The '' (; ; literally "ancient stringed instrument") is the modern name for a plucked seven-string
Chinese musical instrument of the
zither family (ä¸è¯çµƒæ¨‚/ä¸åŽå¼¦ä¹å™¨). It has been played since
ancient times, and has traditionally been favored by
scholars and
literati as an instrument of great subtlety and refinement, as highlighted by the quote ã€Œå£«ç„¡æ•…ä¸æ’¤ç´ç‘Ÿã€, meaning "a gentleman does not part with his ''qin'' or ''
se'' without good reason,"
[1] as well as being associated with the ancient Chinese
philosopher Confucius. It is sometimes referred to by the Chinese as 「國樂之父/国ä¹ä¹‹çˆ¶ã€, meaning "the father of Chinese music" or 「è–人之å™/圣人之器ã€, meaning "the instrument of the sages".
Traditionally the instrument was called simply 'qin' 「ç´ã€, which can also be written as 「ç¹ã€, 「ç¡ã€ or other ancient forms,
[2] but by the twentieth century the term had come to be applied to many other musical instruments as well. The
yangqin 「ç´/扬ç´ã€ hammered dulcimer, the
huqin 「ç´ã€ family of bowed string instruments, and the Western
piano () are examples of this usage, so the prefix "gu-" 「〠(meaning "ancient") was added for clarification. It can also be called 'qixianqin' 「七絃ç´ã€ ("seven-stringed instrument"). The guqin is not to be confused with the
guzheng (「å¤/å¤ç〠"ancient stringed-instrument (with moveable bridges)"), another Chinese long zither also without
frets, but with moveable
bridges under each string. Because
Robert Hans van Gulik's famous book about the qin is called ''The Lore of the Chinese Lute'', the guqin is sometimes inaccurately called a
lute.
[3] Other incorrect classifications, mainly from music
compact discs, include "
harp" or "table-harp".
The guqin is a very quiet instrument, with a range of about four
octaves, and its open strings are tuned in the
bass register. Its lowest pitch is about two octaves below
middle C, or the lowest note on the
cello. Sounds are produced by open strings, stopped strings, and
harmonics. The use of
glissando — sliding tones — gives it a sound reminiscent of a
pizzicato cello, fretless
double bass or a
slide guitar. the qin is also capable of over 119 harmonics, of which 91 are most commonly used. By tradition the qin originally had five strings, but ancient qin-like instruments with 10 or more strings have been found. The modern form has been standardized for about two
millennia. A number of players and listeners have commented that qin music sounds similar to
Blues music in one way or another, but it should be noted that there are also many differences.
History
Main articles: Guqin history
Legend has it that the qin, the most revered of all Chinese musical instruments, has a history of about 5,000 years. This legend states that the legendary figures of China's
pre-history —
Fuxi,
Shennong and
Huang Di, the "
Yellow Emperor" — were involved in its creation. Nearly almost all qin books and tablature collections published prior to the twentieth century state this as the factual origins of the qin,
[4] although this is now presently viewed as
mythology. It is mentioned in Chinese writings dating back nearly 3,000 years, and related instruments have been found in
tombs from about 2,500 years ago. The exact origins of the qin is still a very much continuing subject of
debate over the past few
decades.
In 1977, a recording of "Liu Shui" ã€æµæ°´ã€‘ (Flowing Water, as performed by Guan Pinghu, one of the best qin players of the 20th century) was chosen to be included in the
Voyager Golden Record, a gold-plated LP recording containing music from around the world, which was sent into outer space by
NASA on the
Voyager 1 and
Voyager 2 spacecrafts. It is the longest excerpt included on the disc. In 2003, guqin music was proclaimed as one of the
Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity by
UNESCO.
[5]
Guqin literature
Main articles: List of guqin literature
There are a number of ancient sources that discuss qin
lore, qin theory and general qin literature. Some of these books are available inserted into certain ''qinpu'' (qin tablature collections). The basic contents of qin literature is mainly essays discussing and describing the nature of qin music, the theory behind the notes and tones, the method of correct play, the history of qin music, lists of mentions in literature, etc. The detail can be very concise to extremely detailed and thorough. Some are mostly philosophical or artistic musings, others are scientific and technical.
Schools, societies and players

The famous painting "Ting Qin Tu" (è½ç´åœ–, ''Listening to the Qin''), by the Song emperor Huizong (1082–1135)
As with any other musical tradition, there are differences in ideals and interaction between different people. Therefore, there exists different schools and societies which transmit these different ideas and artistic traditions.
Historical schools
Main articles: Qin schools
Because of the difference in
geography in China, many qin schools known as ''qin pai'' (ç´æ´¾) developed over the centuries. Such schools generally formed around areas where qin activity was greatest.
Some schools have come and gone, some have off-shoots (such as the off-shot of Zhucheng school, the Mei'an school). Often, the school is originated from a single person, such as the Wu school which is named after the late
Wu Zhaoji. The style can vary considerably between schools; some are very similar, yet others are very distinct. The differences are often in interpretation of the music. Northern schools tends to be more vigorous in technique than Southern schools. But in modern terms, the distinction between schools and styles is often blurred because a single player may learn from many different players from different schools and absorb each of their styles. This is especially so for conservatory trained players. People from the same school trained under the same master may have different individual styles (such as
Zhang Ziqian and
Liu Shaochun of the Guangling school).
Guqin societies
Main articles: List of guqin societies
It should be noted that there is a difference between qin schools and qin societies. The former concerns itself with transmission of a style, the latter concerns itself with performance. The qin society will encourage meetings with fellow qin players in order to play music and maybe discuss the nature of the qin. Gatherings like this is called
yajis, or "elegant gatherings", which take place once every month or two. Sometimes, societies may go on excursions to places of natural beauty to play qin, or attend . They may also participate in
competitions or
research. Of course, societies do not have to have a strict structure to adhere to; it could mostly be on a leisurely basis. The main purpose of qin societies is to promote and play qin music. It is often a good opportunity to
network and learn to play the instrument, to ask questions and to receive answers.
