and will soon give a cure, I wish your good health
@@KJ-yv6gy hm
This was so beautiful - I especially loved their rendition of Arirang at the end!
The instruments are so unique, but they blend together so nicely
love the perfect harmony when these three instruments are playing together! Erhu always deliveries so much emotions
뭔가 눈감고 들어도 어느 나라인지 알거같은ㅋㅋ..
I have to say. Out of all instruments, the shamisen is the most distinctive to it's country. Hearing one note you already know something Japanese is in the house.
Lol, I have to agree with that!
😂😂😂🤣✅👍
That’s probably because you’re obsessed with Japan and know basically nothing of the others.
they like simplicity
Hell yeah! LOL!!
I love Asian culture so much. Love 🇯🇵 🇨🇳 🇰🇷 from Ireland!!!
Asian countries not only include those three
do you also love Mongolia?
india? thailand? cambodia? malaysia? theres a lot more countries but i think you get my point
@@soda_can732 Why not Vietnam in stead of that Cambodia thing lol
@@soda_can732 difference of asia and east asia
Having a Korean folk song (Arirang) being played on such a variety of instruments was such an interesting rendition.
My dream is to see these three dragon nation to stop bickering and try to get along with one another
Maybe one day😌
@@wolfy6223 hopefully it will
The Dragon, The Phoenix, and The Chrysanthemum based on their Throne.
@@EricChien95 three of them are dragon to me. Ryu, ryong and long
The dragon nation is China
Woah the erhu sounds amazing
Shamisen is so interesting. It's like the instrument is telling a story
Each instrument has its own beauty 🎶 🤍❤️💙
二胡一响起,那感觉就来了,高山流水清泉簌簌,真好
中国のこの楽器大好き
I always love Chinese and Japanese,korean this three is my fav.
Same their culture is just beautiful so beautiful 😍😍
Chinese traditional music melody is the most gorgeous and beautiful.
the performance of the lady playing erhu was so charming
I like all 3 countries instruments, especially that chinese one
Erhuの音大好き。てか、最高
これがアジアンパワーだ
アジアンパワー
lol
terima kasih
ムーンプリズムパワー
Third song was Liang Xiao (Beautiful Evening), love that piece! 💖
Thank you ❤
Amazing traditional music performance, thank you to all of us, who listen to this lovely music, very beautiful colored dresses to * Thank you to all 💓💓💓
臨場感があり、響き渡るような音
壮大なる白頭山の麓を見下ろす雲海
奥行きのある雄大な音色
中原に吹き渡るそよ風から悠久なる歴史
素早く小刻みで軽快、著しい緩急の流れ
玄界灘に吹き荒ぶ嵐からの日本晴れ
きれいな言葉ありがとうございます
Erhu is like telling you a story
I found this video searching a concert called Rokkasen in Thailand back in the 90s of Chinese, Japanese and Korean musicians playing together traditional asian music as well as European Waltz. I knew at the time how special the concert was, there is no place for me to experience it again. I wish I could share how unearthly and heavenly the sound of the harmony was.
Always that erhu melts my heart😢
what a special moments hearing the three instrumets together, like living thousand years ago in some asian countryside 😃, very good players, the chinese girl is gorgeous 😍
These instruments are all very different so I'm confused why they didn't directly compare their equivalent for each country. Well, I pick the Chinese instrument this time. It's a beautiful instrument that I can never tire of hearing.
That being said, the Shamisen has the most distinctive sound. You immediately know Japan's in the house.
the lady on the right has so much passion
I love all the music.
The music of the Three Kingdoms is originally homologous, but there are similarities in their differences
Get emotional only with the chinese erhu, well had its reason: love😊
소리 하나가 각나라를 잘 보여준다 신기하다 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ
징짜 신기
Exactly. I think that's the point. (Korean American who can't write Korean for her life here, haha)
that sophisticated and also nostalgic vibe is over the counter when they do ensemble
I’m so glad nobody is comparing. Thank the lord. Every is beautiful in its own right. Please refrain ur preferences.
But i wished they had performed the same category types of instrument. Like their own flutes, their own strings, their own similar objects. It would’ve been more fair.
I was thinking the same but if they had, there would probably be a lot of trolls fighting over which one's the best so it might be for the best that they're so different so that there's no point of comparison at all.
세국가의 아름다운 악기연주 잘듣고 갑니다 👍😊💓
Erhu二胡❤
Japan and Korea are in sync and China is riding along with them.. Very Awesome!
Lol, whatever you say man.
Wow amazing music
Beautiful 😍
You're not going to see this everyday. Glad to see these ladies from different Asian countries playing music together. Arirang is the no. 1 folk song in Korea. It has gone international and is gaining in popularity.
I love the chinese one i really love it
What a lovely exposé, thanks for sharing this. So lovely to see these instruments of old being played so beautifully.
Sooo cool!
