Current location - Music Encyclopedia - NetEase Cloud Music - Which great god knows the northeast Liaoning drum music in China folk music? Please recommend books or other publications in this field.
Which great god knows the northeast Liaoning drum music in China folk music? Please recommend books or other publications in this field.
Liaoning preaches all over the province, but the South China Sea War, Niuzhuang, Nantai, Anshan and Shenyang are the most popular places.

Most of the performers are professional "drum music classes" or "drum music rooms" and are employed by people. Semi-professional trumpeter, engaged in a productive labor. Mainly used in folk weddings and funerals.

generally speaking, there are six advocates in Liaoning province. The wind instruments are small suona (five people, but two big suona are used for funeral), and the percussion instruments are big drums, small cymbals (also known as small cymbals and pots), fine music (also known as fun, hanging bells) and bronze drums (also known as gongs).

The suona songs advocated in Liaoning can be divided into four categories: Han Chui, Dapaiqu, Xiaopaiqu and Shuiqu.

Han Blowing Songs include Introduction to Han Blowing, Love Song of Big Words, Love Song of Small Words, Song of Big Sky, Song of Small Sky, Oriole, Backing the Mountain, Four Tunes, Bell and Drum Music, Jinsha Tan, Jin Zijing, Nanzheng Palace and so on.

The big brand songs include Si Lai, Yan Er Luo, Yi Hua, Partridge, Si Po, San Feng, Sophomore Fan, your legend, Yi Zhi Mei, Wheat Seed and so on.

Xiaopaiqu includes Liu Qingniang, Hai Qingge, Lao Ba Ban, Xiao Kai Men, Yi Jiang Feng, Sacrificing a Gun, Taiping Tune, Gong Zhi Shang, Victory Order, Crying for Heaven and so on.

Water songs include Eight Dragons, Golden Bell Lock, Hundred Birds Langfeng, Tune Zi, Taiping Spring, Cinnamomum cassia, Laoguan Tune, Liangzhou, Dayou Lake, Luanzhou and so on.

In addition to the folk flower-adding technique, the melody of drum-blowing music in Liaoning uses the method of borrowing words and transferring tones. Borrowing words is to change the tone and tonality of Qupai by regularly changing the fingers of certain sounds in the repeated variations of Qupai.

Personally, I recommend the third issue of China Music in 1995, and it may still be sold in JD.COM.