Players
Many artists down through the ages have played the instrument, and the instrument was a favourite of scholars. Certain melodies are also associated with famous figures, such as Confucius and Qu Yuan. Some emperors of China also had a liking to the qin, including the
Song dynasty emperor, Huizong, as clearly seen in his own painting of himself playing the qin in "Ting Qin Tu" (è½ç´åœ–, ''Listening to the Qin'').
[6]
Historical
★
Confucius å”å: Philosopher, 551-479 BCE, associated with the piece ''Kongzi Duyi'' 《å”å讀易》, ''Weibian Sanjue'' 《韋編三絕/韦编三ç»ã€‹ and ''Youlan'' 《幽è˜/幽兰》.
★
Bo Ya 伯牙: Qin player of the
Spring and Autumn Period, associated with the piece ''Gao Shan'' 《高山》 and ''Liu Shui'' ã€Šæµæ°´ã€‹.
★
Zhuang Zi 莊å: Daoist philosopher of the
Warring States Period, associated with the piece ''Zhuang Zhou Mengdie'' 《莊周蒙è¶ã€‹ and ''Shenhua Yin'' 《神化引》.
★
Qu Yuan 屈原 (340-278 BCE): Poet of the
Warring States Period, associated with the piece ''Li Sao'' 《離騷》.
★
Cai Yong 蔡邕:
Han musician, author of ''Qin Cao'' ã€ç´æ“】.
★
Cai Wenji 蔡文姬: Cai Yong's daughter, associated with the piece ''Hujia Shiba-pai'' 《胡笳åå…«æ‹ã€‹, etc.
★
Sima Xiangru å¸é¦¬ç›¸å¦‚: Han poet, 179-117 BCE.
★
Zhuge Liang 諸葛亮 (181–234): Chinese military leader in the
Three Kingdoms, one legend has him playing guqin calmly outside his fort while scaring off the enemy attackers.
★
Xi Kang 嵇康: Sage of the Bamboo Grove, musician and poet, writer of ''Qin Fu'' ã€ç´è³¦ã€‘.
★
Li Bai æŽç™½: Tang poet, 701–762.
★
Bai Juyi 白居易: Tang poet, 772–846.
★
Song Huizong 宋徽宗: Song emperor famous for his patronage of the arts, had a ''Wanqin Tang'' 『è¬ç´å ‚〠("10,000 Qin Hall") in his palace.
★
Guo Chuwang éƒæ¥šæœ›: Patriot at the end of the Song Dynasty, composer of the piece ''Xiaoxiang Shuiyun'' 《瀟湘水雲/潇湘水云》.
The classical collections such as ''Qin Shi'', ''Qinshi Bu'' and ''Qinshi Xu'' include
biographies of hundreds more players.
[7]
Contemporary
Main articles: Contemporary guqin players
Contemporary qin players extend from the early twentieth century to the present. More so than in the past, such players tend to have many different pursuits and
occupations other than qin playing. There are only a few players who are paid to exclusively play and research the guqin professionally and nothing else. Qin players can also be well-versed in other cultural pursuits, such as the arts. Or they can do independent research on music subjects. Often, players may play other instruments (not necessary Chinese) and give recitals or talks.
Performance

The note range of a qin
In the
performance and playing of the qin, the player will use a variety of
techniques to utilise the full potential of the instrument. They would read the specialist and unique tablature that was developed over the centuries and amass a
repertoire of
popular and ancient tunes for the qin.
Playing technique
Main articles: Guqin playing technique
The music of the qin can be categorised as three distinctively different "sounds." The first is ''san yin'' 〔音〕, which means "scattered sounds." This is produced by plucking the required string to sound an open note . The second is ''fan yin'' 〔音〕, or "floating sounds." These are
harmonics, in which the player lightly touches the string with one or more fingers of the left hand at a position indicated by the ''hui'' dots, pluck and lift, creating a crisp and clear sound . The third is ''an yin'' 〔音 / 音 / 音 / 音〕, or "stopped sounds." This forms the bulk of most qin pieces and requires the player to press on a string with a finger or thumb of the left hand until it connects with the surface board, then pluck. Afterwards, the musician's hand often slides up and down, thereby modifying the pitch. This technique is similar to that of playing a
slide guitar across the player's lap, however, the technique of the qin is very varied and utilises the whole hand, whilst a slide guitar only has around 3 or 4 main techniques .
According to the book, ''Cunjian Guqin Zhifa Puzi Jilan'', there are around 1,070 different finger techniques used for the qin, with or without names. It is therefore, the only instrument in Chinese music, or even Western music, which uses the most finger techniques.
[8] Most are obsolete, but around 50 or so are sufficient to know in modern practice.
The above four figures are from an old handbook.[9]
Tablature and notation

First section of Youlan, showing the name of the piece: 《碣石調幽è˜ç¬¬äº”》 "Jieshi Diao Youlan No.5", the preface describing the piece's origins, and the tablature in longhand form.
Main articles: Guqin notation
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è˜ã€‹ (Solitary Orchid in Stone Tablet Mode). It is written in a
longhand form called ''wenzi pu'' 〔èœã€• (literally "written notation"), said to have been created by Yong Menzhou (é›é–€å‘¨) 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'' 〔å—èœã€• (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' 〔ç´ã€• (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.
[10] 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.
[11]
Repertoire

The ''Qinxue Rumen'' ã€ç´å¸å…¥é–€ã€‘ (1864) tablature has dots and
gongche notation next to the qin tablature to indicate beats and notes.
Qin pieces are usually around three to eight minutes in length, with the longest being "Guangling San" 《廣陵散》, which is 22 minutes long. Other famous pieces include "Liu Shui" ã€Šæµæ°´ã€‹ (Flowing Water), "Yangguan San Die" 《陽關三疊/阳关三å 》 (Three Refrains on the Yang Pass Theme), "Meihua San Nong" 《梅花三弄》 (Three Variations on the
Plum Blossom Theme), "Xiao Xiang Shui Yun" 《瀟湘水雲》 (Mist and Clouds over the Xiao and Xiang Rivers), and "Pingsha Luo Yan" 《平沙è½é›ã€‹ (Wild Geese Descending on the Sandbank). The average player will generally have a
repertoire of around ten pieces which they will aim to play very well, learning new pieces as and when they feel like it or if the opportunity arises. Players mainly learn popular well transcribed versions, often using a recording as a reference. In addition to learning to play established or ancient pieces very well, highly skilled qin players may also
compose or
improvise, although the player must be very good and extremely familiar with the instrument to pull off successfully. A number of qin melodies are
program music depicting the natural world.
Transcription
'Dapu' 〔打èœã€• is the
transcribing of old tablature into a playable form. Since qin tablature does not indicate
note value,
tempo or
rhythm, the player must work it out for him/herself. Normally, qin players will learn the rhythm of a piece through a teacher or master. They sit facing one another, with the student copying the master. The tablature will only be consulted if the teacher is not sure of how to play a certain part. Because of this, traditional qinpu do not indicate them (though near the end of the Qing dynasty, a handful of qinpu had started to employ various rhythm indicating devices, such as dots). If one did not have a teacher, then one had to work out the rhythm by themselves. But it would be a mistake to assume that qin music is devoid of rhythm and melody. By the 20th century, there had been attempts to try to replace the "jianzi pu" notation, but so far, it has been unsuccessful; since the 20th century, qin music is generally printed with
staff notation above the qin tablature. Because qin tablature is so useful, logical, easy, and the fastest way (once the performer knows how to read the notation) of learning a piece, it is invaluable to the qin player and cannot totally be replaced (just as staff notation cannot be replaced for Western instruments, because they developed a notation system that suited the instruments well).
There is a saying that goes "a short piece requires three months [of dapu to complete], and a long piece requires three years". In actual practice, it needn't be that long to dapu a piece, but suggests that the player will have not only memorised the piece off by heart, but also have their fingering, rhythm and timing corrected. And afterwards, the emotion must be put into the piece. Therefore, it could be said that it really does require three months or years to finish dapu of a piece in order for them to play it to a very high standard.
Rhythm in qin music
It has already been discussed that qin music has a rhythm, and that it is only vaguely indicated in the tablature.
[12] Though there is an amount of guesswork involved, the tablature has clues to indicate rhythm, such as repeating motifs, indication of phrases or how the notation is arranged. Throughout the history of the qinpu, we see many attempts to indicate this rhythm more explicitly, involving devices like dots to make beats. Probably, one of the major projects to regulate the rhythm to a large scale was the compilers of the ''Qinxue Congshu'' tablature collection of 1910s to 1930s. The construction of the written tablature was divided into two columns. The first was further divided into about three lines of a grid, each line indicating a varied combination of lyrics, gongche tablature, se tablature, pitch, and/or beats depending on the score used. The second column was devoted to qin tablature.
Western composers have noticed that the rhythm in a piece of qin music can change; once they seem to have got a beat, the beats change. This is due to the fact that qin players may use some free rhythm in their playing. Whatever beat they use will depend on the emotion or the feeling of the player, and how he interprets the piece. However, some melodies have sections of fixed rhythm which is played the same way generally. The main theme of ''Meihua Sannong'', for example, uses this. Some sections of certain melodies require the player to play faster with force to express the emotion of the piece. Examples include the middle sections of ''Guangling San'' and ''Xiaoxiang Shuiyun''. Other pieces, such as ''Jiu Kuang'' has a fixed rhythm throughout the entire piece.
Generally, qin melodies sound better with a rhythm and the composers had that in mind when creating pieces.
Organology
Whilst the qin followed a certain grammar of
acoustic in its construction, its external form could and did take on a huge amount of variation, whether it be from the embellishments or even the basic structure of the instrument. Qin tablatures from the
Song era onwards have catalogued a plethora of qin forms. All, however, obey very basic rules of acoustics and
symbolism of form. The qin uses strings of
silk or
metal-
nylon and is tuned in accordance to traditional principles.
Construction
Main articles: Guqin construction
According to tradition, the qin originally had five strings, representing the five elements of metal, wood, water, fire and earth. Later, in the
Zhou dynasty,
Zhou Wen Wang (周文王) added a sixth string to mourn his son,
Bo Yihou (伯邑考). His successor,
Zhou Wu Wang, added a seventh string to motivate his troops into battle with the Shang. The thirteen ''hui'' 『〠on the surface represent the 13 months of the year (the extra 13th is the 'leap month' in the
lunar calendar). The surface board is round to represent Heaven and the bottom board flat to represent earth. The entire length of the qin (in
Chinese measurements) is 3 ''chi'', 6 ''cun'' and 5 ''fen'' 「ã€; representing the 365 days of the year (though this is just a standard since qins can be shorter or longer depending on the period's measurement standard or the maker's preference). Each part of the qin has meaning, some more obvious, like "dragon pool" 『/é¾™æ± ã€ and "phoenix pond" 『/凤沼ã€.
Strings
Main articles: Guqin strings
ã€, 〖上音牌ç´å¼¦ã€— Shangyin Shanghai Conservatorie Quality Qin Strings (metal-nylon), 〖虎丘å¤ç´çµƒã€— Huqiu Silk Strings]]
Until the
Cultural Revolution, the guqin's strings were always made of various thicknesses of twisted
silk 『/ä¸ã€, but since then most players use modern nylon-flatwound
steel strings 『鋼絲/é’¢ä¸ã€. This was partly due to the scarcity of high quality silk strings and partly due to the newer strings' greater durability and louder tone.
