View Shopping Cart Your Famous Chinese Account Shopping Help Famous Chinese Homepage China Chinese Chinese Culture Chinese Restaurant & Chinese Food Travel to China Chinese Economy & Chinese Trade Chinese Medicine & Chinese Herb Chinese Art
logo
Search
March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Pipa

Wikipedia

 
PIPA is also an acronym for the Program on International Policy Attitudes.

A pipa (琵琶, pinyin p?p?) is a traditional China|Chinese musical instrument. Sometimes called the Chinese lute, the instrument has a pear-shaped body. It had more than two thousand years of history in China, and belongs to the group of plucking intruments.(彈撥樂器) A related instrument is the Japanese Biwa.

image:pipa1.jpg|thumb|250px|right|A woman plays the pipa in the New York City Subway's 42nd Street-Times Square (New York Subway)|Times Square Station, 2004.

The name "pipa" is made up of two Chinese syllables, "Pi"(琵) and "Pa"(琶). These are the two most common ways of playing this instrument. "Pi" is to push the index finger of the right hand from right to left, and "pa" is to pull the thumb of the right hand from left to right, in the opposite direction. The strings were originally played by the fingernails of the right hand, but since the revolutions in Chinese instrument making, the softer silk strings of earlier times have been exchanged for metal strings encased in nylon, far too strong for human fingernails, so false nails are now used, constructed of plastic or tortoiseshell, and fixed to the fingertips with the player's choice of elastic tape.

Prototypes of the pipa already existed in China in the Qin Dynasty (221 BC - 206 BC|206/207 BC). At that time, there were two types of pipa. One was straight-stemmed, with a round sound box, and two faces mounted with leather. The other was believed to be inspired by the primitive forms of zheng, konghou, and zou. It also has a straight stem, a round sound box, and also four strings along with twelve standards of notes. This model later became developed as the ruan. The modern pipa is closer to the instrument which originated in India and flown into China from the late Jin Dynasty.

The pipa became a favourite in the Tang Dynasty. Many delicately carved pipas with beautiful inlaid patterns date from this period. We can even see the masses of pipa-playing buddhist semi-deities in the wall paintings of Dunhuang.

Wu Man is a virtuoso of the pipa, taught by Lin Shicheng of the Pudong school. She received the first Master's degree in the pipa and won the first National Academic Competition for Chinese Instruments.

Min Xiao-Fen and Jiang Ting are also contemporary pipa players.

The fruit loquat|pipa (枇杷) is named after this instrument.



  • http://www.philmultic.com/pipa/


Category:Chinese musical instruments
Category:Necked bowl lutes
Category:String instruments

da:Biwa
eo:Pipa
fr:Pipa
ja:琵琶
nl:Pipa
ru:Пипа (инструмент)
zh:琵琶

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pipa".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


Search
All informatin on the site is © FamousChinese.com 2002-2005. Last revised: January 2, 2004
Are you interested in our site or/and want to use our information? please read how to contact us and our copyrights.
To post your business in our web site? please click here. To send any comments to us, please use the Feedback.
To let us provide you with high quality information, you can help us by making a more or less donation: