Yang Hongji, Luo Wen, and Samsara Band have all sung "Manjianghonghong". If it is recited, of course it is best to accompany it with folk music, such as Chinese classics played on folk instruments such as guzheng or dulcimer. I personally think "The Wild Geese Falling on the Sand" is more suitable. You can watch the rest by yourself!
In the Ming Dynasty, this song was called "Wild Geese Falling on the Pingsha". The music score was first published in the "Guyin Zhengzong" musical score collection. The melody of "Goose Falling on the Flat Sand" is melodious and smooth. Through the disappearing and reappearing calls of wild geese, it depicts the eye-catching scene of a flock of wild geese circling in the sky. "Tianwenge Qinpu" writes: "The autumn air is crisp, the wind is calm, the sand is flat, the clouds travel thousands of miles, and the sky is flying. It borrows the distant aspirations of the swans. It is also a person who writes about the ambition of the Yishi." Although "Pingsha Luoyan" It appeared relatively late, but it is one of the most widely circulated works in the past 300 years. There are nearly a hundred kinds of piano scores publishing this piece. The reason why it is widely circulated is not only that the melody is smooth and beautiful, but also because of its novel and unique expression techniques, which are easy for the audience to understand.