Silk strings are made by gathering a prescribed number of strands of silk thread, then twisting them tightly together. The twisted cord of strings is then wrapped around a frame and immersed in a vat of liquid composed of a special mixture of natural
glue that binds the strands together. The strings is taken out and left to dry, before being cut into the appropriate length. The top thicker strings (i.e. strings one to four) are further wrapped in a thin silk thread, coiled around the core to make it smoother. According to ancient manuals, there are three distinctive gauges of thickness that one can make the strings. The first is ''taigu'' 〖太å¤ã€— [Great Antiquity] which is the standard gauge, the ''zhongqing'' ã€–ä¸æ¸…〗 [Middle Clarity] is thinner, whilst the ''jiazhong'' ã€–åŠ é‡ã€— [Added Thickness] is thicker. According to the ''Yugu Zhai Qinpu'', ''zhongqing'' is the best.
Although most contemporary players use nylon-wrapped metal strings, some argue that nylon-wrapped metal strings cannot replace silk strings for their refinement of tone. Further, it is the case that nylon-wrapped metal strings can cause damage to the wood of old qins. Many traditionalists feel that the sound of the fingers of the left hand sliding on the strings to be a distinctive feature of qin music. The modern nylon-wrapped metal strings were very smooth in the past, but are now slightly modified in order to capture these sliding sounds.
Traditionally, the strings were wrapped around the goose feet 『ã€,
[13] but there has been a device that has been invented, which is a block of wood attached to the goose feet, with pins similar to those used to tune the
guzheng protruding out at the sides, so one can string and tune the qin using a tuning
wrench. This is good for those who lack the physical strength to pull and add tension to the strings when wrapping the ends to the goose feet. However, the tuning device looks rather unsightly and thus many qin players prefer the traditional manner of tuning; many also feel that the strings should be firmly wrapped to the goose feet in order that the sound may be "grounded" into the qin.
Tuning
Main articles: Guqin tunings
To string a qin, one traditionally had to tie a butterfly knot (''shengtou jie'' 『/è‡å¤´ç»“ã€) at one end of the string, and slip the string through the twisted cord (''rongkou'' 『/绒扣ã€) which goes into holes at the head of the qin and then out the bottom through the
tuning pegs (''zhen'' 『/轸ã€). The string is dragged over the bridge (''yueshan'' 『岳山ã€), across the surface board, over the nut (''longyin'' 『é¾é½¦ã€ dragon gums) to the back of the qin, where the end is wrapped around one of two legs (''fengzu'' 『鳳足〠"phoenix feet" or ''yanzu'' 『é›è¶³ã€ "geese feet"). Afterwards, the strings are fine tuned using the tuning pegs (sometimes,
rosin is used on the part of the tuning peg that touches the qin body to stop it from slipping, especially if the qin is tuned to higher pitches). The most common tuning, "zheng diao" 〈æ£èª¿ã€‰, is
pentatonic: '5 6' 1 2 3 5 6 (which can be also played as '1 2 4 5 6' 1 2) in the traditional Chinese number system or
jianpu 〔簡èœ/简谱〕 (i.e. 1=do, 2=re, etc). Today this is generally interpreted to mean C D F G A c d, but this should be considered 'sol la do re mi' sol la, since historically the qin was not tuned to absolute pitch. Other tunings are achieved by adjusting the tension of the strings using the tuning pegs at the head end. Thus ''manjiao diao'' 〈慢角調〉 ("slackened third string") gives '1 2 3 5 6' 1 2 and ''ruibin diao'' 〈蕤賔調/蕤宾调〉 ("raised fifth string") gives '1 2 4 5 7' 1 2, which is transposed to '2 3 5 6' 1 2 3.
Playing context
The guqin is nearly always used a
solo instrument, as its quietness of tone means that it cannot compete with the sounds of most other instruments or an
ensemble. It can, however, be played together with a ''
xiao'' (end-blown bamboo flute), with other qin, or played while singing. In old times, the ''
se'' (a long zither with movable bridges and 25 strings, similar to the Japanese
koto) was frequently used in duets with the qin. Sadly, the ''se'' has not survived into this century, though duet tablature scores for the instruments are preserved in a few ''qinpu'', and the master qin player Wu Jinglüe was one of only a few in the twentieth century who knew how to play it together with qin in duet. Lately there has been a trend to use other instruments to accompany the qin, such as the ''
xun'' (ceramic ocarina), ''
pipa'' (four-stringed pear-shaped lute), ''
dizi'' (transverse bamboo flute), and others for more experimental purposes.
In order for an instrument to accompany the qin, its sound must be mellow and not overwhelm the qin. Thus, the ''xiao'' generally used for this purpose is one pitched in the
key of F, known as ''qin xiao'' 「ç´ç°«ã€, which is narrower than an ordinary ''xiao''. If one sings to qin songs (which is rare nowadays) then one should not sing in an
operatic or
folk style as is common in China, but rather in a very low pitched and deep way; and the range in which one should sing should not exceed one and a half octaves. The style of singing is similar to that used to recite
Tang poetry. To enjoy qin songs, one must learn to become accustomed to the eccentric style some players may sing their songs to, like in the case of Zha Fuxi.
Traditionally, the qin was played in a quiet
studio or
room by oneself, or with a few friends; or played outdoors in places of outstanding natural beauty. Nowadays, many qin players perform at
concerts in large concert halls, almost always, out of necessity, using electronic pickups or
microphones to amplify the sound. Many qin players attend
yajis, at which a number of qin players, music lovers, or anyone with an interest in
Chinese culture can come along to discuss and play the qin. In fact, the yaji originated as a
multi-media gathering involving the
four arts: qin,
chess,
calligraphy, and
painting.
Ritual use of the qin
Being an instrument of the scholars, the qin is also played in a ritual context, especially in
yayue in China, and
aak in Korea. The
National Center for Korean Traditional Performing Arts of
Munmyo jeryeak (Confucian ritual music) uses the last two surviving aak melodies from the importation of yayue from the
Song Dynasty emperor
Huizong in
1116 using the ''seul'' (se) and ''geum'' (guqin). In China, the qin was still in use in ritual ceremonies of the imperial court, such can be seen in the court paintings of imperial sacrifices of the Qing court (e.g. ''The Yongzheng Emperor Offering Sacrifices at the Altar of the God of Agriculture'' ã€Šé›æ£ç¥å…ˆè¾²å£‡åœ–》, 1723–35).
