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Chinese Music |
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A Prayer for Ethnic Folk Songs
The three-year "Campaign for Preserving China's Ethnic Folk Songs" was concluded in Beijing on March 16, 2004 during the "Fruits of Chinese Ethnic Folk Song Preservation" press conference. |
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A Voice From Afar: Uyghur Music
The most celebrated music in Xinjiang today is Uygur folk music, which has inherited the fine traditions of the ancient music of Qiuci, Gaochang (Karahoja),Yizhou, Shule and Yutian. |
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Campus Ballads
Since the 1990s, under the influence of outside cultures, there has existed a new turn of cultural transformation in the Chinese mainland. |
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The cream of China's girl bands
When talking about China's female bands, Twelve Girls Band may be the first that comes to mind. But in fact, Red Poppy Ladies' Percussion was the first professional female band established in China.
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Naxi Ancient Music
The Naxi are an ethnic group inhabiting the foothills of the Himalayas in the northwestern and southwestern parts of Southwest China's Yunnan and Sichuan provinces respectively. |
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Grand Songs of the Dong Ethnic Minority Group
According to the Dong people in southwestern China, "The Han people, having their own autography, pass down books, while the Dong people, without an autography, pass down songs from generation to generation. |
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wu songs
Wu Songs refer to folk songs sung in local dialect, including shange (mountain songs), xiaodiao (small tunes), and haozi (work songs), popular in the whole Yangtze River Delta. |
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