三味線も二胡も대금(デグン?)も全部すごい綺麗な音色だけど、個人的には二胡の音色は川の流れみたいに緩やかに流れていきそうな感じがして一番好きかも。
あと二胡ってモンゴルの馬頭琴にちょっと似てる感じがするw
特別好聽的音樂. 從土耳其送你們愛
优秀
Beautiful
The Shamisen. So powerful, so commanding and so unique. ❤️
感動的。
This is amazing
3 Power of asia! With beautiful traditional music collaboration, its cool!
this is exactly the video i was looking for to help distinguish the traditional sounds between these different regions, thank you!
goosebumps from hearing first song on the daegeum
Wow! The sound of all 3 played together is so beautiful!
Stumbled upon this video but turned out to be a majestic experience to watch this, very beautiful play 😍
This is beautiful, display of hope that once again East Asia can be one some day and we can stop fighting amongst ourselves.
All East Asian traditional instruments are mostly originated from ancient China but have developed into various local types.
True
Not really. they are different. Obviously, due to proximity, there have been cultural sharing. But instruments like the Gayageum have been around for 2000 years. The Shamisen is uniquely Japanese too just as the Daegeum is.
@@dou_june0v037 Nope, the Gayageum is different. As someone coming from an archeological anthropology background with a specialization in Northeast Asia, yes there similarities, but instruments like the Daegeum and Gayageum are unique. The similarities are just from the material. Gayageum is around 2000 years old.
@@SeoWoojin55 shamisen is a variant of sanxian, an ancient Chinese instrument. it was imported from China to Japan at 16th century.
@@SeoWoojin55 I never knew Korea even have 2000 yrs of history
最后那段合奏太棒了,有种穿越回古代的感觉。
Three master artists.
Los tres instrumentos me dan una sensacion de paz .
That shamisen player is actually a former black metal guitarist.
Lmao
Traditional Japanese music tends to have a trance-inducing effect
I can feel that too! It makes me go out in the garden at night and dance like a willow tree with my eyes closed
The music makes Japan sounds so enigmatic and mysterious
Japanese music, as much of its art, has a refined but restrained approach. One can detect the influence of the native religion, Shinto, and the Buddhist import from China, Ch'an,(Zen), in much of the art. Zen became much more pervasive in Japan then China. The Japanese took it to another level, with rock garden, tea ceremonies, poetry, painting and architecture. It was during the Sung Dynasty, that the Ch'an school reached its zenith and influence in China. Which is why the paintings and ceramics from that time are greatly admired by the Japanese. The art had a simplicity and restrained elegance that suffered decline after the Mongol conquest, and after the Mings, by the Manchus. The Japanese continued to retain many of the arts that would be lost in China. So did Korea. Both of these countries have the honor of preserving the oldest extant forms of music in the world. The Chinese music many listen to today is quite modern in relation to its very long history. People need to understand that during the devastation of the wars that occurred during the Ch'ing Dynasty in the 19th century, (Taiping Rebellion and wars with foreign powers),and in the 20th,much of traditional Chinese culture was destroyed. Not to mention the fiasco of the Cultural Revolution, when anything looked at as old or, "feudal," was done away with. Temples, art works, books, sculptures were brazenly destroyed. This orgy of madness and self destruction went on from the mid 60s into the 70s. Much of what one sees in China, are reconstructions or recreations. The Japanese and even the former Hermit Kingdom have done a much better job of preserving true Chinese culture then the Chinese themselves. Theses cultures were greatly impressed with the beauty and sophistication of the T'ang and Sung, when Chinese culture was at its height and prestige.
@@luissantiago8446 is not completely destroyed however, or we would not know any of these thing today......it still very much exist...and in other place like TW, or Singapore, Vitnam
@@nos8141 Did not post that it was completely destroyed, and yes the overseas Chinese communities continued to keep aspects of the culture alive. But much has been lost. When one thinks about what the Taipings destroyed. Westerners don't realize that this was the biggest Civil War in the 19th century. Over 20 million Chinese died in that conflict, and a third of the country was left in ruin. The Ch'ing Dynasty was weakened by it. The Imperial palace in Nanjing was destroyed. When the English and French sent troops to fight yet another war with China, the foreign troops set fire to the Summer Palace outside of Peking. This was a series of palaces, set in gardens, that were amazingly beautiful and held an immense trove of art. The foreign troops looted the palaces of their art works before setting this jewel ablaze. The looting of the palaces and temples continued with the Boxer Rebellion, and Japanese occupation. Chiang Kai Shek and the Nationalists were able to remove an incredible amount of Chinese art that had been stored in the Forbidden City and take it to Taiwan, where it makes up one of the world's greatest collections of Chinese art. The Imperial Palace still has treasures, but not what it once held. Some of the finest Chinese art you'll find is in other countries, like Japan. In Nara, there survives an old wooden structure that is a warehouse specifically designed to withstand heat, humidity and rot. This storehouse contains items perfectly preserved from the T'ang Dynasty, such as musical instruments and game boards. Beautifully executed. None of this survives in China, where archeological digs are making up for what has been destroyed or stolen out of the country. Th mainland Chinese are presently rediscovering their ancient culture, but much of what one sees in Xian, the old capital city or in other locals are restorations. The same applies to ancient music, clothing or ceremonies.
the erhu rlly is beautiful
The Japanese sound makes me feel a ninja will come into my house
The best part is when they play together
美しい…
When these countries play in harmony, there will be peace and beauty.