[14]
Qin aesthetics
When the qin is played, a number of
aesthetic elements are involved. The first is
musicality. In the second section of "Pingsha Luoyan", for example, the initial few bars contain a ''nao''
vibrato followed by a phase of sliding up and down the string, even when the sound has already become inaudible . The average person trained in music may question whether this is really "
music". Normally, some players would pluck the string very lightly to create a very quiet sound. For some players, this plucking isn't necessary. Instead of trying to force a sound out of the string one should allow the natural sounds emit from the strings. Some players say that the sliding on the string even when the sound has disappeared is a distinctive feature in qin music. It creates a "space" or "void" in a piece, playing without playing, sound without sound. In fact, when the viewer looks at the player sliding on the string without sounds, the viewer automatically "fills in the notes" with their minds. This creates a connection between player, instrument and listener. This, of course, cannot happen when listening to a recording, as one cannot see the performer. It can also be seen as impractical in recording, as the player would want to convey sound as much as possible towards a third audience. But in fact, there is sound, the sound coming from the fingers sliding on the string. With a really good qin, silk strings, and a perfectly quiet environment, all the tones can be sounded. And since the music is more player oriented than listener oriented, and the player knows the music, he/she can hear it even if the sound is not there. And with silk strings the sliding sound might be called the
qi or "life force" of the music. The really empty sounds are the pauses between notes. However, if one cannot create a sound that can be heard when sliding on a string, it is generally acceptable to lightly pluck the string to create a very quiet sound.
[15]
Guqin in popular culture

Xu Kuanghua playing an ancient qin in the film, ''Hero''.
Being a symbol of high culture, the qin has inevitably been used as a prop in much of Chinese popular culture to varying degrees of accuracy. One can find references to the qin in a variety of media, most notably
television serials and
film. Mostly, the
actors may not know how to play the instrument and mime it to a recorded piece by a qin player who may have recorded it specifically for the project. At other times, the music that is mimed to is
guzheng music, rather than qin music. We also see the rather stereo-typical hybrids of qin and zheng pseudo-instruments of ''Kung Fu Hustle'', to the more faithful and loving representation of the qin in
Zhang Yimou film ''
Hero'' (英雄). In the latter case, Xu Kuanghua plays an ancient version of the qin in the courtyard scene in which Nameless (Jet Li) and Long Sky (Donnie Yen) play ''
go''. He in fact mimes it to the music composed which is actually played by Liu Li, formerly a professor at the
Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing.
[16] It is suggested that Xu made the qin himself.
[17]
The qin is also used in older Chinese novels, such as
Cao Xueqin's ''
Dream of the Red Chamber'' and various others.
Related instruments
The Japanese
ichigenkin 「一絃ç´ã€, a
monochord zither, is believed to be derived from the qin. The qin handbook ''Lixing Yuanya'' (ã€ç†æ€§å…ƒé›…】, 1618) includes some melodies for a one-string qin, and the ''Wuzhi Zhai Qinpu'' contains a picture and description of such an instrument.
[18] The modern ichigenkin apparently first appeared in Japan just after that time. However, the ''honkyoku'' 〔本曲〕 (standard repertoire) of the ichigenkin today most closely resembles that of the
shamisen 「三味線ã€.
The Korean
komungo ã€Œê±°ë¬¸ê³ ã€ may also be related, albeit distantly. Korean literati wanted to play an instrument the way their Chinese counterparts played the qin. For some reason they never took to the qin itself, instead playing the komungo, a long fretted zither plucked with a thin stick. The repertoire was largely the komungo parts for melodies played by the court orchestra. It should be noted that another ancient Chinese zither, the ''
zhu'' 「ç‘ã€, was likely plucked with a stick, so the komungo may also be related to that instrument.
Media
Solo
Video
See also
★
Contemporary guqin players
★
Guqin aesthetics
★
Guqin construction
★
Guqin history
★
Guqin notation
★
Guqin playing technique
★
Guqin schools
★
Guqin strings
★
Guqin tunings
★
List of guqin literature
★
List of guqin societies
★
List of traditional Chinese musical instruments
★
Qinpu
★
Se
★
Yaji
★
Yayue
References
In the writing and research of this article, a variety of sources have been used, whether primary or secondary.
Bibilography and further reading
'Chinese books on qin:'
★ Zhou, Ningyun (1915). ''Qinshu Cunmu'' ã€ç´æ›¸å˜ç›®ã€‘.
★ Zha, Fuxi (1958). ''Cunjian Guqin Qupu Jilan'' ã€å˜è¦‹å¤ç´æ›²èœè¼¯è¦½ã€‘. Beijing: The People's Music Press. ISBN 7-103-02379-4.
★ Xu, Jian (1982). ''Qinshi Chubian'' ã€ç´å²åˆç¼–】. Beijing: The People's Music Press. ISBN 7-103-02304-2.
★ Li, Xiangting (1992). ''Tangdai Guqin Yanzou Meixue ji Yinyue Sixiang Yanjiu'' ã€å”代å¤ç´æ¼”å¥ç¾Žå¸åŠéŸ³æ¨‚æ€æƒ³ç ”究】. Taipei.
★ Gong, Yi (1999). ''Guqin Yanzhoufa'' ã€å¤ç´æ¼”奿³•】; 2nd ed., rev. inc. 2 CDs. Shanghai: Shanghai Educational Press. ISBN 7-5320-6621-5
★ Li, Mingzhong (2000). ''Zhongguo Qinxue'' ã€ä¸åœ‹ç´å¸ã€‘ å·å£¹. Volume one. Shanxi: Shanxi Society Science Magazine Association.
