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Chinese Music |
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Meihua Sannong |
| Meihua Sannong is one of the earliest and most famous pieces of Chinese ancient music. Its origin went back to as early as the Eastern Jin Dynasty (317-420), in which period lived a famous general and musician named Huan Yi. |
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Mongolian Haolaibao
Haolaibao, also called Haolibao, is a singing and storytelling form of Quyi popular with the Mongolian nationality, and dates back to the 12th century. |
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Tail-burnt Guqin
Among the Four Great Guqin in Chinese music history, the one named Tail-burnt has its interesting legend. |
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Role of Sheng
The roles on the Chinese opera stage fall into four categories -- Sheng, Dan, Jing and Chou. These roles have the natural features of age and sex, as well as social status, and are artificially exaggerated by makeup, costume and gestures. |
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Henan Zhuizi
This form of Dagu originated in Henan and has a history of over 100 years. It became popular in Henan, Shandong and Anhui provinces as well as in the cities of Tianjin and Beijing. |
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Embroidery of Golden Phoenix
Miao Jin Feng (Embroidery of Golden Phoenix) is a feature-length traditional piece of Suzhou Tanci. According to playbooks handed down from early days, the piece was perhaps created before the Guangxu reign (1875-1909) in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). |
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The Story of Wu Song
The Story of Wu Song is one of representative works of Shandong Kuaishu by noted Shuochang artist Gao Yuanjun. |
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