The Chinese erhu,the best
색으로 따지자면 한국은 확실히 무채색의 느낌 감색의 느낌? 암튼 중국 일본과 달리 화려함보다는 담백하고 맑은 느낌 언뜻보면 소박해보이지만 가만들여다보면 단아하고 우아한 느낌 음악도 그렇고 의상도 그렇고 집이나 전통문양도 그렇고 심지어 여백의 미를 중시하는 문화까지도 다 일맥상통하는 느낌이 있음..
디게 한이 맺혀있는 느끼이라서 애잔하면서도 먹먹해지는 느낌도 있죠😢
그래서 뭘 어째라고 지금은 한국이 젤 좃밥이자나ㅋㅋ
@Ciel
뭔 개븅1신같은 소리야.
@@user-mp6pj3sr2y ㅋㅋㅋ ㄴㄴ 일본망해가는중
@@user-rc9zq1yc7r 반일도 정신병이 맞는데 님처럼 말하는 분들이 흔히 말하는게 조선은 매우 가난하고 백성의 반 이상을 노예로 만들고 나라도 돈이 없고 힘이 없었다. 라는 말을 다들 하는데 조선 후기야 재정이 안 좋았지만 조선이 전체적으로 보면 그렇게 못 산 나라도 아니고 동시대 중진국 이상은 한 국력인데 무슨 꼭 보면 드라마에서 극적인 모습 연출하려고 그린 거지소굴 같은 모습에 탄압 받는 모습으로만 생각하며 말 하는 것도 문제이죠.
백성의 반 이상을 노비로 만들었다. 라는 말도 노비는 국방의 의무와 노역의 의무를 지지않는데 나라의 반 이상을 지배층이 노비로 만든다는 것도 말이 안 되죠.
윗분 말대로 조선이 검소와 검양 단정 단아를 강조한 건 돈이 없고 염색 기술이 없어서 그랬던 것도 아니고 국교를 바꾼게 가장 큰 이유죠.
삼국시대를 거쳐 고려시대까지 1천년이상 이땅의 역대 왕조의 국교였던 불교는 건축 예술 생활양식에서 화려함을 추구하는데(현재의 동남아 불교국들을 보면 쉽게 알 수 있음) 이런 영향으로 조선이전의 궁궐이나 의복이나 문물등이 발굴되는 유물만 봐도 화려함의 결정체고 고려의 궁궐도 만백성이 우러러 불 수 있게 언덕위에 계단식으로 층을 준데다가 건물 자체도 복층으로 크고 높게 만들어 더 웅장해 보이게 지었는데 이런 국교였던 불교의 부패로 인해서 신학문이었던 유교를 받아들인 신진사대부들이 불교를 배척하고 유교를 국교로 하는 조선을 세우면서 궁궐도 백성의 눈높이와 마음을 고려해 지붕이 담을 넘어서는 안 된다는 철학으로 평지에 높지 않게 짓고 의복과 문물들이 단조로워지고 시내의 알짜베기 땅 한가운데에 있던 불교 사찰들도 숭유억불정책으로 산골짜기 외진 곳으로 다 쫒겨나서 지금처럼 절들이 산 속에 있게 되는 계기가 됩니다.
굿👍🏻 뭔가 신비롭다
The heavy Asian flavor, how beautiful and gorgeous to the ear
excelente
It’s so cool and touching , I’m crying and I wanna dance at the same time. China Japan and Korea should be friends,because they are family.
Only the stubborn nationalist japanese stands in the way.
No way bro
@@clementyap1009 yep. Japan and "power/control" always ruins it
One of them will force each other eventually. Japan tried to force china and Korea. At this point, China will try and force Japan eventually.
@@clementyap1009 All three countries have nationalists that are standing in the way, average Korean, Japanese or Chinese could care less.
ooof...the shamisen is so spooky. Love that
i've never heard of the Daegeum before but the creakyness is interesting to lidten to
The daegeum has a buzzing membrane that's unique among flutes.
果然各有特色👍
同一乐器演奏才能区分不同特色吧,日韩演奏的乐器中国又不是没有。
Joseon dynasty(조선왕조) / Edo bakuhu(えどばくふ) / Qing empire(大淸帝國)
Came in 2021 but this is so badass
I like Shamisen sound
Chinaa its the center of instrumental philippines have too