★ Yin, Wei (2001). ''Zhongguo Qinshi Yanyi'' ã€ä¸å›½ç´å²æ¼”义】. Yunnan: People's Press of Yunnan. ISBN 7-222-03206-1/I‧866
★ Li, Xiangting (2004). ''Guqin Shiyong Jiaocheng'' ã€å¤ç´å®žç”¨æ•™ç¨‹ã€‘. Shanghai: Shanghai Music Press. ISBN 7-80667-439-X
★ Wu, Na (2004). ''Guqin Chuji Jiaocheng'' ã€å¤ç´åˆçº§æ•™ç¨‹ã€‘. Beijing: Tongxin Press. ISBN 7-80593-835-0/J‧105
★ Huang, Datong (ed.) (2005). ''Chiba Guqin Kao'' ã€å°ºå…«å¤ç´è€ƒã€‘. Shanghai: Shanghai Conservatory of Music Press. ISBN 7-80692-168-0/J‧161
★ Wu, Zhao (2005). ''Jueshi Qingyin'' ã€ç»ä¸–清音】; inc. 1 CD. Suzhou: Ancient Inn of Wu Press. ISBN 7-80574-908-6/G‧259
★ Yao, Bingyan and Huang, Shuzhi (2005). ''Tangdai Chen Zhuo Lun Guqin Zhifa: Yao Bingyan Qinxue Zhu Shu zhi Yi'' ã€å”代陳拙論å¤ç´æŒ‡æ³•‧姚丙炎ç´å¸è‘—述之一】. Beijing: Shu zhi Zhai Wenhua Co. Ltd. ISBN 988-98739-1-5.
:Part of the ''Qinxue Congkan'' ã€ç´å¸å¢åˆŠã€‘ ("collection of printings on qin study").
★ Yi, Cunguo (2005). ''Taiyin Xisheng'' ã€å¤ªéŸ³å¸Œè²ã€‘. Guizhou: Zhejiang University Press. ISBN 7-308-04261-8/J‧093
★ Zhang, Huaying (2005). ''Gu Qin'' ã€å¤ç´ã€‘. Guizhou: Zhejiang People's Press. ISBN 7-213-02955-X
:Part of the ''Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity Collection'' ã€äººç±»å£å¤´ä¸Žéžç‰©è´¨æ–‡åŒ–é—产丛书】.
★ Guo, Ping (2006). ''Guqin Congtan'' ã€å¤ç´ä¸›è°ˆã€‘. Jinan: Shandong Book Press. ISBN 7-80713-209-4
★ Miao, Jianhua (2006). ''Guqin Meixue Sixiang Yanjiu'' ã€å¤ç´ç¾Žå¦æ€æƒ³ç ”究】. Shanghai: Shanghai Conservatory of Music Press. ISBN 7-80692-224-5
:Part of the ''Series of Doctor Dissertations in Music'' ã€éŸ³ä¹åšå£«å¦ä½è®ºæ–‡ç³»åˆ—】.
★ Xian, Zhi (2006). ''Qi-xian Midao: Jingdian Guqin Gushi'' ã€ä¸ƒå¼¦å‘³å‘³é“‧ç»å…¸å¤ç´æ•…事】. Beijing: China Three Gorges Press. ISBN 7-80223-171-X
★ Xu, Junyue and Xiaoying (2006). ''Zhepai Guqin Yishu'' ã€æµ™æ´¾å¤ç´è‰ºæœ®ã€‘. Shanghai: Shanghai Arts and Literature Press. ISBN 7-5321-3030-4
'Qinpu:'
★ Zhu, Quan (1425, 2001). ''Shenqi Mipu'' ã€ç¥žç«’秘èœã€‘. Beijing: Cathay Bookshop. ISBN 7-80568-973-3/J‧284
★ Xu, Shangying (1673, 2005). ''Dahuan Ge Qinpu'' ã€å¤§é‚„é–£ç´èœã€‘. Beijing: Cathay Bookshop. ISBN 7-80663-288-3/J‧322
★ Zhou, Zi'an (1722, 2000). ''Wuzhi Zhai Qinpu'' ã€äº”知齋ç´èœã€‘. Beijing: Cathay Bookshop. ISBN 7-80568-864-8/J‧237
★ Chu, Fengjie (1855). ''Yugu Zhai Qinpu'' ã€èˆ‡å¤é½‹ç´èœã€‘. Fujian: Private publication.
★ Zhang, He (1864, 1998). ''Qinxue Rumen'' ã€ç´å¸å…¥é–€ã€‘. Beijing: Cathay Bookshop. ISBN 7-80568-865-6/J‧236
★ Yang, Zongji (1910–1931, 1996). ''Qinxue Congshu'' ã€ç´å¸å¢æ›¸ã€‘. Beijing: Cathay Bookshop. ISBN 7-80568-552-5/I‧139
★ Wang, Binglu (1931, 2005). ''Mei'an Qinpu'' ã€æ¥³ç›¦ç¡è«©ã€‘. Beijing: China Bookstore. ISBN 7-80663-297-2/J‧331
★ Wu, Jinglüe and Wenguang (2001). ''Yushan Wushi Qinpu'' ã€è™žå±±å´æ°ç´è°±ã€‘ ''The Qin Music Repertoire of the Wu Family''. Beijing: Eastern Press. ISBN 7-5060-1454-8/I‧78
★ Gu, Meigeng (2004). ''Qinxue Beiyao (shougao ben)'' ã€ç´å¸å‚™è¦ï¼ˆæ‰‹ç¨¿æœ¬ï¼‰ã€‘. Shanghai: Shanghai Music Press. ISBN 7-80667-453-5
'Journals, newsletters and periodicals:'
★ ''Zhongguo Huabao'' ã€ä¸åœ‹ç•«å ±ã€‘. July 1986.
★ Beijing Guqin Research Association. ''Beijing Qin-xun'' ã€åŒ—京ç´è®¯ã€‘. March 2001 (volume 71).
