We were invited by recently by the Ministry of Education(MOE), Singapore to give a talk to secondary school students leaders of various Chinese orchestras on how to maintain and protect their Chinese musical instruments.
We starting giving such talks to teachers and students a couple of years ago and it quickly became a yearly affair.
Usually the talk is one of the programmes of a music camp organised by MOE for student leaders from the various secondary school Chinese orchestras.
The talk starts with a presentation by Tan Kim Seng- one of the founders of Eason Enterprises, followed by a breakout session whereby students are split into string, plucking and wind sections. The old dude one the left is Tan Kim Seng and yours truly is on the right.
Below is Mr Er, a music instructor for not the Erhu as his name suggests, but Chinese wind instruments like Dizi and Sheng(Chinese pipes). He is one of the few people in Singapore who can repair the Sheng. He gave some tips on how to do simple repairs on the Sheng.
And that's me speaking to a group of wonderful students from the string section on things like maintenance and setting up - the various aspects of the erhu except how to play it.
This is Mr Ng, one of the people from Eason. Besides knowing how to wipe the Yangqin, he plays and teaches the Yangqin as well, along with the Liuqin, Pipa, Guzheng and Ruans - well, almost every instrument in the plucking section.
I'm surprised many of the students who play Chinese musical instruments have blogs. I have added some of their blogs on the right.
I have also added a cbox on the right. It is a sort of message board so feel free to leave me a message. Please refrain from posting viagra ads or related stuff. The profile of my readers clearly is not your target audience.
A blog on all kinds of Chinese musical instruments by Eason Music Pte Ltd
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
New Products Listed - Mini Flutes and Mini Ruans
I've just listed some new products on my website.
2 of them are koudis - which directly translated to English means 'mouth flute'. I suppose they called it a mouth flute because it is played with the mouth, as opposed to the rest of the flutes which is played by the, erm...., the mouth as well. Hey!....so why is it call the mouth flute?
After looking at the video below, I conclude they call it the mouth flute because the lady looks like she is whistling instead of playing a flute.
Anyway I shall call it the 'miniature flute' instead.
You need one of these if you want to do what this lady is doing:
One of it is a G key koudi and the other a D key koudi.
Click the below links to go to the individual product pages:
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/dizi/wdz42(d).jsp
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/dizi/wdz42(g).jsp
------------------------------------------------
The other 2 products listed is a XiaoRuan (Small Ruan) and GaoYinRuan (High pitched Ruan). The XiaoRuan and GaoYinRuan is part of the Ruan family, consisting of DaRuan, ZhongRuan, XiaoRuan and GaoYinRuan.
Here's how they line up to be:
The XiaoRuan and GaoYinRuan sounds similar to the mandolin.
For those who are not acquainted with the 'hanyu pinyin', the pronunciation of 'Ruan' is more like Run, instead of 'Roo...Ann'.
Click on the video samples link in the respective pages to hear how they sound like.
XiaoRuan:
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/ruan/tbxr5.jsp
GaoYinRuan:
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/ruan/tbxr3.jsp
Ruan product page:
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/products_ruan.jsp
2 of them are koudis - which directly translated to English means 'mouth flute'. I suppose they called it a mouth flute because it is played with the mouth, as opposed to the rest of the flutes which is played by the, erm...., the mouth as well. Hey!....so why is it call the mouth flute?
After looking at the video below, I conclude they call it the mouth flute because the lady looks like she is whistling instead of playing a flute.
Anyway I shall call it the 'miniature flute' instead.
You need one of these if you want to do what this lady is doing:
One of it is a G key koudi and the other a D key koudi.
Click the below links to go to the individual product pages:
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/dizi/wdz42(d).jsp
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/dizi/wdz42(g).jsp
------------------------------------------------
The other 2 products listed is a XiaoRuan (Small Ruan) and GaoYinRuan (High pitched Ruan). The XiaoRuan and GaoYinRuan is part of the Ruan family, consisting of DaRuan, ZhongRuan, XiaoRuan and GaoYinRuan.
Here's how they line up to be:
The XiaoRuan and GaoYinRuan sounds similar to the mandolin.
For those who are not acquainted with the 'hanyu pinyin', the pronunciation of 'Ruan' is more like Run, instead of 'Roo...Ann'.
Click on the video samples link in the respective pages to hear how they sound like.
XiaoRuan:
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/ruan/tbxr5.jsp
GaoYinRuan:
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/ruan/tbxr3.jsp
Ruan product page:
http://www.eason.com.sg/products/products_ruan.jsp
Friday, November 7, 2008
More Photos From Shanghai Music Fair 2008
Here are the rest of the pictures I took at the Shanghai Music Fair:
This was one of the main attractions at the Dunhuang booth - a butterfly Guzheng.
Its not just 1 Guzheng, its 4 Guzhengs in 1!
Shot of the gigantic lute again. Nothing new cos they recycled from last year's fair.
The world's largest erhu? Correction - the world's largest playable erhu. Tried playing it and sounds horrible.
A close up of the erhu. What a bridge.
The booth of Shanghai Dunhuang 'Yun' brand, which we are the sole distributor in Singapore.
Took them a long time to figure out sex sells....
After 1 year they are still together....
Nice booth.
To be frank I'm not sure what is this. Looks like a horn flute or something.
I took some shots of these ocarinas but was stopped by the owner. What's so special about them?
Miniature Chinese instruments.
Another shot of it.
The world's largest Chao gong. Correction - the world's largest playable Chao gong. According to the owner there are some bigger in size but they are all looks and no substance.
Coming up next.....Beijing Olympic Chinese music instruments.
This was one of the main attractions at the Dunhuang booth - a butterfly Guzheng.
Its not just 1 Guzheng, its 4 Guzhengs in 1!
Shot of the gigantic lute again. Nothing new cos they recycled from last year's fair.
The world's largest erhu? Correction - the world's largest playable erhu. Tried playing it and sounds horrible.
A close up of the erhu. What a bridge.
The booth of Shanghai Dunhuang 'Yun' brand, which we are the sole distributor in Singapore.
Took them a long time to figure out sex sells....
After 1 year they are still together....
Nice booth.
To be frank I'm not sure what is this. Looks like a horn flute or something.
I took some shots of these ocarinas but was stopped by the owner. What's so special about them?
Miniature Chinese instruments.
Another shot of it.
The world's largest Chao gong. Correction - the world's largest playable Chao gong. According to the owner there are some bigger in size but they are all looks and no substance.
Coming up next.....Beijing Olympic Chinese music instruments.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)