Guqin notation

Guqin notation

The notation of the guqin is a unique form of tablature for the Chinese musical instrument, with a history of over 1,500 years, still in use today.

History

Written qin music did not directly tell what notes were played; instead, it was written in a tablature detailing tuning, finger positions, and stroke technique, thus comprising a step by step method and description of how to play a piece. Some tablatures do indicate notes using the gongche system, or indicate rhythm using dots. The earliest example of the modern shorthand tablature survives from around the twelfth century CE. An earlier form of music notation from the Tang era survives in just one manuscript, dated to the seventh century CE, called Jieshi Diao Youlan 《碣石調幽蘭》 (Solitary Orchid in Stone Tablet Mode). It is written in a longhand form called "wenzi pu" 〔譜〕 (literally "written notation"), said to have been created by Yong Menzhou (雍門周) during the Warring States Period, which gives all the details using ordinary written Chinese characters. Later in the Tang dynasty Cao Rou (曹柔) and others simplified the notation, using only the important elements of the characters (like string number, plucking technique, "hui" number and which finger to stop the string) and combined them into one character notation. This meant that instead of having two lines of written text to describe a few notes, a single character could represent one note, or sometimes as many as nine. This notation form was called "jianzi pu" 〔字譜〕 (literally "reduced notation") and it was a great leap forward for recording qin pieces. It was so successful that from the Ming dynasty onwards, a great many qinpu 〔琴〕 (qin tablature collections) appeared, the most famous and useful being "Shenqi Mipu" (The Mysterious and Marvellous Tablature) compiled by Zhu Quan, the 17th son of the founder of the Ming dynasty ref|SQMP. In the 1960s, Zha Fuxi discovered more than 130 qinpu that contain well over 3360 pieces of written music. Sadly, many qinpu compiled before the Ming dynasty are now lost, and many pieces have remained unplayed for hundreds of years. ref|tab

Development

Major changes in the tablature happened during the Qing period. Before, the recording of the note positions between "hui" were only approximations. For example, to play sol on the seventh string, the position the player must stop is between the 7th and 8th hui. The tablature of Ming times would only say "between 7 and 8" 「七八日()」 or for other positions "below 6" 「六下」 or even say "11" 「十一」 (when the correct position is slightly higher). During the Qing, this was replaced by the decimal system. The space between two hui were split into 10 'fen' 〔〕, so the tablature can indicate the correct position of notes more accurately, so for the examples above, the correct positions are 7.6, 6.2 and 10.8 respectively. Some even went further to split one fen into a further 10 'li' 〔/〕, but since the distance is too minute to affect the pitch to a large degree, it was considered impractical to use. Some people argue that the old system is just as accurate as the new system when qin tuning theory is observed.ref|position Also, these old positions may actually conform to the rules of equally tempered music, with its pitches slightly flatter, such as in the case of 8 for 7.9 and 11 for 10.8. Another main property for this old system is that it requires the player to "feel for the note", just as one would do for any other fretless stringed instrument, be it erhu or violin, instead of relying solely on fixed positions (which pitches can change slightly depending on how the player tunes their qin).

Existing qinpu generally come from private collections or in public libraries throughout China, etc. Those that are available for public purchase are facsimile qinpu printed and bound in the traditional Chinese bookbinding process. More modern qinpu tend to be bound in the normal Western way on modern paper. The format uses qin notation with staff notation and/or jianpu notation.

Modern developments

A number of efforts have been made to further develop qin tablature. A book by Wang Guangqi (王光祈) uses Roman and Arabic numerals to express the information provided by qin tablature. The qin player, Gong Yi, developed a format using staff notation combined with some tablature marks ref|gongyi. Others have tried to write a computer program that will do this. Chen Changlin, a Beijing-based computer scientist and qin player of the Min (Fujian) School, developed the first computer program to encode qin notation from ancient tablature sources. ref|notation

ee also

*Qinpu

References

:"Please see:" References section in the guqin article for a full list of references used in all qin related articles.

Footnotes

# Zhu, Quan. "Shenqi Mipu" 【神竒秘譜】.
# Zha, Fuxi. "Cunjian Guqin Qupu Jilan" 【存見古琴曲譜輯覽】. Pages 3-44.
# Beijing Guqin Research Association. "Beijing Qin-xun" 【北京琴讯】. March 2001 (volume 71). Pages 1, 2 and 4.
# Gong, Yi. Guqin Yanzhoufa 【古琴演奏法】. Pages 38-42.
# Qin music notation web generator (2005) Project Title: Chinese music instrument: 'Qin' notation web generator (http://web.pdx.edu/~candy/qin/index.html, 29 July 2006)


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Guqin — Classification Chinese Silk (絲) …   Wikipedia

  • Guqin playing technique — The playing techniques of the guqin Chinese zither is sometimes called fingerings. There is a large number of techniques employed in playing the qin, but unlike other instruments, these are rather complex and full of symbolism.Basic soundsThe… …   Wikipedia

  • Musical notation — Music markup redirects here. For the XML application, see Music Markup Language. Hand written musical notation by J. S. Bach: beginning of the Prelude from the Suite for Lute in G minor BWV 995 (transcription of Cello Suite No. 5, BWV 1011) BR… …   Wikipedia

  • List of guqin literature — This is a list of literature for the guqin. Qin literature should be distinguished from qinpu which contains music tablature of some sort. There are a number of ancient sources that discuss qin lore, qin theory and general qin literature. Some of …   Wikipedia

  • Contemporary guqin players — Contemporary guqin player Wu Ziying This is a list of contemporary players of the guqin of the 20th and 21st centuries. It attempts to list most notable players (i.e. if they are publicly known and/or have made a significant contribution to qin… …   Wikipedia

  • North American Guqin Association — The North American Guqin Association (Chinese: 北美琴社; often abbreviated to NAGA) is a guqin society based in the State of California, in the United States, which serves guqin players on the West Coast of the United States. Of the three major qin… …   Wikipedia

  • Four Arts of the Chinese Scholar — The Four Arts of the Chinese Scholar, otherwise known as siyi (), is a term used to describe four main requirements of the Chinese scholar gentleman. They are qin ( qin), qi ( qi), shu ( calligraphy) and hua ( painting). Origin of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Jieshi Diao Youlan — (碣石調幽蘭) means Solitary Orchid in the Stone Tablet Mode or just Solitary Orchid ( Secluded Orchid or Elegant Orchid in some translations). It is the name of a piece of music or melody for the guqin which was written before AD 908, and is possibly… …   Wikipedia

  • Yangqin — A yangqin on a stand The trapezoidal yangqin (simplified Chinese: 扬琴; traditional Chinese: 揚琴; pinyin: yángqín) is a Chinese hammered dulcimer, originally from Middle East and Persia (modern day Iran). It used to b …   Wikipedia

  • Ancient music — Musical eras Prehistoric Ancient (before AD 500) Early (500 – 1760) Common practice (1600 – 1900) Modern and contemporary (1900 – present) Ancient music is m …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”