'English books on qin:'
★ Gulik, Robert Hans van (1940, 1969). ''The Lore of the Chinese Lute''. 2nd ed., rev. Rutland, Vt., and Tokyo: Charles Tuttle and Sophia University; Monumenta Nipponica. ISBN 0-8048-0869-4
★ Gulik, Robert Hans van (1941). ''Hsi K'ang and his Poetical Essay on the Chinese Lute''. Tokyo: ''
Monumenta Nipponica''. ISBN 0-8048-0868-6
★ Liang, David Ming-Yueh (1972). ''The Chinese Ch'in Its History and Music''. Chinese National Music Association / San Francisco Conservatory of Music
★ Hsu, Wen-Ying (1978). ''The Ku'Chin''. California: Wen Ying Studio, Pasadena
★ Lieberman, Fredric (1983). ''A Chinese Zither Tutor: The Mei-an Ch'in-p'u''. Trans. and commentary. Washington and Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 0-295-95941-X
★ Binkley, James (2007). ''Abiding With Antiquity'' ã€èˆ‡å¤é½‹ç´èœã€‘. Lulu.com. ISBN 978-1430303466
'German books on qin:'
★ Manfred Dahmer: “Qin - die klassische chinesische Griffbrettzither". With Audio-CD. Uelzen: ML-Verlag
'Music books:'
★ Sachs, Curth (1940). ''The History of Musical Instruments''. New York: Norton & Co.
★ Lai, T. C. & Mok, Robert (1985). ''Jade Flute - the Story of Chinese Music''. New York: Schocken Books. ISBN 0-8052-3961-8
★ Liang, David Ming-Yue (1985). ''Music of the Billion''. New York: Heinrichshofen. ISBN 3-7959-0474-9
★ Herbet, Trevor (2001). ''Music in Words: A Guide to Researching and Writing about Music''. London: The Associated Board of Royal Schools of Music. ISBN 1-86096-236-X
'Non qin books (or books with a section on the qin):'
★ Dr. L. Wieger, S. J. (1915, 1927, 1965). ''Chinese Characters: Their origin, etymology, history, classification and signification. A thorough study from Chinese documents''. L. Davrout, S. J. (trans.). New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-21321-8
★ Zhang Yushu et al. (1921). ''Kangxi Zidian'' ã€åº·ç†™å—典】. Shanghai: Shanghai Old Books Distribution Place.
★ Wang, Yunwu (1969). ''Wang Yunwu Da Cidian'' ã€çŽ‹é›²äº”å¤§è¾å…¸ã€‘. Hong Kong: Guanghua Book Department.
★ Herdan, Innes (trans.) (1973, 2000). ''300 Tang Poems'' ã€è‹±è¯å”詩三百首】, Yee Chiang (illus.). Taipei: The Far East Book Co., Ltd. ISBN 957-612-471-9
★ No author (1976, 1982). ''(Putonghua : Yueyin) Zhonghua Xin Zidian'' ã€ï¼ˆæ™®é€šè©±â€§ç²µéŸ³ï¼‰ä¸è¯æ–°å—典】. Hong Kong: Chinese Book Department, Hong Kong Section. ISBN 962-231-001-X
★ Addiss, Stephen (1987). ''Tall Mountains and Flowing Waters''. Hawaii: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-1039-2
★ Yang, Xin; Barnhart, Richard M.; Nie, Chongzheng; Cahill, James; Lang, Shaojun and Wu, Hung (1997). ''Three Thousand Years of Chinese Painting''. New Haven & London, Beijing: Yale University Press and Foreign Language Press. ISBN 0-300-09447-7
★ Temple, Robert (1998, 1999, 2002, 2005). ''The Genius of China: 3000 years of science, discovery and invention''. Dr. Needham, Joseph FRS FBA (intro.). London: Prion. ISBN 1-85375-582-6
★ Liang, Jianmin (ed.) et al. (2000). ''Gu Hanyu Dacidian'' ã€å¤æ±‰è¯å¤§è¯å…¸ã€‘. Shanghai: Shanghai Cishu Press. ISBN 7-5326-0571-X
★ Rawski, E. Evelyn & Rawson, Jessica (ed.) (2005). ''CHINA: The Three Emperors 1662—1795''. London: Royal Academy of Arts. ISBN 1-903973-69-4
External links
'Qin society sites'
★
North American Guqin Association 北美ç´ç¤¾ Wang Fei's US based qin society, with a link to a store that sells good quality qins, CDs and books as well as other Chinese instruments, updates often and a library of qin music samples and other useful material
★
London Youlan Qin Society 倫敦幽è˜ç´ç¤¾/伦敦幽兰ç´ç¤¾ Cheng Yu's UK based qin society with information about each ''yaji'' and regular updates on upcoming events
★
New York Qin Society ç´ç´„ç´ç¤¾ New York based qin society, with information of their previous ''yaji'', now updated with new material /
★
University of Toronto Guqin Association 多倫多大å¸å¤ç´ç¤¾ Toronto based qin society, providing a network for promoting and connecting qin players in the Greater Toronto Area. Due to be restructured into the ''University of Toronto Chinese Cultural Aesthetics Society'' in August 2007
★
Anhui Mei'an Qin Society 安徽梅庵ç´ç¤¾ The Mei'an Qin Society's website has some information about the society and various qin information /
'General Qin sites'
★
John Thompsons on the ''Guqin'' Silk String Zither A host of information on the qin and silk strings for qins in English, including extensive study of Shenqi Mipu and analysis of playing style, plus useful section on qin sources
★
Christopher Evan's Chinese Guqin Site Christopher Evan's site explains Chinese music theory, notation and technique as well as note position diagrams
★
Julian Joseph's Guqin Site A site mainly about Julian's dapu of the ''Shiyixian Guan Qinpu'' [Qin Tablature of the House of Eleven-strings] plus several unabridged lists of commercial qin recordings
★
Yugu Zhai Qinpu Jim Binkley's translation of the qin construction manual with links to other sources. Includes a qin FAQ section and pictures of his 'blue qin' made by himself
★
Friends of Guqin : ''Amics del Guqin'' å¤ç´ä¹‹å‹ A site by Qin players in Spain //
'Sites dealing with qin notation and tablature'
★
Qinqu Jicheng The near complete out-of-print PDF version of the Qinqu Jicheng download (vol. 10 missing)
★
Chinese Guqin and Notation Judy Chang's very detailed and well illustrated site explaining fingering techniques, including sections on structure, forms and various information
★
Jieshi Diao Youlan Manuscript View the original Tang ''Jieshi Diao Youlan'' manuscript kept at the National Museum in Japan here ////
★
'Qin' notation web generator Detailed and very interesting site on qin notation and a program to enter it
'Other specialist Qin sites'
★
Wang Fei's Webpage A site about
Wang Fei and her projects, with links to other interconnected sites
★
Stephen C. Walker on the guqin zither A much more detailed and objective analysis of the qin
★
Chinese Instruments Has a long section on the qin, mostly pictures and descriptions of qins throughout the ages and its history
'Sites with a little information on Qin'
★
UNESCO Proclamation of guqin as a Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity
★
Stephen Dydo's Site Has pictures of Stephen's qin construction as well as information of his other past-times besides qin
'Sites with music samples and/or videos'
★
Listen to Guqin Music various qin music from Sinohits
★
Listen to ''Qin'' Music page from John Thompson site
★
Qin mp3s halfway down the page, from Jim Binkley's site
★
Listen Room from the NAGA site for various music a videos of many players
★
BBC WOMAD 2005 for the guqin and pipa concert of Zeng Chengwei and Cheng Yu
''More links are on the article's discussion page.''
News articles/blog entries
★
News Guangdong: Guqin: The First of China's Four Ancient Arts 24th May 2005
★
Weekend Standard: The sound of old music 6–7th August 2005
★
'Shanghai'ist: Tea and Ancient Strings: Shanghai's guqin shop 18th August 2005
★
Peking University News: Promoting Guqin Lyrical Music around the World - An Interview with Guqinist Qiao Shan 14th October 2005
★
China Culture Org: The Art of Guqin Music 8th December 2005
★
China: ''Guqin''-Piano Concert Celebrates Best of Both Worlds 19th December 2005
★
Hong Kong Wenweipo: Jiuxiao Huanpei About the famous auctioned qin several years ago; 6th January 2006
★
Xinhua News: Nation designates Cultural Heritage Day 9th February 2006
★
China Daily Shanghai Star: Delicate draughts of tradition 15th June 2006
★
Oakland Tribune: Fans and players of the guqin to gather to display their pluck 17th July 2006
★
Danwei: The ''guqin'' and earth’s greatest hits by Peter Micic 13th October 2006
★
Information on music articles and news blog: The Guqin – A Chinese Musical Instrument That Helped Defeat An Army 4th January 2007
★
Macau Art Net: Guqin Echoes to be heard at the Macau Museum 5th January 2007
★
Sina: Traditional Chinese music to make ground-breaking tour in Europe, Africa 7th January 2007
''Older news articles are on the article's discussion page.''
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Endnotes
1. ''Li Ji'': Quli, second half ã€ç¦®è¨˜â€§æ›²ç¦®ä¸‹ã€‘.
2. Zhang Yushu et al.. ''Kangxi Zidian'' ã€åº·ç†™å—典】. Folio 28.
3. John Thompson on the Guqin Silk String Zither (2005) Qin: Lute or Zither? (http://www.silkqin.com/11misc/lute.htm, 29 July 2006)
4. Yin, Wei. ''Zhongguo Qinshi Yanyi'' ã€ä¸å›½ç´å²æ¼”义】. Pages 1-10.
5. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (2004) The Art of Guqin Music (http://www.unesco.org/culture/intangible-heritage/masterpiece.php?id=65&lg=en, 29 July 2006)
6. Yang, Xin et al. (1997). ''Three Thousand Years of Chinese Painting''. Page 122.
7. Zhou, Zi'an. ''Wuzhi Zhai Qinpu'' ã€äº”知齋ç´èœã€‘. Volume 1, folio 1, leaf 18-28.
8. Guo, Ping. ''Guqin Congtan'' ã€å¤ç´ä¸›è°ˆã€‘. Page 112.
9. Zhang, He. ''Qinxue Rumen'' ã€ç´å¸å…¥é–€ã€‘. Volume 1, leaves 39, 40, 43 and 47.
10. Zhu, Quan. ''Shenqi Mipu'' ã€ç¥žç«’秘èœã€‘.
11. Zha, Fuxi. ''Cunjian Guqin Qupu Jilan'' ã€å˜è¦‹å¤ç´æ›²èœè¼¯è¦½ã€‘. Pages 3-44.
12. A more detailed analysis can be found here:
13. Gong, Yi. ''Guqin Yanzhoufa'' ã€å¤ç´æ¼”奿³•】. Page 11 and 13.
14. Rawski, E. Evelyn & Rawson, Jessica (ed.). CHINA: The Three Emperors 1662—1795. Pages 117, 126 and 127.
15. London Youlan Qin Society (2004) Yaji 5th September 2004 (http://www.ukchinesemusic.com/londonyoulanqin/yaji_20040905.htm, 29 July 2006)
16. china.org.cn (2002) Composer Achieves Goal with 'Hero' Score (http://www.china.org.cn/english/NM-e/51029.htm, 29 July 2006)
17. China Info Travel (2002) Guqin Master Xu Kuanghua (http://www.chinainfotravel.com/Guqin_Master_Xu_Kuanghua_1104.htm, 29 July 2006)
18. Zhou, Zi'an. ''Wuzhi Zhai Qinpu'' ã€äº”知齋ç´èœã€‘. Volume 1, folio 2, leaf 10.
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